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Archive for July, 2005

Spam Spam Spam Bacon Eggs Refferer Logs and Spam

In perusing my referrer logs this afternoon for the first time in some months, I was annoyed to see that perhaps 90% of the entries had something to do with (you guessed it) poker.

In doing a little digging via WHOIS, I discovered that all but two of the twenty-odd different recurring poker-related domains resolved to the same IP address: 64.4.195.62. So, you might just want to add this address to your IP denial list — not sure if this will keep the associated links from stinking up your referrer logs, but it can’t hurt.

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Clueless in Brunswick (Again)

Bruce Gagnon opines on something about which he apparently has zero knowledge. I know…shocka…but in this case he seems to have pegged the cluelessness meter and bent the needle:

The shuttle is grounded again.

Not quite — the launch has been delayed due to a sensor glitch. Grounding more accurately describes the status it was in from Feb. 1, 2003 until a couple of weeks back, prior to Dr. Griffin announcing the RTF launch would take place on July 16th.

Some years ago NASA privatized all shuttle maintenance operations and told the aerospace corporations who got the contracts to maintain the shuttle that they could keep any profits they squeezed from the operation. The corporations began laying off maintenance crews and increased the pressure and workloads on those remaining workers.

Which workers would those be, Mr. Gagnon? Surely you’re not shedding tears over the careers of folks whose involvement with the von Braun-tainted US space program marks them as Nazis? Or are these folks only Nazis when you want to call into question the moral basis of the space program, but convenient heroic proletarians injured by unconscionable capitalist greed when you want to take a swipe at the Military-Industrial Complex™?

Could it be the constant problems with the shuttle are now in part as a result of this “profits first” and safety second mentality of the aerospace industry? I think so.

Well, you can think whatever you like, but that particular opinion is entirely at odds with reality.

Mr. Gagnon has clearly never spent time at one of the contractor sites, with their safety reminder posters on every wall, frequent safety briefings and standdowns, etc. The magic words “safety issue” are not infrequently used to obtain additional funding from NASA for this or that specific safety-related improvement. In my own experience, safety is something of an obsession (albeit a healthy one) in the aerospace industry, which is why when safety incidents do occur they are regarded as an unconscionable embarrassment for the entire company (which, I should point out, gave up its filthy, evil, capitalist profits on the project as penance).

As one of the commenters at his site point out, the “constant problems” with the Shuttle are inherent in the fact that it is a highly complex system based on thirty-year-old technology. Think of the Shuttles as a set of high-performance sportscars, hand-built from scratch. Now think of the maintenance and reliability problems one runs into after five or six years with a mass-produced car, where scale and long production runs not enjoyed by those hand-built vehicles permit design problems and maintenance issues revealed by experience in use to be reduced or eliminated over time.

But actually looking at what the problem is and the reasons it is cropping up now might argue against his socialist premise — the reality of the situation doesn’t matter if he can twist it in some way to fit his government good, industry bad worldview. And this is where the needle on the cluelessness meter gets bent.

Looking back at the reason the fleet was grounded (for real) for two-plus years, the CAIB Report clearly established that the organization directly responsible for the accident was none other than NASA itself — not its contractors. It was at NASA, and not at USA or the other contractors, where safety took a backseat to schedule pressures. It was NASA (aka “the government”) that chose to ignore the advice of its contractor (aka “the Military-Industrial Complex™”) and treat the ET foam-shedding problems as a maintenance issue rather than a safety problem. And it was NASA that was obsessed with meeting the ISS schedule to avoid threatened budget cuts, fostering a “safety second” mentality.

So, is Mr. Gagnon correct in his assessment of this delay and his pinning of the problems with the Shuttle program exclusively on the greedy capitalists of the Military-Industrial Complex™ throwing safety to the wind in an unscrupled scramble for profits-over-people? I think not.

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Other Options

Mark thinks they ought to have chosen The Long Watch, but perhaps The Man Who Sold The Moon, either suitably updated or as a yesterday’s-world-of-tomorrow period piece, would be a more timely choice.

And if they’re into Heinlein and plan to do a second edition of their related horror anthology, perhaps they might consider adapting The Unpleasant Profession of Jonathan Hoag.

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The Vision Thing

MarsBlog reader Carl Carlsson challenges USAToday’s Roboten-über-alles attitude.

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Home is Where the Moonbats Are

As if Michael Moore setting up a vanity film festival in my hometown wasn’t bad enough.

Now, Bruce Gagnon is spreading his lunacy message there.

The descent of Traverse City into Berkeley on the Lake continues.

Update: Tangentially related (on the topic of moonbats), I listened to this on the way home this afternoon. Now, tell me that harping over and over and over again about the girth of a random “red-stater” woman you happen to encounter on vacation, and then plunging from that low point into repeatedly calling Paula Jones “a whore”, is not hate-filled and mean-spirited.

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Synthetic Meat of Mars

LiveScience has an update on something I swear I covered here a while back: growing Spam in a bottle.

Currently, small amounts of edible fish can be created in the lab. But University of Maryland doctoral student Jason Matheny says that this process could be adapted on an industrial scale — whole factories producing fish sticks without the fish or chicken nuggets without the real birds.

“With a single cell, you could theoretically produce the world’s annual meat supply,” Matheny says. “And you could do it in a way that’s better for the environment and human health. In the long run, this is a very feasible idea.”

Lab-grown meats could be designed to be healthier too.

“For one thing, you could control the nutrients,” Matheny says. “For example, most meats are high in the fatty acid Omega 6, which can cause high cholesterol and other health problems. With in vitro meat, you could replace that with Omega 3, which is a healthy fat.”

Cultured meats would reduce the environmental burden that comes from raising livestock. Also, it wouldn’t need to be treated with antibiotics and other drugs that are common in the industry.

The Earthly benefits of this are plain enough, but think of the psychological benefits of dietary variety for space settlers. Sure, it might taste like beef but have the texture of, say, tapioca pudding, but it beats eating hydroponic salad for every meal. And who knows what new five-star dishes the master chef at a lunar hotel might devise for the well-heeled space tourist clientele, using chicken, beef, and pork paste decanted in the meat caverns of Mare Sirenium?

Of course, if they do perfect the texture and flavor, so much the better — even with the cachet of a luxury good, I can’t imagine such dishes catching on back on Earth. If the synthetic substitute is as good as or better than the real thing, however, and it can be mass-produced at a lower cost than meat from cattle, it could destroy the market for the walking-around version. But I expect, if that day should eventually come, that we will see the perverse spectacle of environmental activists militating for the conversion of feedlots to habitat preserves to prevent the extinction of suddenly “endangered” domesticated cattle. “Save the Angus” could become the rallying-cry bumper sticker of a future generation.

On the other hand, think of all the neat things you could do with this food technology beyond merely making meat more healthy. If sufficient DNA could be obtained, any animal that ever walked the planet could potentially end up in your supermarket’s meat aisle, regardless of endangered status or even extinction …wooly mammoth, spotted owl, dodo, dinosaur, thylacine, even giant panda. And even this could be on the menu if you were so inclined, free of not only the cholesterol and saturated fat but also the guilt and shame that would normally be attached.

And now for your Zen thought of the day:

It’s not known, for example, how to exercise an animal that doesn’t exist…

Indeed.

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What I Did On My Summer Hiatus

I climbed a fourteener:

~14,000ft up Mt. Elbert

Well, most of the way, anyway. Ran out of time, and the weather started getting iffy.

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Don’t Try This At Home

singularity.jpg

One reason do-it-yourself singularity kits never really caught on.

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