Monthly Archives: November 2005

Welcome to the Future!!!

This could very well be the web site that changes your life. No kidding!

Are you ready for the future? Are you sure? And more importantly, is the future ready for you?

We’re so glad to have you here. You’ve landed on an archive page, so if you want to see what we’ve been up to lately, click here. For a quick dose of good news, visit out sister blog, L2si, where we feature dispatches from a rapidly changing, rapidly improving world. Or you can go here to see what’s happening with both blogs and find links to our podcasts.

So please, make yourselves at home. Have a look around. We’re glad to see you!

Stick It To The Middleman

NPR had a segment the other day on the power of the Internet to promote independent artists via MP3 bloggers, Pitchfork, etc.

Surprisingly, NPR didn’t mention podcasting. Some podcasts are guys DeeJaying their favorite indie bands. Other podcasts, like our FastForward Radio, use independent bands as buffer music. Either way these unsigned bands get exposure that wouldn’t have been possible a couple of years ago.

Anything that expands listening options beyond Top 40 blandness is a good thing.

Hear the whole thing.

A Spiral

Via GeekPress, one of Saturn’s rings is not a ring:

“These strands, initially interpreted as concentric ring segments, are in fact connected and form a single one-arm trailing spiral winding at least three times around Saturn,” Charnoz and colleagues write in the Nov. 25 issue of the journal Science.

The artist’s rendering makes this more understandable.

This discovery has scientists scratching their heads. How could such a structure possibly have formed? But, hey, we figured out the rings — even with their shepherd moons — we’ll figure out the spiral.

Thought for the Day

Ran acros this nugget while doing some long-weekend reading:

The great obstacle to discovering the shape of the earth, the continents, and the oceans was not ignorance but the illusion of knowledge.

Interesting. Makes you wonder what we think we know today that we really don’t…

Read the whole thing:


Stand By

Elon Musk will have to wait a little longer:

An upstart rocket company says it has delayed the startup of its launch schedule by at least 24 hours, due to the U.S. Army’s need to prepare for a missile defense launch.

The maiden launch for the Space Exploration Technologies Corp., or SpaceX, had been scheduled for 4 p.m. ET Friday from an equatorial launch site on an island in the Pacific Ocean’s Kwajalein Atoll.

The launch of the Falcon 1 rocket is the first step in a process that SpaceX founder Elon Musk hopes will one day lead to competing with all of the major satellite launch providers and, eventually, commercial space travel.

Here’s hoping he’s not delayed too long.

A Stumper

In keeping with the day, I thought I would do a little piece on what a Speculist has to be thankful for. I came up with a nice list of things that are not particularly Speculist-oriented, things like…

family

friends

health

a job

freedom

…and so on, but those apply across the board to everyone who has them. What does a Speculist, in particular, have to be thankful for?

?

I’ve wracked my brain, but other than the fact that I’m alive to witness the single most exciting epoch in human history, I can’t think of a darn thing.

Geek Projects # 1

Anthony Pigliacampo wrote me last night in response to my Geek Project’s bleg:

So I have to admit, I cheated. My background is in product design, I worked for a few years at IDEO and designed products for everyone from Proctor and Gamble to Nike.

We didn’t mean to exclude people with education or work experience in product design. We just want to see what sort of innovations are possible for individuals or small groups outside of corporate R&D. Anthony’s projects definitely qualify:

1gp1.JPGI was constantly frustrated by all the cool things we designed never hitting the market or getting raped and pillaged by corporate marketing departments. While on a climbing trip in May, a friend of mine and I decided that we needed a coffee press that fit inside of our Nalgene water bottles.

Some napkin sketches led to some prototypes which led to some more prototypes which led to many sleepless nights and all eventually led to the Press-bot.

Anthony, who Google shows to be quite an athlete (swimming, running, biking, and climbing) looks at his water bottle and thinks – “this could be better.” And so he turns it into a coffee press. Make sure to check out the video at the Press-bot website.

While he was developing the Press-bot, Anthony got the idea for the Gel-bot. Apparently long-distance runners and cyclists benefit from nutrition taken during a race – and a gel is a handy way to get it. Anthony decided that this gel would be even handier if it could be incorporated into his water bottle.

1gp2.JPG[Then I] had another pet idea that I made real, or at least am in the process of doing so, Gel-bot. Both projects were self-funded by myself and a fellow tinkerer/engineer. We sourced everything ourselves and have done everything from marketing to supply chain management.

I really don’t think it would have been possible to release a product like this on a shoestring budget 5 years ago. We have made use of every possible technology to help our cause, from open-source software to create finance spreadsheets to free VOIP calls with our manufacturers in China. We have exploited everything we could find.

We even hacked a trade show (read “snuck in”) with a big sign and made our own booth in front of an electrical panel. We built our own booth for the next show we attended (which involved drilling about 300 1/8” holes through aluminum strips help together with quick clamps). We actually paid to attend that one.

1gp3.JPG

Overall I am amazed at the progress we made. It all feels like one big hack because everything has moved so fast but the product is awesome, works great and has been getting great reviews.

1gp4.JPG

Cheers!

Anthony

And all it took was a little creativity, a lot of hard work, and I’m guessing he had some fun too. Thanks Anthony. Make sure to check out the Press-bot and Gel-bot websites. Both sites have product demonstration videos.

If you’d like your project to be featured in a future edition of “Geek Projects,” please email me at:

mrstg87

{at}

yahoo

{dot}

com

The Name Says it All

For this to work, these people will have to be complete idiots. For example, won’t it occur to any of them to wonder why they aren’t, like — you know — weightless for crying out loud?

Oh, wait. They’ve got it covered:

The one thing the programme-makers will not be able to simulate, of course, is microgravity. Instead, the crew will be told that they will be soaring to an altitude of some 100 kilometres, which is enough to qualify for astronaut status, but not to induce weightlessness.

Sadly, there is no shortage of people who would fall for that. There are way too many of us who think that astronauts are weightless because “there’s no gravity” up there. Once you get past the atmosphere and you’re in space, you’re weightless! So these geniuses are going to think that this spacecraft they’re on is going to be flying around at 100 Km out for five days. Won’t that take a lot of fuel?

No, they won’t need fuel because the spacecraft will be in orbit. It will just be such a low orbit that they won’t be weightless. Makes sense. Or maybe it’s just a really slow orbit. I wonder if they’ll have a near fly-by with Mars? A lot can happen when you’re in space.

When the hatch comes open, the victims of the prank are going to be surprised, but maybe not the way the creators of the show think. Ten bucks says that at least one of them exclaims:

“Mother! What are you doing out here in space?”

"Geek Projects" bleg

A couple of weeks ago I wrote a post entitled “Projects” about two inventions: a solar-powered backpack hotspot, and an all-electric motorcycle.

The first project has been completed, and the second is an ongoing project that Micah of “Event Horizon” is working on.

These projects were unrelated except that both are efforts by individuals to make something new. It shows an unwillingness on their part to wait for big corporate R&D departments to produce what they want.

Here’s the bleg: if you love to tinker in your garage, we’d like to hear about your pet project – especially if you are inventing something new or if you are putting together existing tech in a new way.

It can be an ongoing project or something you’ve completed. If you’re a blogger, send us a link to your post(s) on the project. If you’re not a blogger, email us your story and attach pictures.

Pictures are key. We want to see what you’ve done.

Our goal with the “Geek Projects” feature is to demonstrate that the day of garage innovation is not over. In fact, we expect to see a renaissance of personal innovation as the tools that allow this kind of creativity become more attainable.

Help us follow this trend by sending in your project.

Contact us at:

mrstg87

{at symbol}

yahoo

{dot}

com

Better All The Time #25





Dispatches from a rapidly changing, rapidly
improving world


#25
11/21/05

Just in time for Turkey Day, we’ve got
some great news for you. No, we haven’t just saved a lot of money on our car
insurance. It’s much better than that! Check it out.