Xenophilia (True Strange Stuff)

Blog of the real Xenophilius Lovegood, a slightly mad scientist

Archive for February 19th, 2010

Frustrated Owner Bulldozes Home Ahead Of Foreclosure

Posted by Xeno on February 19, 2010

Like many people, Terry Hoskins has had troubles with his bank. But his solution to foreclosure might be unique.

Hoskins said he’s been in a struggle with RiverHills Bank over his Clermont County home for nearly a decade, a struggle that was coming to an end as the bank began foreclosure proceedings on his $350,000 home.

“When I see I owe $160,000 on a home valued at $350,000, and someone decides they want to take it – no, I wasn’t going to stand for that, so I took it down,” Hoskins said.

via Frustrated Owner Bulldozes Home Ahead Of Foreclosure – Cincinnati News Story – WLWT Cincinnati.

Okay, you can have the house back. I’m done with it now. Oh, and that $190,000 I paid already, may I ask in what building are you keeping that? Survey Results:

Choice Votes Percentage of 9658 Votes
Good for him 7462 77%
Not a good idea 893 9%
He should be prosecuted 1303 13%

Posted in Money, Strange | 2 Comments »

Study: Women’s Genes to Blame for Short-Term Relationships

Posted by Xeno on February 19, 2010

http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_K5ks3AU-LOk/SjG7kP_c-YI/AAAAAAAAA-Y/nz6wjFJOxKE/s320/monalisa.jpgUnlucky in love? Blame your parents.

University of Western Australia researchers think they may be on to something about women’s attraction. They discovered a woman’s appearance or sweat contains clues to the genetic make-up of her immune system, reported The Telegraph .

The scientists studied the DNA of almost 150 university students. They concluded that women with more variety in their genes are likely to have more boyfriends.

According to The Daily Mail the students also filled out a survey about their love lives.

Scientists scrutinized the DNA for variations in genes known to influence the immune system. The more diverse the genes are, the stronger a person’s ability is to fight off disease.

Results of genetic tests were paired up with survey answers. Researchers found that the more varied major histocompability complex (MHC) genes a woman had, the more sexual partners she had.

Scientists are at a loss as to why this is. They can not say why her immune system affects her luck at love. They also do not know if it means the opposite sex can’t resist her or she can’t resist them, the Daily Mail reports.

Previous studies referred to a person’s sweat, saying that the more different a person’s sweat is form another person’s, the more pleasant the other person finds them.

The Daily Mail reported that this may be a defense to help stop someone from unintentionally having sex with a relative.

As far as men? They can’t necessarily blame their parent, or at least their parents’ DNA.

No connections were found between their MHC genes and their success with the opposite sex.

via Study: Women’s Genes to Blame for Short-Term Relationships.

Posted in Biology, Love | 9 Comments »

Pet dog in South Africa brings home a human head

Posted by Xeno on February 19, 2010

POLICE in King William’s Town have called on anyone missing a male relative to help identify a head found in a village about 10km outside the town.The head was found by a dog, and dragged to its owner’s house.A Ndevana resident said she got the shock of her life on Sunday when her dog arrived at her home carrying the grisly find.The resident immediately alerted the police.Police spokesperson Captain Thozama Solani said the head was badly decomposed, but still had flesh on it.“It has been kept at a State mortuary in Bhisho.”Solani said there were no reports of missing people in the area and police were baffled as to where the dog found the head.A forensic team has been trying to determine what happened to the body.She said at this stage police were not sure if the body had been buried or not.Families with missing relatives are asked to go to the Bhisho mortuary and identify the head.

via Daily Dispatch Online.

Posted in Strange | Leave a Comment »

Bill Gates and the ‘nuclear Renaissance’

Posted by Xeno on February 19, 2010

Bill Gates is backing a new kind of nuclear power plant. But some question the plan's viability.Say you were to give Bill Gates a really great present — like the ability to cure crippling diseases or to pick all U.S. presidents for the next 50 years.

Gates would like those gifts, sure.

But you wouldn’t have granted his one, true wish.

The Microsoft-founder-turned-philanthropist said at a recent speech in California that, more than new vaccines for AIDS or malaria or presidential selection power, what he really wants is clean energy at half its current cost.

To do that, he said, we’ll need new technology.

Gates — a father of the personal computer and quite the tech powerhouse — said one of the brightest hopes for clean, cheap power is a new form of nuclear power plant that reuses waste uranium from existing nuclear reactors.

It’s kind of like radioactive recycling, and, on its face, can sound like a miracle.

Gates actually described energy innovation in those terms: To prevent famine, poverty and the hardship that will come with global climate change we need “energy miracles,” he said at the TED Conference in Long Beach.

Some nuclear scientists and critics say the nuclear technology Gates highlighted is misguided, naive and expensive.

Others, like Craig Smith, a nuclear engineer at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, said Gates is helping put the world on the verge of a “nuclear Renaissance” that could provide cheap power for everyone in the world — forever.

“There’s a new enthusiasm not only in the United States but, I think, worldwide for the use of nuclear energy,” Smith said.

Smith’s argument is bolstered by the fact that President Obama on Tuesday announced $8.3 billion in loan guarantees for a new nuclear power plant.

The proposed project, to be located in Burke County, Georgia, would be the first nuclear power plant built in the United States in three decades.

How it works

Most nuclear power plants today use radioactive elements like uranium to create nuclear fission and then produce electricity.

One problem: That reaction leaves behind uranium waste. To make matters worse, the United States hasn’t identified a safe place to store the waste from the country’s 104 nuclear reactors in the long term.

That’s where the technology promoted by Gates comes in.

Gates has invested tens of millions of dollars in a Bellevue, Washington, company called TerraPower, according to TerraPower CEO John Gilleland.

TerraPower is working to create nuclear reactors that generate hyper-fast nuclear reactions able to eat away at the dangerous nuclear waste.

This has a number of potential benefits, Gilleland said. Among them:

The Uranium isotope that’s food for the new nuclear reactors doesn’t have to be enriched, which means it’s less likely to be used in atomic weapons.

The fission reaction in the new process burns through the nuclear waste slowly, which makes the process safer. One supply of spent uranium could burn for 60 years.

The process creates a large amount of energy from relatively small amounts of uranium, which is important as global supplies run short.

The process generates uranium that can be burned again to create “effectively an infinite fuel supply.”

… Michael Mariotte, executive director of the Nuclear Information and Resource Service, an environmental and public-safety group, said the timeline is too slow.

The technology could be ready for testing in 20 years and ready for commercial use 20 years after that, Gates said in California.

via Bill Gates and the ‘nuclear Renaissance’ – CNN.com.

Forty years is a long time to wait. Why will it take so long? More info here.

Posted in Alt Energy, Technology | 2 Comments »

Free 2010 Vancouver Olympics Streaming Video

Posted by Xeno on February 19, 2010

No cable TV? This web site covers nearly all your 2010 Vancouver Olympics needs, including free streaming video:  vancouver2010.  Also try the NBC Olympics web site.

“NBC has your problems solved with hours of free streaming Olympic action.  You likely will not find Lindsey Vonn’s Downhill run streaming online, but you can find hours of curling and all the men’s ice hockey action.” – bleacherreport

Posted in - Video, Sports | Leave a Comment »

6000 Pages of Secret UFO files released from The National Archives

Posted by Xeno on February 19, 2010

images of ufo documentsThe files contain a wide range of UFO-related documents covering the years 1994-2000.

Find out more about close encounters, strange illnesses, flying ‘Toblerones’ and unidentified objects tracked on radar.

Start by reading our highlights guide (PDF, 254kb) to help you navigate your way

through the files.

Due to the large size of some of these files, we recommend you save them to your PC before opening them. Please right click on the links and select the ‘save’ option.

Previous file releases

The National Archives holds other UFO files that have already been released by the Ministry of Defence. You can download these in PDF format for a small fee. The files contain details of numerous UFO sightings.

Access existing UFO files

via UFO files | Newly released files from The National Archives.

Posted in UFOs | Leave a Comment »

Variations In One Gene May Be Associated With Endurance Running

Posted by Xeno on February 19, 2010

A few minor variations in one gene may make a difference in athletic endurance, according to a new study from Physiological Genomics.

The study found that elite endurance athletes were more likely to have variations of the NRF2 gene than elite sprinters. Non-elite endurance athletes were also more likely to have the genetic variations compared to sprinters, although the difference was not as pronounced.

The study shows an association between the gene variation and endurance, but does not establish a cause-effect relationship. Future studies are needed to unravel exactly what role the gene plays in athletic performance. The study is part of a larger body of research that is exploring the human genome and which aims to understand the genetic underpinnings of athletic performance.

Although the human genome is relatively uniform, there are variations among individuals. The researchers investigated the NRF2 gene because previous studies have shown that it may play a role in endurance performance because it:

*

helps produce new mitochondria, a key cellular structure that produces energy

*

reduces the harmful effects of oxidation and inflammation, which increase during exercise

“These findings suggest that harboring this specific genotype might increase the probability of being an endurance athlete,” said one of the authors, Nir Eynon of Wingate Institute in Israel. The study, “Interaction between SNPs in the NRF2 gene and elite endurance performance,” was carried out by Dr. Eynon, Alberto Jorge Alves, Moran Sagiv, Chen Yamin, Prof. Michael Sagiv and Dr. Yoav Meckel. All are at the Wingate Institute except for Alberto Alves, who is with the University of Porto in Portugal. The American Physiological Society (www.the-APS.org) published the study.

via Study Finds Variations In One Gene May Be Associated With Endurance Running.

Posted in Biology, Sports | Leave a Comment »

Defeating US Navy Acoustic Weapon with Foam and a Helmet

Posted by Xeno on February 19, 2010

YouTube – Jem v. the US Navy’s latest weapon – Bang Goes the Theory – BBC One.

Posted in - Video, Humor, Technology, War | Leave a Comment »

Inventor designs rockets made to look like giant box of crayons

Posted by Xeno on February 19, 2010

Lift-off: Mr Coker's rockets are launched, but only four of the eight actually take offThe wacky inventor stands proudly with his rocketsWork resumed in August 2004, and more than six years later, the project was finally completed.

He recently headed out to Nevada’s Black Rock desert to test them out.

Based on the small eight-pack of crayons, the three-and-a-half foot long rockets were launched from a box designed to look like the classic yellow and green Crayola box.

But, despite looking like child’s play, the mission was only a partial success with just four of the eight rockets blasting into the sky.

Inexplicably, the green, brown, yellow and orange crayons remained in the box.

Of the four rockets that went off, the violet crayon was found with a broken fin.The other three were found without major damage. …

via It’s dynamite! Inventor designs set of rockets made to look like giant box of crayons | Mail Online.

Posted in Strange | Leave a Comment »

Starship pilots: speed kills, especially warp speed

Posted by Xeno on February 19, 2010

http://coinapp.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/WarpSpeed.jpgStar Trek fans, prepare to be disappointed. Kirk, Spock and the rest of the crew would die within a second of the USS Enterprise approaching the speed of light.

The problem lies with Einstein’s special theory of relativity. It transforms the thin wisp of hydrogen gas that permeates interstellar space into an intense radiation beam that would kill humans within seconds and destroy the spacecraft’s electronic instruments.

Interstellar space is an empty place. For every cubic centimetre, there are fewer than two hydrogen atoms, on average, compared with 30 billion billion atoms of air here on Earth. But according to William Edelstein of the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore, Maryland, that sparse interstellar gas should worry the crew of a spaceship travelling close to the speed of light even more than Romulans decloaking off the starboard bow.

Special relativity describes how space and time are distorted for observers travelling at different speeds. For the crew of a spacecraft ramping up to light speed, interstellar space would appear highly compressed, thereby increasing the number of hydrogen atoms hitting the craft.

Death ray

Worse is that the atoms’ kinetic energy also increases. For a crew to make the 50,000-light-year journey to the centre of the Milky Way within 10 years, they would have to travel at 99.999998 per cent the speed of light. At these speeds, hydrogen atoms would seem to reach a staggering 7 teraelectron volts – the same energy that protons will eventually reach in the Large Hadron Collider when it runs at full throttle. “For the crew, it would be like standing in front of the LHC beam,” says Edelstein.

The spacecraft’s hull would provide little protection. Edelstein calculates that a 10-centimetre-thick layer of aluminium would absorb less than 1 per cent of the energy. Because hydrogen atoms have a proton for a nucleus, this leaves the crew exposed to dangerous ionising radiation that breaks chemical bonds and damages DNA. “Hydrogen atoms are unavoidable space mines,” says Edelstein.

The fatal dose of radiation for a human is 6 sieverts. Edelstein’s calculations show that the crew would receive a radiation dose of more than 10,000 sieverts within a second. Intense radiation would also weaken the structure of the spacecraft and damage its electronic instruments.

Edelstein speculates this might be one reason why extraterrestrial civilisations haven’t paid us a visit. Even if ET has mastered building a rocket that can travel at the speed of light, he may be lying dead inside a weakened craft whose navigation systems have short-circuited.

via Starship pilots: speed kills, especially warp speed – space – 16 February 2010 – New Scientist.

Posted in Physics, Space, Survival | 4 Comments »

 
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