Oct 13, 2015 19:04
- My collection Cold Hands and Other Stories is now available to Kindle Unlimited
subscribers.
- Well, judging by its website it may seem a little wobbly, but
Heathkit has a new owner, and is actually selling radio kits. Let us wish
them the best and watch what happens. (Thanks to Tom Byers, Michael
Covington, and several others for alerting me.)
- Smart bullets appear early in The Cunning Blood, which I wrote in 1998.
(You can read that part of the story in the Amazon "Look inside"
ebook preview.) Seventeen years later, we're starting to pursue
that line of research, with the Army's XM25, which us about ready to test.
By 2374, those little devils are going to be pretty damned
dangerous.
- Lazarus 1.4.4 has been released. Mostly bug
fixes, but it's free and well worth having if you program for
Delphi or Pascal generally. Plus, it can be installed and works
very well on the Raspberry Pi 2.
- Here's David Archibald's solar update for October,
2015. I find the trend lines in the graph of F10.7 flux
fascinating: They've been in a pretty linear decline since the
beginning of the year. Anything under 100 signals a cooling trend.
We're now at 84, and the reading may "bottom out" at the lowest
possible reading of 64 by January of 2016.
- As if a quieting Sun weren't enough, there's a newly discovered mechanism pushing the planet in
the direction of global cooling, via volatile organic
compounds, particularly isoprene.
- Roy Harvey pointed me to MakerArm, a sort of general-purpose 3-D positioner
that can be used to mill PCBs, print 3-D artifacts, and draw things
on cakes with frosting. This is definitely second-gen, or maybe
third (I lose track) and something in me seriously wants one.
- Esther Schindler sent a link to word that high-fructose corn syrup apparently slows recovery
from brain injury. It also overloads your liver, especially
downed 44 convenience-store ounces at a time.
- I'm considering renting a short cargo container as a temporary storage
shed in our new (large) back yard. We did this at our second house
in Scottsdale in the 90s, and it worked very well. Researching
containers led me to this writeup of the world's largest container ship, MSC
Oscar, which can hold 19,224 containers. Me, I'd
call it Darth Freighter.
- This is very cool: Brilliant color photographs of an era (1940-1942) we
remember almost entirely in black and white. (Thanks to Pete
Albrecht for the link.)
- More Oldiana, for early vintage Boomers and before: An Old-Time Chicago Quiz. This one is
not easy: I got less than half of them right, granting
that most of the ones I missed were sports-related. (Thanks to Pete
Albrecht for the link.)
- We're getting closer to being able to prevent Lyme disease,
though injection of lab-engineered
antibodies.
- Megan McArdle thinks it makes sense. I think
it's their last swing around the drain marked "DOOMED MAGAZINES."
Whoever turns out to be right, Playboy is eliminating nudity. Wow.
Isn't that kind of like caffeine-free diet Jolt?
electronics,
health,
pascal,
sf,
programming,
history,
astronomy,
writing,
science,
photography