Category Archives: Science/Engineering

Standing to lose

Weight, that is. Sitting, it seems, turns off the enzymes in the body that burn fat. Standing, alone, won’t get the enzymes cooking, but standing combined with puttering about will. Tough news for the culture of the keyboard and the couch. Unless you do away with the couch and the chairs.

Global baloney

Anything Al Gore, Hollywood, the United Nations and the European Union agree on must be a crock.

UPDATE:  At least Gore’s web site is good for something, i.e. hawking pharmaceuticals. 

The capacitor peddlers

Silicon Valley Redneck thinks Austin’s mysterious electric energy breakthrough company, EEStor, doesn’t smell like roses. "Snake-oil," he calls it, marshalling some numbers based on the firm’s very few pronouncements, to show why. The recent, unexplained departure of Mort Topfer, the former Dell vice-chairman from EEStor’s board, suggests SVR could be onto something. That their Web domain is for rent/sale is also not encouraging.

MORE: Things looked a little rosier back in January when Technology Review did this piece

Comet Holmes

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The moon has all but obscured Comet Holmes’ big fuzzball, but it was still dazzling in this Nov. 11 view from southern France. The streak on the left is the track of a satellite. Speculation here on why Holmes’ dust cloud is so big.

Bigger than the sun?

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That’s Comet 17P/Holmes (left), at least in the 1.4 million kilometer diameter of its dust cloud. But it’s nowhere near the mass of the sun, of course, compared here to Saturn. Thank goodness. Got a little scary there for a minute, right? It’s also an unaided-eye fuzzball in the Constellation Perseus.

Stranger in the nest

I’m borrowing the title of a 1999 book by the late University of Texas psychologist David Cohen for the title of this post, but it’s really about research to be released Thursday by the AAAS’s Science magazine. One is not supposed to bust their news embargoes but, let me tell you, the NYTimes and other newspapers do it constantly, and may do so on this interesting genetic finding. If so I’ll update this with a link. Seems medical researchers at Harvard have discovered that, while most of our genes have chromosomes contributed by our mothers and fathers, nature can turn off the contributed genes in some cells in an event called "random monoallelic expression." Which would explain why some of us might not get the diseases–even genetic ones–that our parents suffered. It might also help explain why some children are so different from their parents. Cohen used previous genetics findings–and his own parental experiences–to assert that, whatever they may think about it, parents actually have little ability to affect how their kids turn out. He might have been more accurate than he knew.

Military aviation’s future

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The Global Hawk UAV recently returned from Iraq under its own power. Not transported via C5 or C17. Controlled by a pilot, via satellite, from Edwards AFB, CA, where the robot is shown in its hanger.