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August 21, 2007
a day later » August 22, 2007

Google's new astronomy search tool: "Sky"

Snip from New York Times article by Miguel Helft:
Google is unveiling within Google Earth today a new service called Sky that will allow users to view the skies as seen from Earth. Like Google Earth, Sky will let users fly around and zoom in, exposing increasingly detailed imagery of some 100 million stars and 200 million galaxies.

“You will be able to browse into the sky like never before,” said Carol Christian, an astronomer with the Space Telescope Science Institute, a nonprofit academic consortium that supports the Hubble Space Telescope.

While other programs allow users to explore the skies, they typically combine a mix of representations of stars and galaxies that are overlaid with photographs, Ms. Christian said. “These are really the images of the sky. Everything is real.”

Link to article, and you can get Sky by downloading the latest edition of Google Earth: Link.

Microsoft has been developing a similar service, called World Wide Telescope. The former project lead: Jim Gray, a longtime Microsoft researcher who vanished this year during a San Francisco Bay Area sailing trip.

Reader comment: vik says,

There has been an open-source application 'Celestia' that has been providing the same concept (virtual fly-through of space, in real or unreal time) for some time now.
The King of Jingaling says,
Also, for background astronomers is the excellent Stellarium. Both this and Celestia are excellent freeware windows on the universe.
raphael says,
Google has a nice thing going with Google Earth, but I think from a purely aesthetic point of view, NASA did it better. World Wind is just prettier. And with regard to the stars thing, about a year earlier. Oh, and it does Mars, Jupiter and Venus, which is freakin' great!
natalie says,
On the subject of Google's Sky thing, I was reminded about this excellent flash planetarium from Paul Neave: Link.
Paul J. Camp says:
Ok, it isn't photo realistic, but if what you want to do is find things in the sky, from anywhere on Earth, at any time, in any year, you can hardly do better than the freeware Cartes du Ciel. I use it in my astronomy classes. It can also control telescopes, if you're so inclined. While you're there you can pick up the freeware Virtual Moon Atlas.
 

Extreme pug skydiving: extreme cute animal video


What better way to end a day of blog posts about ball weights and severed limbs than with this cute video of a guy skydiving with his beloved pet pug, dropping out of the heavens at 10,000 feet. Fly, Bugsy, fly! Video Link. (Thanks, Susannah Breslin)

Reader comment: Jesse Thorn says,

That's not cute... THAT'S HORRIBLE! Doesn't this guy know that PUGS HATE SKYDIVING?
 

Icky but enjoyable Japanese doom metal video: Dir en grey


Here's a super trippy and disturbing music video from the Japanese band Dir en Grey. I guess they're somewhere between boy band and black metal? Contains robotic nudity, barf, some chick eating a baby's severed head, and chopped up ladylegs. Video Link. (Thanks, Susannah!)

Reader comment: Greg Lara says,

Dir en Grey are considered part of the genre called “Visual Kei” (Visual Syle). Dir en Grey received coverage in the US newspapers earlier this year because they sold out a concert tour with zero advance promotion/publicity.
 

Flowchart: Medieval sexual decisionmaking for penitentials


BoingBoing reader Drew says,

In his book "Law, Sex, and Christian Society in Medieval Europe," James Brundage creates a truly fantastic flow chart explaining when one can and (mostly) cannot engage in the physical act of love.

At the time, a lot of Christian theology basically took the form of lists of things one wasn't allowed to do, so this flow chart probably isn't far off from the real decision making process prescribed by the church.

Link.

Previously on BoingBoing:

  • Flowchart: Is it f*cked up? What to do, if so.
  • Infographic: Criteria for proper tactical usage of phrase "Oh, Snap!"

    Reader comment: Pixel says,

    I made an HTML version of the flowchart from that book several years ago, I hadn't been able to credit it at the time because I was given the flowchart as a Xerox from the book by a friend. Link.
  •  

    Police raid pirate cinema in Helsinki

    BoingBoing reader Herkko says,
    In Helsinki, cops have arrested Pirate cinema organizers who were showing Hollywood blockbusters in a squatted house. Antipiracy lawyer Kotilainen is cheering for major police operation and piracy crack down: "They say that they are anarchists, fighting against big movie moguls. Then the only recreation that they have is to show movies produced by the companies that they despise so much." The house squatters are getting ready for next show tomorrow.
    Link
     

    More on the passing of old-school phone phreaker Joybubbles

    One week ago, we pointed to news that an early hacker named Joybubbles had passed on (previous BB post). Reader Adam Aviv writes in with word of obituaries that offer more insight into the life of this man:
    The New York Times recently ran an obituary of Joybubbles, AKA Joe Engressia. He was a pioneer of telephone touch-tone hacking, or Phone-Phreaking and is dead at the age of 58. The article is a fascinating read of a fascinating man. Blind, Engressia had perfect pitch and learned how to recreate the touch-tons necessary to move the switches at AT&T in the 70's. Using this technique, him and a community of others, were able to get the switches to do their bidding. Thus began the revolution and inspiration for many computer scientist and network freaks.

    Later in life, he also hosted a weekly telephone story time from Mineapolis, similar to Mr. Rogers. Clips of which can be found in an NPR interview with Ron Rosenbaum of Slate, who first published an interview with him in Esquire in 1971.

    RIP JoyBubbles.

    Image: Associated Press, 2005.

    Update: That 1971 Esquire magazine article by Ron Rosenbaum in which Joybubbles is featured is available online, and a fascinating read: Link.

    BoingBoing reader Eric Etherige adds,

    This is the post you've been waiting for: an item on Joe Engressia by Ron Rosenbaum, the legendary magazine writer who wrote that 1971 article for Esquire.
    Wow, no kidding. Here's a snip:
    He was a great American character, a Thomas Edison/Gyro Gearloose folkloric figure and someone who, despite his hardships was a truly wonderful personality. He and the phone phreak/hacker phenomenon spoke to the love/hate relationship America has with technology: we love what tech does for us, but we love the techno outlaws who know how to subvert it and show us humans are still the boss.

    About 15 years ago Joe changed his name to “Joybubbles” and dedicated his life to the sensibility of five year olds. I wondered about that, but I realized it’s about play and how hackerdom preserves the spirit of play in an increasingly antiseptic, joyless, cyberworld.

    Joe deserves credit for creating, with his phone phreaking, the first electronnic web; the world will miss a lovely spirit, but it’s a spirit that lives on in the World Wide Web.

    Link.

    Bb reader Dave C says,

    When I read that he was blind it reminded me of something. I live in the Twin Cities and back in the 80's, if you looked at the very end of the phone book, the last listing was for something called 'Zzzzyzzerrific Funline' or something similar to that. When you called it the recording was always by the same guy who would usually tell you a bit about himself including the fact he was blind. He always talked in a sort of sing song voice. A quick check on Wikipedia confirmed my suspicion! I never knew I was listening to a legend! Great memories. He will be missed.
     

    Greening Burning Man: how-to guide and best of overview


    Over at Worldchanging, Micki Krimmel has written a comprehensive roundup of what individuals, camps and the Burning Man organization are doing to make this year's festival more ecologically responsible: Link. See also the Burning Man environmental blog: Link.

    Image: Burning Man playa tableau, with lots of bikes and a tripped out mannequin. Xeni Jardin, 2003.

     

    Visual clutter detection

    MIT researchers have designed a software tool that measures "visual clutter." According to the scientists, the system could someday help designers create better displays, maps, and data visualizations and steer our attention in various ways. The prototype tool, written in MATLAB, is freely available here. From the MIT News Office:
    "We lack a clear understanding of what clutter is, what features, attributes and factors are relevant, why it presents a problem and how to identify it," said Ruth Rosenholtz, principal research scientist in MIT's Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences (BCS) and the paper's lead author.

    The fact that one person's clutter is the next person's organized workspace makes it hard to come up with a universal measure of clutter. Rosenholtz and colleagues modeled what makes items in a display harder or easier to pick out. They used this model, which incorporates data on color, contrast and orientation, to come up with a software tool to measure visual clutter.

    To be useful, such a tool has to capture the effect of clutter on performance. In their paper, Rosenholtz and her colleagues-- MIT BCS graduate student Yuanzhen Li and BCS undergraduate Lisa Nakano--tested the influence of clutter on searching for a symbol in a map, like an arrow indicating "you are here." They found good correlation between the time it takes to find a symbol in a map and the amount of clutter according to their measure.
    Link
     

    Magic and the brain

    Today's New York Times has a fascinating article about a recent scientific symposium on the "Magic of Consciousness." Organized by the Association for the Scientific Study of Consciousness and staged in Las Vegas, the conference featured scientists, philosophers, and, of course, magicians discussing the nature of reality, attention, and cognition. From the article:
    Sounding more like a professor than a comedian and magician, Teller described how a good conjuror exploits the human compulsion to find patterns, and to impose them when they aren’t really there.

    “In real life if you see something done again and again, you study it and you gradually pick up a pattern,” he said as he walked onstage holding a brass bucket in his left hand. “If you do that with a magician, it’s sometimes a big mistake.”

    Pulling one coin after another from the air, he dropped them, thunk, thunk, thunk, into the bucket. Just as the audience was beginning to catch on — somehow he was concealing the coins between his fingers — he flashed his empty palm and, thunk, dropped another coin, and then grabbed another from a gentlemen’s white hair. For the climax of the act, Teller deftly removed a spectator’s glasses, tipped them over the bucket and, thunk, thunk, two more coins fell.

    As he ran through the trick a second time, annotating each step, we saw how we had been led to mismatch cause and effect, to form one false hypothesis after another. Sometimes the coins were coming from his right hand, and sometimes from his left, hidden beneath the fingers holding the bucket.

    He left us with his definition of magic: “The theatrical linking of a cause with an effect that has no basis in physical reality, but that — in our hearts — ought to.”
    Link
     

    Virtual pandemics

    The cover story in the current issue of medical journal The Lancet Infectious Diseases (subscription only) is "The untapped potential of virtual game worlds to shed light on real world epidemics." The article focuses on the accidental "corrupted blood" disease that recently spread through World of Warcraft. The researchers from Tufts University School of Medicine are using the virtual plague to explore how humans might behave when faced with a similar situation in the real world. From the BBC News:
    Researcher Professor Nina Fefferman, from Tufts University School of Medicine, said: "Human behaviour has a big impact on disease spread. And virtual worlds offer an excellent platform for studying human behaviour. "The players seemed to really feel they were at risk and took the threat of infection seriously, even though it was only a game...

    She said a major constraint for epidemiologists studying disease dynamics at the moment was that they were limited to observational and retrospective studies.

    For example, it would be unethical to release an infectious disease in real life in order to study what the consequences might be.
    Link to BBC News, Link to The Lancet Infectious Diseases (article abstract is free with reg) (via MAKE: Blog)
     

    Arm wrestling arcade game breaks limbs

    Arm Spirit, a Japanese arm wrestling arcade game, has been recalled after breaking the arms of three players. From the Associated Press:
     Images 300*501 Tok10808211322 "The machine isn't that strong, much less so than a muscular man. Even women should be able to beat it," said (game distributor) Atlus spokeswoman Ayano Sakiyama, calling the recall "a precaution..."

    "We think that maybe some players get overexcited and twist their arms in an unnatural way," she said.
    Link (Thanks, Carlo Longino!)
     

    Karl Rove's Pierced Family Jewels, part 2: Jim Ward interview (audio)


    Following up on a previous BoingBoing post (Essay: I'm the proud owner of Karl Rove’s father’s solid gold cock ring):

    Piercing pioneer Jim Ward (image above), who in 1975 launched what is now considered America's first contemporary body piercing business (The Gauntlet), remembers Louis "Indy" Rove, an early body modification enthusiast who is identified as the adoptive father of Deputy White House Chief of Staff Karl Rove. The elder Mr. Rove had (at least) 37 piercings, most of which were in his genitals, all performed by Mr. Ward.

    - - - - - - - - - - - -

    AUDIO: (duration - 24:11)

    [Browser-compatibility note -- The audio link in this post appears as embedded Flash, and is brought to you by our sponsor: HP's iPaq 510 Voice Messenger. If your web reader doesn't allow you to access Flash, here's a direct MP3 Link. ]

    - - - - - - - - - - - -

    Text Image at left: snip from a 1983 issue of the body mod fanzine "Piercing Fans International Quarterly," which featured the man identified as Karl Rove's dad on the cover.

    Inside that issue, a long, first-person essay about Rove's love for body modding. That issue featured close-up photos of his numerous genital piercings on the cover. The photos were shot by Fakir Musafar, who kindly provides the scans.

    In the detail at left, Rove talks about the relief of managing to pass through an airport security metal detection machine with dozens of gold rings in his genitals.

    Full scans to be posted later, and an audio interview with Fakir Musafar, who also knew Louie Rove.


    EXCERPT FROM JIM WARD INTERVIEW:

    [BOINGBOING] Now, did you ever pierce Louie [Rove]?

    [JIM WARD] Oh, [laughter] many times. I pierced him -- I looked up the -- we published a magazine called Piercing Fans International Quarterly, PFIQ. He was the cover and the feature interview in one of the issues. In 1983.

    [BOINGBOING] You mentioned that he used the nom de pierce, "Indy."

    [JIM WARD] That's correct. And I referred back to the article -- at that time he had 37 piercings. And most of them were in his penis.

    [BOINGBOING] That's a lot of hardware.

    [JIM WARD] It is indeed, and it was all gold.

    [BOINGBOING] It was gold -- was that unusual?

    [JIM WARD] It was, because a lot of men preferred stainless steel. He had the money to buy it, and that's what he did.

    (...) [BOINGBOING] You mentioned also [via email to us] that you knew him as a retired geologist who had worked for the Getty Mining Company.

    [JIM WARD] That is correct.

    (...)He was actually an incredibly nice man. He was genteel, a sweet nature. I don't think I ever heard him say an unkind word about anyone. He was probably an alcoholic. He drank way too much and smoked way too much. But he was never a mean drunk. If he'd had too much, he just said goodnight and went to bed. He was just really incredibly nice. He actually, a number of times through the years when I was strapped for money, he actually lent me a little money.

    [BOINGBOING] And you mentioned [earlier via email to us] that he hosted some of these piercing parties for gay men at his home not far from LACMA, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.

    [JIM WARD] That's true.

    (...) [BOINGBOING] What did you know of his family life, his personal life, before he came to LA?

    [JIM WARD] Not that much. I knew he was divorced, I knew he had children. The only story I remember about his family was, I remember his telling me about when he came out to his mother. And this may be a little off color, but -- her response was, "You mean you put that dirty thing in your mouth?" So, for some reason that stuck in my mind. He was actually fairly private about his family and didn't go into a lot of detail.

    [BOINGBOING] I don't know if you had a chance to read the essay on BMEzine [by Yard[D]og], does any of that resound with the Louie Rove you knew?

    [JIM WARD] Oh yes. It did indeed.

    (...) [BOINGBOING] If there's one thing you'd like people to know about who Louie Rove the individual was, what would that be?

    [JIM WARD] He was a man who was not afraid to be himself. He realized that he was a gay man. He ended a marriage that was a lie. He lived openly as a gay man. He was very true to himself.

    Full text of Jim Ward interview after the jump.

    Continue reading Karl Rove's Pierced Family Jewels, part 2: Jim Ward interview (audio).
     

    Candy and condoms

    0821071342 My brother Rick Pescovitz just snapped this photo at a Shell gas station in Cincinnati, Ohio. Odd display: Skittles, Starburst, Reese's Pieces, and rubbers. Life is sweet. Click image to see it larger.
     

    Old Crow's big win at Bonneville Speed Week

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    Bobby Green took his incredible bellytank racer, Old Crow, out to Utah's Bonneville Salt Flats this month for Speed Week. Old Crow hit a record-setting speed of 104.365 mph. In honor of the win, Bobby had himself tattooed with the COOP-designed Old Crow logo. COOP himself was on hand for speed week and took many amazing photos of the experience.

    Link to the Bellytank blog, Link to COOP's photos, Link to COOP's blog
     

    Caffeine may keep elderly women sharp

    A new scientific study suggests that drinking caffeinated coffee or tea may protect memory and reasoning for women over 65 years old. Scientists from the French National Institute of Health and Medical Research ran mental tests on 7000 men and women, all 65 years or older, and then tested them again two and four years later. Women who reported drinking heavy amounts of caffeine, did better on the tests on average than those who drank less. Men experienced no visible benefit. From Science News:
    Although the study's design precluded investigating the possible mechanism for a gender difference, (researcher Karen) Ritchie notes that at least one animal study published by others "suggests there's an interaction between caffeine and the [female] sex hormones estrogen and progesterone."

    If caffeine's protective effect works by interacting with receptors for estrogen on a women's cells, this might explain another preliminary observation by the French team: that among heavy caffeine consumers, women over age 80 faced half the risk of significant cognitive decline during the study than ladies 65 to 80 did...

    One disappointing observation, Ritchie notes, is that even heavy caffeine intake didn't reduce the risk of developing outright dementia, such as Alzheimer's disease.
    Link
     

    Janitor sues for LSD dosing

    Dominick Rao, a custodian at a Hackensack Fair Lawn, New Jersey school, is suing the school district claiming that his co-workers served him LSD-laced pizza at a party. He alleges that his colleagues were trying to kill him. From the Associated Press:
    "He said he felt like his body and system were melting from the inside out, like he was living in a kaleidoscope," (Rao's attorney Richard Mazawey said...)

    When Rao returned to work after the alleged incident, a co-worker asked him, "How are you still alive," the suit says.
    Link (via Fortean Times)
     

    BoingBoingBoing #15: William Gibson


    Episode #15 of the BoingBoingBoing podcast is now online!

    Special guest for this episode is author William Gibson, and we speak with him about his new novel, Spook Country. Cory reviewed the novel here, and posted more about its development here.

    - - - - - - - - - -

    LISTEN TO BOINGBOINGBOING #15:
    Podcast Feed, Subscribe via iTunes, Archive.org, Listen at Odeo, Direct MP3 url, iTunes link.


    powered by ODEO

    - - - - - - - - - -

    TECH NOTES:
    We recorded this podcast as a Skype conference call, and captured it with AudioHijack. The audio was later edited in Apple's Garage Band, after some help from Levelator.

    PREVIOUS EPISODES OF BOINGBOINGBOING:
    1 (Mr. Jalopy, master craphound), 3 (Gareth Branwyn, cyberculture writer), 4 (Chris Anderson, WIRED editor-in-chief), 5 (George Dyson, tech historian), 6 (Steven Johnson, author), 7 (John Hodgman, humorist and PC), 8 (Merlin Mann, productivity guru), 9 (Matt Haughey, MeFi), 10 (Bonnie Burton, Lucasfilm), 11 (Noah Shachtman, defense tech reporter), 12 (Q Burns Abstract Message, DJ and music producer), 13 (game developer Jane McGonigal).

     

    How the Air Force (almost) discovered Pulsars

    Paul Saffo says:
    "Here is the tale of how an Air Force radar operator (Charles Schisler) detected the existence of Pulsars in 1964, years before their discovery by scientists in 1967. I especially like Mr. Schisler's recounting of how, when he brought it to his superiors' attention, they told him "it was not in their mission..." If they had even a modicum of curiosity, Mr. Schisler might have gotten a trip to Stockholm much as Arno Penzias once did when he heard a strange hiss on his receiver...

    If management couldn't be bothered to listen to Mr. Schisler, then what other wonders have been overlooked in the vast flows of sensor data collected over the last few decades.
    Link
     

    Space Shuttle Endeavor safely lands at Kennedy Space Center

    A damaged STS:118 Endeavor has just touched down at Kennedy Space Center, after a two-week mission. The timing of the return home was prompted in part by a hurricane. Link.

    Reader comment: Fred Kiesche says,

    NASA Watch posted a shot of the damaged tile, a side-by-side of the tile before landing (orbital inspection) and on the ground. Looks like the decision was a good one. Link.
     

    Proud nerd tattoo of the day: "cryptozoology"


    Link to larger size, Link to alternate shot. Brought to you by the generous iPhone snapping skills of r. stevens, creator of the Dieselsweeties webcomic.

    We don't know who the dude with the excellent cryptotat is, but Mr. Stevens explains,

    Granulac and I were in Canadia for the Toronto Comic Arts Festival this weekend and I caught this guy's tattoos as he was walking past our booth- didn't manage to get his name, but it was amazing to meet someone MORE into Coast to Coast AM, cryptozoology and the like than I am. My camera lost some screws and shattered in my pocket, but my Canadian-stroke-inducing iPhone did a pretty good job. Canadians are really, really, really jonesing for iPhones.

    In other news, apparently it is illegal to levitate above a motorcycle within city limits.

    More on his blog here: Link. All this and universal healthcare, too?

    Update: Loren Coleman gives the cryptotat two prehensile thumbs up! Link.

    John Maynard says,

    I happen to know the identity of the fella with the cryptozoology tattoo. His name is Spencer Butts. He used to front a band here in Toronto called The Secret Handsnakes. He's also been an MC for the Wavelength Music Series. Here is his myspace.
     
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