Month: June 2008

  • Fusion Report 13 June 008

    Alan Boyle has a new report on the goings on in New Mexico at EMC2 Fusion Labs. Emc2 Fusion’s Richard Nebel can’t say yet whether his team’s garage-shop plasma experiment will lead to cheap, abundant fusion power. But he can say that after months of tweaking, the WB-7 device “runs like a top” – and…

  • This used to be a wonderful country

    “This country is starting to feel second-rate to me, and it’s not a pleasant feeling.” So says David Post, a Philadelphian who (like me) is horrified by the state of public transportation. (Via Glenn Reynolds.) The worst part of this entire experience was that nobody really seems to give a damn, or be in the…

  • Inspiring Town Hall meeting at the birthplace of the Constitution

    Philadelphia is one of the most heavily Democrat cities there is. So, when I read that John McCain’s Straight Talk America was coming to Philadelphia for a Town Hall, I just had to go. That required standing in a long line in front of the Constitution Center, and waiting another two hours, but it was…

  • Big Solar Cells

    Abu Dhabi is buying solar cell manufacturing plants from the US in order to make solar cells 2.2 meters by 2.6 meters (7 ft 2 1/2in by 8ft 6 3/8 in). As part of its drive to become a world leader in alternative energy, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates-based Masdar PV announced this week it…

  • Global bloggers invade peaceful village

    Yesterday I went to New York for an exciting evening with three favorite bloggers — Sean Kinsell, Connie du Toit (best known to bloggers as Mrs. du Toit), and her husband, the one and only Kim du Toit. Sean (who has recently moved back from Japan) and Connie (visiting from Texas on a business trip)…

  • The Discomfort Of Ignorance

    Professor X has written a wonderful piece on his troubles in a very low level English 101 class. He has studied the matter up close and personal and has some wise words on the subject. For I, who teach these low-level, must-pass, no-multiple-choice-test classes, am the one who ultimately delivers the news to those unfit…

  • The commissariat of inclusion

    If you’ve been wondering what’s behind the scenes in the ridiculous fight that Spike Lee started with Clint Eastwood, don’t miss Roger L. Simon’s analysis. He thinks the motivation is simple jealousy, cloaked in the form of Lee’s bitter identity politics: ….for more than a decade Spike has barely made a film any of us…

  • VooDoo Child

    In honor of this election season’s very own VooDoo child. Hendrix live at Berkeley (how appropriate) 30 May 1970.

  • running to beat all records!

    I went for my usual three-mile-run yesterday. Normally, such an observation would not qualify for the blog, as I try to avoid blogging about mundane personal activities. Really, do people want to hear about what I eat, what I wear, what time I go to bed, and how thoroughly I brush and/or floss my teeth?…

  • Hell hath no fury like an independent male sexist pig scorned?

    After lamenting Jon Stewart’s “sexist riffs against Hillary Clinton” and a “compilation of venomous idiocies, most but not all from Fox News” the Inquirer’s Chris Satullo opines that sexism alone was not what defeated Hillary Clinton: …though Clinton was targeted by sexists, she didn’t lose because of that. She lost because Obama was a candidate…

  • Misdiagnosis

    I was reading something Wretchard wrote at The Belmont Club and came across this comment: Inasmuch as the economy is in the toilet and the Iraq and Afghanistan wars are unwon, all the math is pointing toward the Democrat winning. Obama has one little problem. He doesn’t do unscripted. He also has a little problem…

  • ITER Is The Fusion Reactor Of The Future

    In fact from the look of things it may always be the Fusion Reactor of The Future. A massive international nuclear fusion experiment planned for Cadarache, France, is set to cost up to 30% more than anticipated and be delayed by as much as three years, governments will learn next week. Construction has not even…

  • Deviation Isn’t What It Used To Be

    Here is a very funny audio clip if you have a bent mind. Thanks to RJ40. Cross Posted at Power and Control

  • Bring back “fairness”! Stop the hate! And save the children!

    While it always sounds clich&eacute-ish to say it, what needs to be said more often is that the price of freedom is eternal vigilance. Steve Boriss (who blogs at the Future of News) looks at the history of free speech, noting that with every technological advance in communication came another heavy-handed attempt by government to…

  • A movement, not a typo

    When I read about the principal who got in trouble with mean-spirited radio talk shows for issuing diplomas referencing the word “educaiton,” I initially laughed. Principal Timothy Freeman fell on his red pen, shouldering responsibility for the diplomas issued to 330 Westlake graduates at the Wolstein Center in Cleveland on Saturday that read board of…

  • “No wonder those YouTube women are so mad.”

    I enjoyed Katherine Scalia’s look at Barack Obama as the new trophy wife of the Democratic Party: As a trophy wife, Obama would be content to let the Democrats pull out of Iraq; Hillary might actually suggest they stay. Obama would be able to sell the socialized health care Hillary couldn’t pull off. Most importantly,…

  • What Counts?

    This is a roundup on what is wrong with our voting system. Brad Friedman tries to vote. He had a lot of problems. Fortunately he was wired with the California Secretary of State’s office. This was not his first problem with voting irregularities. It was his first personal experience. The comment section (from which I…

  • Where Will Learning Take Place?

    It seems as if the schools in America are not producing the quality of output many Americans desire. There is a lot of “woe is me” out there. However, it does not reflect in any way what is really going on. Let us take my case, an impecunious student with a lot of time on…

  • The complex design of charitable incompetence

    Yesterday I visited the famed Barnes Foundation (noted for its huge Impressionist collection) but no photography is allowed. Well, unless you’re writing about the museum’s controversial history for the New York Times. Then you’re allowed to take photographs like this: And then you can yell at bloggers like me who utilize them to depict That…

  • shell shock

    An incident in which a 10 year old boy was suspended from school for having an empty shell casing given to him by a veteran at a Memorial Day celebration has rightfully stirred the wrath of the pro-Second Amendment community. According to a May 29, Telegram.com article, a uniformed veteran gave the 10-year-old two empty…