Category Archives: Science/Engineering

Jerry Sterling Stover, R.I.P.

It’s always embarrassing to miss the death of a friend, particularly when the friend is a relative, however distant. Jerry and I were cousins, by virtue of his being the nephew of my maternal grandfather. And we’d been in touch for more than a decade, only to lose track of each other soon after he passed his 92nd birthday a year ago this month.

His Feb. 15 obituary in the Dallas Morning News is available in full when you go in through Google, curiously, since going directly gets you an advisory to become a subscriber if you want to read the whole thing. And you might, because Jerry was one of the last Army veterans of the Allied invasion of France at Omaha Beach.

I knew that part. He gave me a small vial of Omaha Beach sand after a return he made there a few years ago. But I never heard of the secret stuff which his two sons, apparently, revealed in the obit, which is reprinted free here: his September, 1941 “clandestine [assignment] as a military observer in London [receiving] radar training from the Royal Air Force….He carried a diplomatic passport and was required to dress as a civilian when he was not on a British military base.”

In which he also “flew combat missions over the English Channel with Royal Air Force crews using radar to hunt German submarines that surfaced to recharge their batteries…” Or that he had a hand in helping American troops “liberate a concentration camp north of Munich [possibly Dachau] late in the war.” These things he never talked about with me.

He did talk about much else involving the war, including his participation in the Battle of the Bulge. He was an Army major, a staff officer, by the time the Nazis surrendered. He also talked about the Internet, the Web, and computer technology. He was a devoted Apple user and was always enthusiastic about communications, starting with his shortwave radio experiences as a 13-year-old, right up to his Skyping with an iPad not long before he died of pneumonia on Feb. 7. He was pretty frail by then and frequently ill. The old man’s friend, they used to call pneumonia. I suppose it was.  Rest in peace, cousin.

Taxes armed the Batman killer

Where did the supposedly penniless graduate-student lunatic who shot up the movie theater get the money to buy all his guns and explosives?

From Uncle Sugar. Turns out he didn’t build that massacre by himself, as Obozo would say. The feds helped him, with $26,000 of our tax money, the only kind they have!

Who invented the Internet? Xerox

I suppose we can’t expect Obozo to know better than to think his precious big feds invented the Internet since almost everyone else does. But would it be too much to ask a POTUS to do more research than clip newspaper and magazine articles? Looks like that’s about all that this one and his clown act of advisers does.

“If the government didn’t invent the Internet, who did? Vinton Cerf developed the TCP/IP protocol, the Internet’s backbone, and Tim Berners-Lee gets credit for hyperlinks. But full credit goes to the company where Mr. Taylor worked after leaving ARPA: Xerox. It was at the Xerox PARC labs in Silicon Valley in the 1970s that the Ethernet was developed to link different computer networks. Researchers there also developed the first personal computer (the Xerox Alto [above]) and the graphical user interface that still drives computer usage today.”

And, yep, even the mouse

Not that everyone agrees, of course. Really, it depends on how you interpret it. The government funded a lot of the early research. But all that did was lay the stepping stones. And it isn’t the same thing as inventing it.

Via the WSJ and Instapundit

Ban guns? Ban movie theaters. Or Neuroscience

The Colorado movie theater shootings have brought the usual liberal media cries for gun control. Hey, the theater already had a “no firearms” sign, though some might say that was only an invitation. When only the government has guns, all will be safe? As if.

How about banning movie theaters? Makes as much sense, maybe more. Awful places, movie theaters, sticky floors, and unwashed, overly-perfumed bodies all crammed together, side-by-side. Usually some fat person in the seat in front of you, making it hard to see. Bound to send any left-thinking neuroscience PhD candidate in search of his fifteen minutes of fame.

After all, we now have the Internet, with streaming video. Must we continue these bizarre public meetings with popcorn and Big Gulps (already righteously banned in New York City)? For that matter, why not ban neuroscience? All those big words and exam cram sessions obviously caused a breakdown here.

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Peak oil? Heh

Home of the Nemos

You know, the clownfish called Nemo. One of their homes would, strangely enough, be the Negev Desert of Southern Israel. Interesting story of aquaculture in the Arava Valley around Eilat. Very industrious people, the Israelis. A great place to visit, despite what the lying liberal news media (War, war, war!) may have you thinking. Check it out.

Why the AGW religion is bull

This graph put together from federal data by Dr. Dewpoint (Joe D’Aleo) at Weather Bell shows the hottest continental U.S. decades (1930s, 1950s, 1910s, and 1980s) came well before sales of the carbon-spewing SUVs that are the radical environmentalists’ favorite culprit for “climate change.”

Course what the pols who babble about Anthropocentric (i.e., human-caused) Global Warming really want is more government control over us and the economy and more tax money to hire more leftist bureaucrats, whom you can bet will be doing something other than altering the climate—if that was even possible.

China’s stance on this nonsense is refreshingly bold: “China will take swift counter-measures that could include impounding European aircraft if the EU punishes Chinese airlines for not complying with its scheme to curb carbon emissions, the China Air Transport Association said on Tuesday.”

Even better is the story behind the North Carolina Legislature’s recent rejection of a state commission’s attempt to impose infrastructure and development restrictions on twenty coastal counties over predicted (without, of course, any evidence) sea-level rises of 39-feet by 2100.

UPDATE:  Bigtime BSer John Kerry rails against AGW critics: “Thomas Paine actually described today’s situation very well,” Kerry said. “As America fought for its independence, he said: ‘It is an affront to treat falsehood with complaisance.’”

I agree. So check out Kerry’s mendacity. While Martha Stewart and others have gone to prison for insider-trading, Kerry does it all the time. Search for his name on the Look Inside feature here to see how he used his insider knowledge to increase his fortune from impending Obamacare legislation.