Sunday, April 30, 2006
Young Men Also Experience Sexual Dysfunction
read more | digg story
Saturday, April 29, 2006
IRS Claims Symantec Owes $900 Million In Back Taxes
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You Tube burning through cash while entertaining millions
The site's bandwidth costs increase every time a visitor clicks on a video and are estimated to be approaching $1 million a month, much of which goes to provider Limelight Networks.
read more | digg story
Top 5 Creative Uses for Your iPod
1) Subway Maps - http://www.ipodsubwaymaps.com/
2) Dictionary - http://www.ipreppress.com/Pages/Reference/MWPocket.htm
3) Find Dates - http://www.poddater.com/
4) Personal Trainer - http://homepage.mac.com/berbie/TrailRunner/english.html
5) Play Doom - http://ipodlinux.org/Main_Page
Linux on your iPod also allows you to install things like:
Wikipedia - http://encyclopodia.sourceforge.net/en/index.html
Periodic Table - http://ipodlinux.org/Special:Module/periodic
read more | digg story
Why Do 'American Idol' Voters Have A Southern Bias?
For five years, the most popular talent contest on American television has been dominated by kids from Southern Hicksville, USA. Seven of the eight top-two finishers in the first four years were from states that once formed the Confederacy, and five of the seven remaining finalists this season are, too. Is it the Gospel music? Check out the article link below.
read more | digg story
Thursday, April 27, 2006
Amateur Hacks Into US Military Computers Looking for UFO and Aliens Truth
An amateur exposed security flaws in US governmental computers to unlock the truth about UFO's and aliens. He has also revealed evidence that makes it sound like they exist. He's likely going to jail or worse. He's being charged with crimes that will likely cause him to be extradited to the US for trial. The punishment could be at much at 70 years in jail (possibly Guantanimo Bay) and over a $1,000,000 in fines.
Okay, this is seriously scary. Despite this guy sounding like the friendly-hacker-next-door, I think he did something completely irresponsible. What exactly is his sympathy plea based on? "Yes, my hand was in the cookie jar, but I was only looking for knowledge." Puhhlease. Could someone please keep people out of our government secrets and computers that aren't supposed to be there?
I also propose that this guy has been alone with his dial-up modem and computer for far too long. He's said to be an out of work computer programmer who: 1) doesn't understand why it's wrong to break into government computers; 2) is dumb enough to joke about revealing the secrets. Don't we have government agencies that make people disappear for stuff like this? Maybe this action of actually trying the guy for the crimes is a sign that they're more worried about making an example of him than they are about what he's found out. If he had dangerous government secrets, I doubt he's be giving interviews.
Check out the story!
read more | digg story
Wednesday, April 26, 2006
PSM "reveals" PS3 release date, price
read more | digg story
I was surprised that I made the 437 miles in just over 8 hours. I am also, continually, amazed at how well drivers in other parts of the US (I live in AZ), drive. For most of the day I drove at close to 80 MPH while going for long stretches without passing or being passed. Yes, there were plenty of drivers surrounding me. There is some unspoken rule in the Eastern turnpikes about everyone going fast is good, but driving like a jerk is bad. 437 miles and I think I was only cut off twice. No, it wasn't a MASShole. Just a Mercedes in a hurry. In Arizona, I think there's a 26% chance I'd die after driving 437 miles in one day.
Love Muffin's brother-in-law is hosting me for the next two nights in Philly. Burgers and wings coming up. I better not drink too many Coronas. God forbid I have to take (or pay) for this test again.
Peace out homies.
Tuesday, April 25, 2006
Microsoft faces strong competition, says it's own lawyer
Words from the mouth of the giant, but is it a Trojan horse?
read more | digg story
Monday, April 24, 2006
22 Reasons for Human Clones
Twenty-two key reasons to support human cloning, including the practical (for future financial security), the vain (to cure baldness) and the truly awe-inspiring (to cure infertility, fix deformity and prolong life).
First I want to say that growing basic organs such as skin, cartilage, bladders, and blood vessels in a "test tube" is already a reality. Nice blog of bladder development.
While I'm typically a progressive about medical advances, I think human cloning is a bit creepy. Give me LASIX, slap on a robotic arm (if I need one), anti-obesity drugs, sugar substitutes, etc... I just can't wrap my head around people cloning themselves.
I'll use some of the "reasons" to clone human beings given in the digg.com article as a framework for why I think we are not ready for this.
Medical Tragedies: Some of the examples given were girl who needs a kidney, burn victim, cosmetic deformity. Okay, growing organs is cool. Making a kidney in a Petri dish is very cool. Cloning a complete human just so you can farm some of their organs is not cool.
Ethics boards have already dealt with this one and typically discourage a planned pregnancy solely for the purposes of a willed organ donation to a sibling. One of the main reasons is that the child cannot make an autonomous and unbiased decision on whether to give the organ. Can you expect a clone to make an unbiased decision on whether to give up his skin for a burn victim? "Sure Bob, I really like your DNA. You can have my skin."
To Cure Infertility: Many employers and many medical plans cover infertility treatments. ALL insurance carriers do not cover heart transplants and bone marrow transplants. Non-universal access to reproductive specialists and treatments are a poor argument to clone a human. Additionally, if a person is infertile and cannot afford access to infertility treatments, how are they going to afford to have a person cloned? In what day and age will cloning be on the HMO basic plan? If we're going to talk about "changing the world," then let's promote adoption.
Bad Parents: WTF? Is this seriously a social, medical, legal argument for cloning based on having a bad childhood? Did I miss the "just kidding" disclaimer? I think it's sad and horrible the childhoods that some people have endured. I can't, even with this in mind, stand behind a policy that says it's okay to cloning yourself so "you" can have a better chance at a normal childhood. Pay your intentions "forward" in other ways. There are many children who can be helped to have better lives without cloning yourself. SELFISH!
A child's right to be better than its (sic) parents - I'm not sure about a cloning advocate that labels a child an "it." Anyway, I digress... Nobody told me that I had a right to be better than my parents. I'm going to call my Mom and tell her about it.
Because you believe in freedom - Assuming that cloning does become a medical and legal possibility in the near future, who will have access to it? That's right! Rich people! We don't have universal access to basic healthcare in America and most people in the world don't have access at all. When do we suddenly leapfrog these problems so we can have the 2020 Assembly of People Worried about Universal Access to Cloning? Can't we worry about AIDS in India and Africa before we worry about rich people cloning themselves?
Too bad the essays link is broken (see referred page). All of my arguments have probably already been shattered.
Religious Freedom - I've never heard of the Raelian Religion and the Summum Religion, but even if they condone cloning and their members are cloned what if the clones don't want to belong to these religions? Maybe they'll become Catholics and then feel guilty about being a clone? I wonder what Mohammed would say about cloning?
Gay Couples - How does this couple decide which partner to clone? I fight with my girlfriend over where to get a burger. This argument would probably put me on the couch, again.
Okay, I've got to get back to studying. Please leave me some comments. Schwarzenegger movie theamed (The 6th Day) comments are encouraged.
Oh and here's a site where you can clone your pet: Genetic Saving and Clone
read more | digg story
Scientists find brain cells linked to choice
It appears that using monkeys they have evaluated orbitofrontal complex (OFC) reactions to different economical choices. Examples given were choosing between 3 drops of grape juice and 10 drops of apple juice.
Functional studies (such at PET and fMRI) have also shown that the OFC is also implicated in a variety of disorders including eating disorders, gambling, and other unusual social behaviors.
Here are some links to abstracts associated with the OFC:
Orbitofrontal cortex activity related to emotional processing changes across the menstrual cycle.
Functional neuroanatomy of aversion and its anticipation.
Orbitofrontal ensemble activity monitors licking and distinguishes among natural reward
read more | digg story
Brain responses to cocaine administration in the human brain by fMRI
read more | digg story
University Of Utah To Help Build Bionic Arm
We're getting closer and closer to making the movie The Terminator a reality. This is all part of the evolutionizing Prosthetics 2009 project. The key link in this research will be a peripheral nerve interface for the prosthesis.
Here's a direct link to another version of the study:
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1619143/posts
read more | digg story
Sunday, April 23, 2006
Amazing Truth Behind the Fast Food Industry
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Xbox 360 CPU to switch to Cooler Running Xenon Processor
read more | digg story
More evidence that sex is good for you
Definetely a "feel" good story. It's not new news that more frequent RELATIONS is related to better health. However, these stories (while a great reason to talk your significant other into the sack) do overlook the correlative nature of much of this research.
Most of these studies have no control over the possibility that maybe healthy people have more sex rather than the sex leading to better health. Even our most genitally obsessed friends would unlikely be thinking about shagging when in chronic pain from, say, metastatic cancer.
It also stands to reason that healthy people are more attractive and more capable of frequent sexual acts. On top of all this these studies are also confounded by the positive benefits of just being in a relationship and all of the positive physical contact that isn't "sex." I'm waiting for a study to examine the effects of a "sex-buddy" on health. Could we propose that the effects would be positive but not as good as being in a full-fledged relationship?
One of my favorite educational sites by a very educated woman who I was fortunate enough to meet and hear speak a couple of years ago.
Dr. Laura Berman
read more | digg story
Picture of the inside of two Women, 250lbs & 120 lbs
This is a very cool imaging comparison of two females with widely different amounts of body fat. Likely these images were made using a whole-body multi-detector computerized tomography (MDCT). Data is typically acquired in the axial plane in slice thicknesses of about 0.5mm. Using a computer the data is then reformatted into images in the coronal (in this case) and saggital images. Another computer program can then color the images using data from the density (Hounsfield Units, a measurment of X-Ray beam attenuation). This is what makes bone look white and muslce look red. Each has a typical CT density. This can explain why there appears to be fat in the obese woman's brain. These different planes have varying uses depending on the pathology a clinician and/or radiologist is looking for.
More about anatomical planes at:
Anatomical Planes
Other things about the comparison which are interesting are that the bone and muscle mass of the two are roughtly equivalent. Internal organs are roughly the same size. The obese woman appears to have larger organs because they are surrounded by significant amounts of adipose tissue (fat).
Likely due to the excessive weight burden the obese woman has a more "knock-kneed" look or a varus deformity.
Varus Deformity
However you can see this deformity without the weight burden, it is more typical in obese people, paticularly women. This leads to orteoarthritis and is treated conservatively with NSAIDs. The "cure" is weight-loss and/or a knee replacement surgery.
Knee Replacement
One organ that is likely really larger in the obese woman is the heart which has undergone hypertrophy. The heart cannot generate an increase number of muscle cells, but instead the individual muscle fibers all get large to deal with the increased burden. This is not surprising. All that extra fat has blood supply and the heart does have to work harder to pump blood through all that extra tissue. I was once told there is a mile of capillaries in a pound of fat. I never took the time to measure it myself, though...
Cardiac Hypertrophy
You can see a variety of very cool medical imaging reformats at:
Fenestra Image Galleries
read more | digg story
Sexy gaming girls as next-gen gamer conference models: Allowed at E3!
Whether or not people like to admit it, sex sells. And it definetely sells videogames. Look at the success of games like Tomb Raider and the GTA series. You can see a nice review of video game babes here:
http://archive.gamespy.com/top10/may03/gamebabes/
read more | digg story
Saturday, April 22, 2006
True cost of a college education
This is espeically true when you figure in the value of 401(k) and IRA investments. Four to six years of even meager contributions to a 401(k) account that generates a ROI of even close to the market average can account to over a hundred thousand dollars by retirement. There's a good graph of this effect at Fool.com:
The Birds 'n' Bees of Your 401(k)
What this article does not take into effect is the ability to compete for jobs in a down-turned economy which we have not seen in recnet years It also does not account that some degress have much higher averages than other. While liberal arts degrees are only averaging about $30K a year, chemical engineers are starting at about $56K.
Most lucrative college degrees
At this difference, I think despite missing out on the 4-5 years of compound interest on retirement savings the higher earning degrees can overpower this loss by larger savings contributions.
read more | digg story
The Artificial Prison of the Human Mind
read more | digg story
One of the most lasting lesson from this experiment is the extremes to which "normal" humans will behave in given circumstances. Check-out the Milgram experiements which also illustrate this point.
Milgram experiment
Along these same lines an arguement can be made that these same types of indoctrination and obediance that lead to the creation of the war criminals in Nazi Germany around the time of WWII. These types of psychological phenomena help to explain how "typical" young-men could be turned into murderers.
Another interesting point about these studies is that they would NEVER be allowed by IRB's today:
IRB FAQ
Photo radar helps remove reckless AZ driver from road: clocked at 107 MPH
I'm a big fan of this result of the photo radar in the East Valley. This story highlights the apprehension of a 19-year-old female driver who was clocked at various times travelling in Scottsdale from 76-107 MPH!
I typically drive about five miles over the speed limit and this places me about an average speed. I don't mind being passed and I don't mind moving over for drivers moving along quicker than I am. However, I definetely do mind when someone zips by me at a ridiculous speed. It's not uncommon to be passed by people driving more than 20 MPH faster than me on the loop 101 where the speed limit is 65!
I agree with the sentiment that photo radar is not a substitute for police officers on the roads. However, if the radar can help the officers catch a few highly dangerous drivers then I'll for it until a better solution is proposed.
Maybe you're an excellent driver with tires speed rated for 100+ MPH and a car capable of safely handing at that speed, well in that case... drive it like it's stolen and try not to kill anyone! As I said before, I'd rather see more officers on the road. I don't know that photo radar is the answer, but I think the highways are more dangerous than they need to be:
"The total economic cost of motor vehicle crashes in 2000 was $230.6 billion. This represents the present value of lifetime costs for 41, 821 fatalities, 5.3 million non-fatal injuries, and 28 million damaged vehicles, in both police-reported and unreported crashes. Lost market productivity accounted for $61 billion of this total, while property damage accounted for nearly as much - $59 billion. Medical expenses totaled $32.6 billion and travel delay accounted for $25.6 billion."
2000 Economic Impact of MVA