Sabtu, 08 Maret 2014

On Helix, evil transhumanists are the world's worst mad scientists onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com

Written By 12; About: On Helix, evil transhumanists are the world's worst mad scientists onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com on Sabtu, 08 Maret 2014

onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com On Helix, evil transhumanists are the world's worst mad scientists

On Helix, evil transhumanists are the world's worst mad scientists S


Last night's episode of Helix took us further toward the final showdown between Ilaria's private army and our ragtag gang of vectors, scienticians, and silver-eyed somethings. We've discovered what Illaria represents, by the way, and it involves a lot of silly science talk. Spoilers ahead!


So basically what we're dealing with are a bunch of evil transhumanists who've figured out how to live forever by lengthening their telomeres without telomerase. Which, as Sarah explains to us in an embarrassingly awful monologue, could also cure cancer! Because you could take out telomerase and then cancer would die! Ohhh, sciencey! I honestly have no idea why this show keeps trying to bring in actual science if it's going to be so painfully bad. Honestly I would be much happier if we got one line about handwavium and just got back to the plot.


As Orphan Black has already proven, evil transhumanists are the new vampires. Helix is running with that idea in a major way, which we see when Julia and Alan race to an abandoned station to track down the random scientist who stole the black good virus. He's using the barely-operating radio to call Illaria and sell them the virus. And even though Illaria supposedly has an army on the way, they send one guy with a helicopter to pick up this item that is basically the most precious item in the world to them. That one guy quickly dispatches random scientist, and chases Julia and Alan into tunnels below the station — where they find a silver eye chained up like Damon in an episode of the Vampire Diaries.


On Helix, evil transhumanists are the world's worst mad scientists S


"Free me," mumbles silver eye. He's half-crazy, but Julia tries to get information out of him about his eyes and what Hiroshi's plan is. Turns out Hiroshi has had this guy chained up for almost 30 years. All the dude wants to do is kill himself to "be free," which he does after a series of growly speeches. Apparently he's one of "the 500 immortals," which Hiroshi later explains are the people who run Illaria. Hiroshi also spills a few other facts, including the fact that Julia's mother left him when she found out that he was kidnaping Inuit kids like Miksa. But it's OK, because "most of them" went to childless families.


In a hamhanded bid to draw out suspense, Hiroshi refuses to tell Julia about how the silver eyes came to be. Obviously they've been around since the earliest days of transhumanism, since the guy Hiroshi chained up has been there since the 1980s. Maybe they're even holder, though. As many commenters have already suggested here, maybe they're actually aliens or vampires, instead of transhumanists who simply act like them. We know they're immortals with telomerase powers, but that's about it.


So let's return to what we do know. At some point, Alan tells Julia matter-of-factly that Hiroshi had a bunch of Inuit kids he was experimenting on. Which — what? Did we already know that? I mean, Hiroshi admitted he was kidnapping the children, but he never said anything about experiments. So now we just assume that he was experimenting on them, and then sent them out into the world to be adopted with Illaria's blessing? Given that this subplot involves a major character, Miksa, and a major revelation about Arctic Biosystems, I could sure have used a little more explanation here. You know, like maybe we could have cut Sarah's "so science very telomere such cancer wow" speech and actually solved the mystery of Miksa's upbringing?


Speaking of Miksa, he's rounded up the Inuit villagers with Sergio's help and they're "scattering to the winds" to escape Illaria's incoming army. I guess they're going to go hide in snowbanks or something? Anyway, who cares because Miksa's sister has told Sergio that he's a nice guy for saving their village and now she and Sergio are making out! I can't help liking this scene because, well, let's face it — Sergio is hot and his main role in this show is to make us happy by kissing people and looking shmoopy. Plus, at least nobody is telling me about telomeres and cancer.


On Helix, evil transhumanists are the world's worst mad scientists S


On that note, let's return to Sarah's epic quest to solve the mystery of Julia's genome even though she's now officially got cancer in her brain. (But don't forget we can cure that by doing things without telomerase! Next time I order a sandwich I'm totally going to try ordering it "with mustard but without telomerase" to see if that has any salubrious health effects.) Hiroshi comes in to help her and tell her she's a good scientist in a rather fatherly way. And then she gives Hiroshi the same absolution that Miksa's sister just gave Sergio. She tells him that even though he kidnaped kids, it's OK because other doctors in history experimented on children too and now we have vaccines! So it won't matter if he destroyed a bunch of families if they can figure out this miracle cure for everything.


Please note: This episode contained more than one scene where we were supposed to ponder the awe-inspiring similarities between science and miracles. I hope you were sufficiently blown away.


Sense of wonder aside, are we any closer to knowing what the virus was really for? We've got this immortal 500 making deadly virus, presumably to clear the planet of other pesky humans who might get in the way of the immortals doing whatever they do. But Hiroshi has rebelled against his fellow silver eyes by making some other virus that creates vectors. And those vectors have now made Peter into their barf-drinking god. Unfortunately, all Peter wants to do is break into Hiroshi's office and steal pictures of Julia from the My Stalker Workbook so he can stick them to the wall of his cozy duct and cry. What the hell are the vectors for? And why do they have this weird hive mind and creepy voicebox thing?


On Helix, evil transhumanists are the world's worst mad scientists S


Don't be surprised if the answer is revealed in some offhand way in a conversation about how Alan has unresolved feelings about Julia, and Sarah has unresolved feelings about Alan, and Hiroshi has unresolved feelings about Illaria. Next week, Alan will say: "I'm so sorry I didn't go to your award ceremony while that vector hive mind was busy controlling the citizens of Earth." And then Sarah, all rebooted on Julia's spinal fluid, will reply, "Yeah, but now you can have sex with me while the 500 evil transhumanists fight with their Singulatarian enemies to have the least scientific perspective on the future."


Seriously, though, next week there will be more black goo zombie action so maybe we really will find out what those vectors are doing with their barf network. That should be fun.


onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com On Helix, evil transhumanists are the world's worst mad scientists

Captain America and Black Widow Team up in extended Winter Soldier Clip onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com

onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com Captain America and Black Widow Team up in extended Winter Soldier Clip

Here now for your viewing pleasure are three solid minutes of footage from Captain America: The Winter Soldier, featuring Cap, Black Widow, and the rest of their S.H.I.E.L.D. cohorts infiltrating an ocean liner that's been overrun by Batroc and his crew of pirates.


Plenty of banter interspersed with ass-kicking to be had here. The last quarter of the video looks like more of what we've seen in previous trailers, including some heavy handed hints at a major character death.


[Marvel]


onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com Captain America and Black Widow Team up in extended Winter Soldier Clip

A homeless man finds a portal to a parallel world... and gets greedy onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com

onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com A homeless man finds a portal to a parallel world... and gets greedy

A homeless man with sticky fingers encounters a mysterious mirror in Daisuke Kaneko's ECIRAVA, a clever little animated short about... well... the title kind of says it all.


Complement with "Symmetry," a live-action short film and audio/visual palindrome.


onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com A homeless man finds a portal to a parallel world... and gets greedy

This mesmerizing kinetic sculpture turns water into wood onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com

onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com This mesmerizing kinetic sculpture turns water into wood

This mesmerizing kinetic sculpture turns water into wood


Drawing inspiration from the captivating kinetic sculptures of Reuben Margolin, this beautiful handmade automata by designer Dean O'Callaghan mimics the ripple effect of a droplet making impact with water.


If you've never seen it, the motion that the sculpture conveys (of a single droplet perpetually bouncing) bears a close resemblance to the fantastic-to-behold cascade effect.


ht NOTCOT


onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com This mesmerizing kinetic sculpture turns water into wood

How to solve the problem of NSA surveillance onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com

onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com How to solve the problem of NSA surveillance

How to solve the problem of NSA surveillance S


Leave it to the folks at Abstruse Goose to deliver one of the most tragicomically honest observations on the current state of NSA surveillance.


Sad but true. I especially appreciate Ann Finkbeiner's commentary on this comic over at Last Word on Nothing, especially the bit I've emphasized, which is pretty amazing/unsettling:



I'm pretty sure if the NSA put their massive minds to it, they could figure out how to hear us thinking, let alone typity-typing on our computers without an internet in sight. Did you know that NSA is the country's largest employer of mathematicians? It is. Respect their powers.



Sleep soundly, everybody!


[Abstruse Goose via Last Word on Nothing]


onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com How to solve the problem of NSA surveillance

Read E.B. White's poignant explanation for writing Charlotte's Web onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com

onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com Read E.B. White's poignant explanation for writing Charlotte's Web

Read E.B. White's poignant explanation for writing Charlotte's Web S


One of the greatest children's books ever written, E.B. White's Charlotte's Web is notable not just for its lovely prose but for its masterful handling of themes on death and dying. In a letter written to his editor a few weeks before the book's publication, White explains why a peculiar truth about farms makes them such appropriate spaces for exploring the concept of death, and how this moved him to write the book in the first place.


Above: One of Garth Williams' gorgeous original illustrations for Charlotte's Web


Writes White to his publisher, Ursula Nordstrom:



I have been asked to tell how I came to write "Charlotte's Web." Well, I like animals, and it would be odd if I failed to write about them. Animals are a weakness with me, and when I got a place in the country I was quite sure animals would appear, and they did.


A farm is a peculiar problem for a man who likes animals, because the fate of most livestock is that they are murdered by their benefactors. The creatures may live serenely but they end violently, and the odor of doom hangs about them always. I have kept several pigs, starting them in spring as weanlings and carrying trays to them all through summer and fall. The relationship bothered me. Day by day I became better acquainted with my pig, and he with me, and the fact that the whole adventure pointed toward an eventual piece of double-dealing on my part lent an eerie quality to the thing. I do not like to betray a person or a creature, and I tend to agree with Mr. E.M. Forster that in these times the duty of a man, above all else, is to be reliable. It used to be clear to me, slopping a pig, that as far as the pig was concerned I could not be counted on, and this, as I say, troubled me. Anyway, the theme of "Charlotte's Web" is that a pig shall be saved, and I have an idea that somewhere deep inside me there was a wish to that effect.



White goes on to explain his decision to include spiders – and Charlotte, in particular – in the story with a rather moving tale. All in all it's a beautiful missive on the reasons writers write what they do, and concludes on a note we think most artists will identify with:


"I haven't told why I wrote the book, but I haven't told you why I sneeze, either. A book is a sneeze."


Read the full correspondence between White and his editor at Letters of Note.


onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com Read E.B. White's poignant explanation for writing Charlotte's Web

1940s Computer-Power onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com

onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com 1940s Computer-Power

For International Women's Day, flashback to the early days of NASA. Fundamental research in aerodynamics using wind tunnels and the very earliest push into supersonic flight are piling up stacks of data. All that data went through computers, the women who performed data transcription and reduction.


1940s Computer-Power S


Computers of the NACA Muroc Flight Test Unit. Standing left to right: Mary (Tut) Hedgepeth, Lilly Ann Bajus, Roxanah Yancey, Emily Stephens, Jane Collons (Procurement), Leona Corbett (Personnel), and Angel Dunn. Kneeling left to right: Dorothy (Dottie) Crawford Roth, Dorothy Clift Hughes, and Gertrude (Trudy) Wilken Valentine.


This photo dates is from the Dryden Flight Research Center, back when NASA was still NACA. These women translated oscillographs into numbers for analysis. After extracting, calculating, and reducing the data from aircraft instruments into a useable format, they handed it off to aerospace research engineers for analysis.


Not every day involved giant, grinning snowmen (or having staff BBQs). Most days, being a computer meant long days at a light-table trying to decipher grainy photographic film. Roxanah Yancey directed her team of computers, and was responsible for ensuring accurate calculations were made form the long strips of test flight data accumulated during research flights out of the station. As more and more tests were flown, a call went out to gather computers from Langley, Lewis, and Ames laboratories.


1940s Computer-Power S


From the left: Geraldine Mayer and Mary (Tut) Hedgepeth with Friden calculators on the their desks; Emily Stephens conferring with engineer John Mayer; Gertrude (Trudy) Valentine is working on an oscillograph recording reducing the data from a flight. Across the desk is Dorothy Clift Hughes using a slide rule to complete data calculations. Roxanah Yancey completes the picture as she fills out engineering requests for further data.


Why were computers almost exclusively women? Partly for the same reason Pickering hired them: they were far cheaper to employ than men. The caption at the NASA archive offers an alternate explanation, "at least part of the rationale seems to have been the notion that the work was long and tedious, and men were not thought to have the patience to do it." The women are bad at math idiocy is a recent occurrence: 1940s women were all about slide rules. Working as a computer in this pre-OSHA era meant long hours hunched over a light table, squinting at tiny images. The result was that most computers who didn't start out wearing glasses eventually ended up with them.


Without the NACA computers, developing air foils shaping wings and propellers couldn't have happened. Today I offer my thanks to Yancey and her team, some of the hidden women in the history of space flight.


Photographs and captions from the NASA/Dryden archives E49-0212 and E49-0053


Related

Happy birthday, NASA!

Alright, so technically it was the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) that was founded today in 1915, and it took 43 years and a… Read…



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onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com 1940s Computer-Power

​The episode that proved that Wu is indeed the true hero of Grimm onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com

onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com ​The episode that proved that Wu is indeed the true hero of Grimm

​The episode that proved that Wu is indeed the true hero of Grimm S


Here's all you need to know about the last episode of Grimm: The show made the bold choice of venturing into preggo tentacle porn. Also, Wu is awesome and Nick and Hank are assholes.


It begins when Wu's pregnant ex-girlfriend Dana gets attacked by the Aswang, the Wesen o' the Week. As it turns out, the Aswang is a Filipino creature that basically uses their forked tentacle-tongue to suck unborn babies out of pregnant women to extend their own lives — an abortion monster, if you will. Turns out Dana has married one, and the Aswang family tradition is to give the first born fetus to grandma to eat, but Dana's husband is a bit more… modern. Anyways, a neighbor interrupts Grandma before she can finish the job.


As usual, Wu is a much better detective than Nick and Hank, although he is; while Wu comes to grips that the crime is clearly affiliated with a legend of his youth, Nick and Hank wait days to even go to the trailer to figure out what kind of Wesen it is, and that's after the clues of 1) claw marks on a second floor window, 2) Dana was mysteriously injected with "valerian root" to knock her out and 3) the fact that something sucked the amniotic fluid out of her stomach.


Wu tries to make sense of it, but the closest he can come is guessing Dana's husband is trying to make the attack look like the legendary Aswang (which is pretty reasonable, all things considered). Nick and Hank agonize over whether to tell Wu the truth about Wesen, but decide they won't unless they absolutely have to. They actually continue not telling him even after Wu directly comes up to them and says, "Hey, there's a weird myth from the Philippines that seems super-relevant to this case, and I know it sounds insane, but I thought you guys should know." He directly tells them about a mythological creature. And they still say nothing.


And you know what the result of them failing to finally let the most competent character on the show join Team Grimm? Well, Wu hangs outside Dana's place when she gets home from the hospital, because he thinks her husband may be involved. That's when he sees Grandma arrives by cab, and scuttle up a tree into Dana's bedroom window. Wu rushes into the house and discovers the fully Woge'd Aswang in Wesen form, sucking the hell out of Dana's unborn baby, and Wu loses his shit. Luckily, Hank and Nick arrive (after waaaaay too much detective work — based on the legend, did they really think Grandma was going to go somewhere other than her son's house for a snack?) and shoot her.


And then Wu checks himself into an insane asylum.


Seriously, that's where Nick and Hank visit him at the end of the episode, because he still has terrifying visions of the Aswang (he seems to be sane otherwise, though). And they still don't tell him. They leave their friend unprepared for exactly the kind of shit that went down, and then they fail to tell him that he's not fucking crazy. It's infuriating. It's infuriating not just because we've all been waiting for Wu to finally be put in the loop, but because this is inordinately shitty behavior from the guys who are supposed to be the heroes here. It's infuriating because Wu is, even without being a detective or knowing anything about Wesen, so much better at being a cop than either Nick or Hank.


But it's mostly infuriating because Wu gets screwed. Now, this could still make for good TV if the show does something with Wu other than give him a quick 60-second check-in at the mental health clinic for the next four episodes — but it would have to involve Nick and Hank feeling inordinately guilty for failing their friend. But I don't know that Grimm knows how terrible its characters were here. Prove me wrong, Grimm! Don't make Wu's narrative sacrifice be in vain!


Oh, Adalind had her baby tonight in like literally the first minute of the show. It's what I have to assume is the fastest anything has ever happened in the history of Grimm (I was guessing the birth would take a full episode, if not two). The baby is made of rubber and is super-creepy, and Adalind gets her Hexenbiest powers back finally. Looks Adalind and baby will get more than two minutes of screen time next week. We'll see how that goes.


​The episode that proved that Wu is indeed the true hero of Grimm S


Assorted Musings:


• I did not know Wu's first name was Drew, but "Drew Wu" makes me giggle every time I think about it.


• Of course Wu has a cat.


• I admit, I do like Nick and Team Grimm's habit of discussing the day's gruesome, bizarre attacks/murders over an elaborate group dinner.


• If you're wondering if Wu is really better at detective work than Nick or Hank, Wu never said upon learning that Dana was injected with a natural sedative called valerian root, "Maybe it has something to do with what stabbed her!"


• Speaking of, if you heard "Valyrian root" when they said "valerian root," congratulations, you're a huge Game of Thrones nerd. I'm happy to have the company.


• Hank is very pro-Wu learning in the beginning, but changes his mind. So now he's an asshole too.


• So in the final conflict, Grandma changes into the Aswang, but continues wearing the clothes she came in with. But in the first attack, the Aswang is completely naked. Which means at some point there was a naked, elderly Filipino lady on Dana's lawn at some point. Weird.


onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com ​The episode that proved that Wu is indeed the true hero of Grimm

Watch a surprisingly stirring short film about mountains onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com

onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com Watch a surprisingly stirring short film about mountains

We don't usually think of mountains as having life spans, but these colossal geologic entities live and die in cycles like countless other forms of matter (albeit on much larger time scales). The Weight of Mountains is a short film by Temujin Doran that explores this process through stunning geophysical imagery.


Via Doran:



This is a short film about the processes by which mountains are created and eventually destroyed. It is based upon the work of British geographer L. Dudley Stamp, and was shot in Iceland.


Physical geography and geology is an enormous and fascinating subject, and this film only touches upon the surface of the discipline. For those who wish to further advance their knowledge in this field, additional reading and research is recommended.



In watching this, I'm reminded of a quote from legendary essayist and author John McPhee who, in searching for the words to summarize his 4-volume opus on geology, settled on the following: "If by some fiat I had to restrict all this writing to one sentence, this is the one I would choose: The summit of Mt. Everest is marine limestone. "


More from Doran here.


onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com Watch a surprisingly stirring short film about mountains

Burgerporn onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com

onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com Burgerporn



Tolles neues Blog über abartige Burger. Die Seite heisst eigentlich Porn Burger, aber eigentlich geht es um Burger-Porn, nicht um Burger aus Pornos und die Headline hebe ich mir deshalb für das sicher irgendwann mal kommende Foodblog über Burger und Fastfood in Pornos aus den 70ern auf.


Der Monsterburger oben kommt mit Käsemakaroni und Hummer und überhaupt scheint der Mann eine Faible für Fischburger zu haben, der Burger namens My Bloody Valentine darunter kommt mit Sardinen Aioli, Forellen-Eiern, Kapern und Lammherz-Tartar.



Welcome, perverts. This is not a health food blog, nor is it chalk full of recipes. Rather, it’s a year long venture into the dark arts of hamburgery.


My goal? In short; pure carnal pleasure. In long; to concoct, photograph, and devour one sin-tillating burger a week, as an exercise in both my culinary and photographic passions. Lets get weird.



Porn Burger


Vorher auf Nerdcore:

Fat & Furious Burgers with Margaret Thatcher, the Smurfs and Daft Punk

Fat & Furious Burgers with Pineapple, Marijuana and Vampire-Teeth

Black Ninja Burger with a Bacon Tongue

Breakfast Burger with Eggs and Bacon

Satanist Jesus-Themed Heavy Metal Ghost-Burger

Ramen Burgers from Japan

Rainbow Burger

Miniature Hamburger DIY-Kit

Giant Burger Bloody Mary

$666 Douche Burger from Heavy Metal-themed 666 Burger-Truck


onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com Burgerporn

This image is why everyone's so excited about a NASA mission to Europa onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com

onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com This image is why everyone's so excited about a NASA mission to Europa

This image is why everyone's so excited about a NASA mission to Europa S


NASA wants to visit Jupiter's moon Europa. Why's that exciting? In a word: Water. As this visualization shows, the icy moon may look tiny next to our own planet, but it's got 2- to 3-times as much H2O as we have here on Earth. That "little" moon is packing quite the store of water — and with it, scientists think, a significant chance of harboring life.


We've written about this visualization before, but we thought it appropriate to bring it to your attention again, in light of NASA's recent announcement, and for those who may have missed it the first time around. When we look at this image, we can't help but recall the words of Michael Shara, curator in the Department of Astrophysics at the American Museum of Natural History, who once had this to tell us about a mission to Europa (emphasis added):



If we can figure out a way of putting a probe through [Europa's] ice — and the ice may be hundreds of yards thick, it could be very difficult to do this — but if we could put a probe down that could melt its way through the ice, and then send out little submarines, who knows what we could find down there. It would be fascinating to go look. I think we have no choice but to go look. We must do it.



And Shara's not the only one excited about a trip to Europa. Adam Steltzner, who led the team of engineers that landed NASA's Curiosity rover on Mars in August 2012, has talked openly about his desire to head up a similar robotic mission to Europa. Needless to say, we're on board.


Illustration by Kevin Hand (JPL/Caltech), Jack Cook (Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution), Howard Perlman (USGS); Spotted on NASA APOD


onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com This image is why everyone's so excited about a NASA mission to Europa

Perfect Shuffle with sliced Bodywave-Loop onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com

onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com Perfect Shuffle with sliced Bodywave-Loop


Schöne neue Arbeit von Rollin Leonard, der sich für seine Video-Installation Wave in einer Wellenbewegung ablichten lies und diesen Videoloop dann in 36 Streifen zerschnitt, der er dann mit der Kartenmischtechnik Faro Shuffle remixte.





On view until March 9th at the Moving Image Fair in NYC. The original Wave and the shuffled remixes at 1/3 scale their original 4k video scale. The shuffling method is a perfect shuffle or a faro shuffle – cut a deck of cards and interlace each card. With a “deck” of 36 slices it takes only 12 shuffles to return to original arrangement. Here instead of moving parts of the body I moved the timelines.



Wave (2014) (via AnimalNY)


Vorher auf Nerdcore:

Rotating Head-Slices Stopmotion


onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com Perfect Shuffle with sliced Bodywave-Loop

Hawkeye and Hulk fight for their lives in the Mojoverse onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com

onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com Hawkeye and Hulk fight for their lives in the Mojoverse

Hawkeye and Hulk fight for their lives in the Mojoverse


Saturday Morning Cartoons is back this week, bringing you a Mojo-rrific episode of Avengers Assemble, a baby shower from an episode of Archer that aired earlier in the week, and the season finale of Defenders of Berk.


If you miss Clone Wars, don't forget to check out the Netflix exclusive season six offering.


As always - minor spoilers ahead!




My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic - "Somepony to Watch Over Me"


Ever tire of looking after a younger sibling? Applejack does. This week Applejack gives Apple Bloom the chance to stay home by herself for the day...will Applejack regret the decision? Personal aside, this episode's title made me audibly groan.




Defenders of Berk - "Cast Out, Part II"


It's the season finale of Berk! Stoick has been captured by Dagur, but this dire situation lends a little heat to the cold war as Alvin and Hiccup join forces for Stoick's rescue and to do battle against the Berserkers and Screaming Death on Outcast Island.




Archer - "Baby Shower"


Archer is on the hunt for an over the top gift for Lana's baby shower, a hunt that leads him to Kenny Loggins' door. This clip shows a portion of the shower, book-ended by a rousing rendition of "Danger Zone." Language in this clip may be NSFW.




Adventure Time - "Bad Timing"


This week's episode is a bit odd, even for Adventure Time. Princess Bubblegum creates a set of power gloves with limited time travel ability, arousing Lumpy Space Princess' desire to use the tech to reunite herself with Brad. There are multiple animated viewing frames for the episode, with the storyline taking place only within a circular portion on the screen.




Avengers Assemble- "Mojo World"


Hawkeye are Hulk are forced to fight in the Mojoverse...but will the pair have to fight each other? Mojo is in full Jabba the Hutt mode in this clip, eating some live bait from a bucket. Check out the crowd shots for a few interesting cameos. Anybody else hoping for a Longshot or Shatterstar appearance?





Top image is courtesy of Marvel/DisneyXD.



onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com Hawkeye and Hulk fight for their lives in the Mojoverse

Jumat, 07 Maret 2014

It's what all the cyborgs are wearing this season onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com

Written By 12; About: It's what all the cyborgs are wearing this season onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com on Jumat, 07 Maret 2014

onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com It's what all the cyborgs are wearing this season

It's what all the cyborgs are wearing this season S


All the cyberkiddies are wearing 3D-printed 18th century military styles this season. They sew LEDs into strips of soft spikes, turn them into epaulets, and power them with their nuke batteries.


Photo by Andrew Tingle


We love these 3D-printed cyberpunk spike fashion accessories created by Adafruit's Becky Stern. She's even created a video for you, below, to help you make your own. Read more about the project on Adafruit.


onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com It's what all the cyborgs are wearing this season

National Geographic recently sat down with McKenzie Funk – author of the new book Windfall: The Boom onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com

onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com National Geographic recently sat down with McKenzie Funk – author of the new book Windfall: The Boom

National Geographic recently sat down with McKenzie Funk – author of the new book Windfall: The Booming Business of Global Warming – to learn about how businesses hope to make money from climate change. "Basically," says Funk, "the more north you are, the more likely some of the effects are going to be positive." Read the full interview here.


onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com National Geographic recently sat down with McKenzie Funk – author of the new book Windfall: The Boom

What kind of kaiju would attack Paris? How about a giant pigeon? onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com

onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com What kind of kaiju would attack Paris? How about a giant pigeon?

What kind of kaiju would attack Paris? How about a giant pigeon? S


A quiet Paris day is interrupted by the sudden appearance of a massive feather that floats down into the streets. But that's just the herald of a greater threat: an enormous pigeon strong enough to topple the city's most famous landmarks.


Ludovic Habas, Mickael Krebs, Florent Rousseau, Yoan Sender, and Margaux Vaxelaire made Douce Menace as their graduation film for Supinfocom Arles. And we thought normal-sized pigeons were a nuisance.


[via Vimeo Staff Picks]


onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com What kind of kaiju would attack Paris? How about a giant pigeon?

Why King Tut's DNA is fueling race wars onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com

onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com Why King Tut's DNA is fueling race wars

Why King Tut's DNA is fueling race wars S


We've all heard stories of the miraculous tomb of King Tutankhamun, son of the rebel king Akhenaten who believed in monotheism. Trying to learn more, Egyptian scientists recently sequenced his DNA. Here's how their discoveries became racially and politically charged events.


Over at Medium, science journalist Jo Marchant has an incredible essay that will take you on a fascinating journey into the history of Tut's discovery, as well as all the crazy missteps along the path to studying his place in Egyptian history. She explores how geneticist Yehia Gad became the first scientist permitted to sequence Tut's DNA a few years ago, just as he was swept up in the protest movements of Arab Spring.


When Gad made his announcement about Tut's DNA, however, it set off an international debate.


Writes Marchant:



Gad and the team had exciting news for the waiting journalists. After amplifying DNA from every mummy they tested, they had constructed a five-generation family tree. The anonymous KV55 mummy, the team said, was actually Tutankhamun's father, the revolutionary Akhenaten, while the foetuses were most likely his daughters. But the most jaw-dropping revelation was the secret that had felled the 18th Dynasty: Tutankhamun's parents had been siblings.


Hawass ensured that the announcement was accompanied by a media blitz, including a research paper published in the esteemed Journal of the American Medical Association and a four-hour special on the Discovery Channel calledKing Tut Unwrapped. He later took to the pages of National Geographic to play up the ancient soap opera. The union between Akhenaten and his sister "planted the seed of their son's early death," he wrote. "Tutankhamun's health was compromised from the moment he was conceived."


The team didn't publish any information on the mummies' racial or ethnic origins, saying that the data on the issue was incomplete. But that didn't stop others from speculating. A Swiss genealogy company named IGENEA issued a press release based on a blurry screen-grab from the Discovery documentary. It claimed that the colored peaks on the computer screen proved that Tutankhamun belonged to an ancestral line, or haplogroup, called R1b1a2, that is rare in modern Egypt but common in western Europeans.


This immediately led to assertions by neo-Nazi groups that King Tutankhamun had been "white," including YouTube videos with titles such as King Tutankhamun's Aryan DNA Results, while others angrily condemned the entire claim as a racist hoax. It played, once again, into the long-running battle over the king's racial origins. While some worried about a Jewish connection, the argument over whether the king was black or white has inflamed fanatics worldwide. Far-right groups have used blood group data to claim that the ancient Egyptians were in fact Nordic, while others have been desperate to define the pharaohs as black African. A 1970s show of Tutankhamun's treasures triggered demonstrations arguing that his African heritage was being denied, while the blockbusting 2005 tour was hit by protests in Los Angeles, when demonstrators argued that the reconstruction of the king's face built from CT scan data was not sufficiently "black."



The issues weren't just racial. Other geneticists questioned whether Gad's samples were contaminated. He'd conducted his research under tremendous time pressure, and after the uprisings of Arab Spring he had a very difficult time gaining access to the mummy again. So it was hard for him to verify his work.


What's terrific about Marchant's essay is how carefully she explores how this scientific discovery is bound up with so many cultural issues in the region, from history to ethnicity. Science doesn't take place in a vacuum. It's always saturated by social issues. And the study of Tut's remains is a perfect way to think about how this complicated relationship between science and culture really works.


You must go read the whole essay over at Medium, or check out Marchant's new book about everything that's happened to King Tut's body after it was discovered.


onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com Why King Tut's DNA is fueling race wars

The elevated city could only be reached by airship onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com

onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com The elevated city could only be reached by airship

The elevated city could only be reached by airship S


Dahlia grew up in the Low Levels, the electric lights dangling from the underside of Arratha forming her night sky. She trained for years to be an airship pilot so that she could rise above the city skyline and marvel at its shining buildings. She was never allowed past the landing dock, but that view was worth every lesson.


Arriving to Arratha, City of Science [Michal Matczak on deviantART via r/ImaginaryCityscapes]


onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com The elevated city could only be reached by airship

This cyberpunk thriller about deadly robots looks slick as hell onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com

onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com This cyberpunk thriller about deadly robots looks slick as hell

Check out the first trailer for the British thriller The Machine, about two researchers who develop an intelligent gynoid — only to have the British government try to turn her into a weapon. And you know how well that usually turns out.


And yes, that's Arrow's Caity Lotz as the robot as well as one of her creators.


The Machine will be in theaters April 25 and on VOD on April 8.


Here's the synopsis:



Two computer programmers fall in love as they create the first-ever piece of self-aware artificial intelligence, designed to help humanity. But things go terribly wrong when the British Government steals their breakthrough and teaches it to become a robotic weapon.



And here are some stills:


This cyberpunk thriller about deadly robots looks slick as hell S


This cyberpunk thriller about deadly robots looks slick as hell S


This cyberpunk thriller about deadly robots looks slick as hell S


This cyberpunk thriller about deadly robots looks slick as hell S


This cyberpunk thriller about deadly robots looks slick as hell S


This cyberpunk thriller about deadly robots looks slick as hell S


This cyberpunk thriller about deadly robots looks slick as hell S


This cyberpunk thriller about deadly robots looks slick as hell S


This cyberpunk thriller about deadly robots looks slick as hell S


This cyberpunk thriller about deadly robots looks slick as hell S


This cyberpunk thriller about deadly robots looks slick as hell S


This cyberpunk thriller about deadly robots looks slick as hell S


This cyberpunk thriller about deadly robots looks slick as hell S


onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com This cyberpunk thriller about deadly robots looks slick as hell

Terrible Halloween costumers rejoice: Once made the Jabberwocky SEXY! onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com

onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com Terrible Halloween costumers rejoice: Once made the Jabberwocky SEXY!

This was a very good episode of Once Upon a Time in Wonderland — except that it was marred by a very bad Jabberwocky.


Now that Alice and Cyrus are together, they are basically insufferable — so I'm keeping this review short and sweet and close to the highlight and the lowlight of the entire show. Biggest High: Liz's play for the Knave. Biggest Low: The Sexerwocky.


A great thing about the Knave being the new genie is getting a genie with a personality outside of pining for Alice. Now that the show has been on hiatus for 2 years (or something) I can honestly say I missed this character, or rather, this actor. Even his ridiculous overly played "bollocks" drop-ins make me smile. You know who else is great? Lizard. Yes, yes the words "expendable death" were stamped across her forehead from the moment we met her. HOWEVER, the way she died was genuinely tragic.


Terrible Halloween costumers rejoice: Once made the Jabberwocky SEXY! S


After revealing her feelings to the Knave she wishes (not literally but the lamp takes it that way) that he would feel something for her. So she got sadness, and grief, and guilt because she unknowingly wished for him to take her life. And there goes all the feelings. Goodbye Lizard, you were a lovely sad moment, and a welcome respite to Alice and Cyrus' weird marriage proposal.


Meanwhile Jafar found the Jabberwocky, who is basically a bad version of David Bowie from Labyrinth — but with all the Bowie sucked out. It was terrible. There is a clip above, for your dubious enjoyment.


By the end of the show, the Jabberwocky is loose and the team is back together again. Alas.


onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com Terrible Halloween costumers rejoice: Once made the Jabberwocky SEXY!

Louisiana's giant sinkhole showed up in radar data before imploding onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com

onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com Louisiana's giant sinkhole showed up in radar data before imploding

Louisiana's giant sinkhole showed up in radar data before imploding


Since 2012, a monstrous sinkhole in Bayou Corn Louisiana has been swallowing up land in giant, tree-sized gulps, growing to a whopping 25-acres. Now, analyses of NASA radar data indicate the land showed signs of collapsing before the sinkhole opened. This raises a pressing question: Could sinkholes like Bayou Corne's be predicted before they happen?


Above: The now 25-acre sinkhole, as seen from above. Image credit: On Wings of Care, New Orleans, La.


Theoretically? Yes. In practice, though, probably not. "You could spend a lot of time flying and processing data without capturing a sinkhole," said JPL researcher Ron Blom. Blom, along with researcher Cathleen Jones, analyzed radar data of Southern Louisiana collected by NASA's Uninhabited Airborne Vehicle Synthetic Aperture Radar (UAVSAR) and found that the ground surface layer in Bayou Corne had, according to NASA, "deformed significantly at least a month before the collapse, moving mostly horizontally up to 10.2 inches (260 millimeters) toward where the sinkhole would later form."


Louisiana's giant sinkhole showed up in radar data before imploding S


This interferogram was formed with images acquired on June 23, 2011 and July 2, 2012. Colors represent surface movement, with one full color wrap corresponding to 4.7 inches (120 millimeters) of displacement. Image & Caption Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech


"While horizontal surface deformations had not previously been considered a signature of sinkholes, the new study shows they can precede sinkhole formation well in advance," added Jones. "This kind of movement may be more common than previously thought, particularly in areas with loose soil near the surface."


Even if there are no immediate plans to fly NASA's UAVSAR over sinkhole-prone areas, it's encouraging to know that predicting sinkholes is something we could conceivably do moving forward. Though we suspect that's small comfort to the people that make up the community of Bayou Corne, many of whom were evacuated so as to keep them from being swallowed up by the sinkhole. The sinkhole, which continues to threaten the community, along with nearby Highway 70, is still growing – perhaps UAVSAR could at least be used to provide locals with some sense of where, and how quickly, it will continue to expand.


Read more over at NASA.


onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com Louisiana's giant sinkhole showed up in radar data before imploding

Will the shift to digital destroy movies as we know them? onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com

onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com Will the shift to digital destroy movies as we know them?

Will the shift to digital destroy movies as we know them? S


Digital movies are becoming more and more popular, but some people are saying the move could destroy movies as we know them. But it's not issues of film quality that have them worried — it's film preservation.


In response to this post on the remake of 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea that almost was, a conversation began about looking at the forgotten art from past movies — and just what the switch to digital film might mean for how easily that art is saved:



GregEganist


I wonder if anyone makes an effort to preserve the art and scripts of projects that are cancelled. There's a lot of striking art out there that could be monetized by someone. Even if the artists and writers don't get much out of that, it would still be great to have their work more widely seen.


Also, there's a big article in this month's IEEE spectrum about movie preservation,"Will Today's Digital Movies Exist in 100 Years" by Andy Maltz. He's leading a committee of the Academy of Motion Pictures to develop standards for saving all-digital movies. Given that movies need tens of terabytes to hold everything, and that they have to be moved to new media and checked for deterioration every couple of years, it can be expensive, especially since a few thousand new movies are made each year. One of the cheapest and safest ways turns out to be to record them on color-separated film!



In the linked article, Maltz lays out some of the problems future archivists could face with digital movies, especially with the problems of updating for new technology:



Digital movies are not nearly as easy to archive for the long term as good old film. In 2007, the Science and Technology Council of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences estimated that the annual cost of preserving an 8.3-terabyte digital master is about US $12 000—more than 10 times what it costs to preserve a traditional film master. (This figure is based on an annual cost of $500 per terabyte for fully managed storage of three copies. While this cost has declined since the report was published, it remains significant.) And that doesn't include the expense of preserving alternate versions or source material for a movie or the ongoing costs of maintaining accessibility to the digital work, as file formats, hardware, and software change over time.


If you take pictures with a digital camera or record video on a smartphone or store files on a laptop, you face the same problem, albeit on a smaller scale. Every few years, you have to transfer all that digital content to the latest recording medium or risk losing it altogether.



Of course, there's also the flip possibility that more digital content could open up the film-viewing process, making it easier for people to watch that content outside of a theater.


Plenty of filmmakers have laid down their allegiance on one side or the other and now we want to your opinion. Do you prefer your movies run on digital or film? And how worried are you about the problems of preservation that the move might present?


Image: British Ministry of Information Photo Division Photographer, 1941


onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com Will the shift to digital destroy movies as we know them?

Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com

onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time

Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S


Not every church repainting job turns out as badly as the "Ecce Homo" fresco in Spain. In fact, these churches all became far more fascinating after people added sometimes bizarre, sometimes beautiful paintings to them.


The VoroneÈ› Monastery, Southern Bukovina, Romania, constructed by Stephen the Great in 1488 to commemorate a battle victory.


Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S


The exterior walls were painted in 1547 by the Metropolitan Bishop of Moldavia named Grigorie Roșca. It was abandoned in the late 1770s, never used in the next more than two hundred years, but now it's still unrestored.


Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S


Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S


Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S


Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S


Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S


Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S


(via Waqas Ahmed, Gaspar Serrano, Costel Slincu and Theron LaBounty)


The St. Lucas Church of Tzicatlán, Puebla, Mexico


Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S (via @LF@ and William Karl Scheper Schaefer)


Humor Monastery, Romania, built in 1530, abandoned in 1786 for two decades.


Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S (via Frank Zecchin, Richard Mortel)


Capela das Almas (The Chapel of Souls), also known as the Chapel of St. Catarina, Porto, Spain, covered with 15,947 blue and white ceramic tiles in 1929 made by Eduardo Leite.


Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S (via Wikimedia Commons)


La Iglesia de San Andres de Xecul in Xela, Guetamala>


Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S


Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S


Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S


Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S


(via chensiyuan, Inaki Martínez Marigorta Díaz, Douglas Vásquez Vides, Carmen Boniquet and Richard and Jo deMeester)


The Church of San Francisco in Puebla, Mexico, dedicated as the Five Wounds of Our Seraphic Father St. Francis of Assisi. Its main facade was built in the 18th century.


Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S


Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S


(via Russ Bowling)


The Igreja de Santo Ildefonso (Church of Saint Ildefonso), Porto, Portugal, completed in 1739. 11,000 azulejo tiles were added to the façade by Jorge Colaço in 1932.


Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S


These tiles depict scenes from the life of Saint Ildefonso and imagery from the Gospels.


Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S


Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S


Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S (via Wikimedia Commons)


The Shrine Basilica of Our Lady of Dolours in Trichur, India, built in 1929, decorated in colorful lights on 25 November every year.


Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S


These photos are from 2007 (above) and 2011 (below).


Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S


(via Jijo Jose and Libin Benny)


Church of Santa María Tonantzintla, San Andrés Cholula, Mexico, built in the late 17th and early 18th century


Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S



Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S


(via Steve Silverman and Threthny)


Santa Maria Jolalpan, Puebla, Mexico


Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S (via Marin and Saul Axel)


The Sucevita Monastery, Romania, built in 1585 by Ieremia Movilă, Gheorghe Movilă and Simion Movilă


Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S


Its western wall is unpainted:


Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S


Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S


Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S


Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S


Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S


Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S


Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S


Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time S


(via Prof. Mortel, globetrotter_rodrigo and Marius Burlan)


onlinecollegedegreee.blogspot.com Some of the weirdest and most beautiful church decorations of all time