Thursday, November 27, 2008
Monday, November 24, 2008
Morning Snow
TED Talk: Design of the Universe
It has to do with how scientists have been able to piece together what the known universe looks like based on observations from right here on Earth.
He provides some interesting data about dark matter and how clusters of galaxies tend to clump together due to the effects of gravity and dark matter over the course of billions of years. He sites data taken from the WMAP satellite and talks about the new Planck satellite that is due to launch later this (or next?) year.
Oh and I didn't realize that the Milky Way Galaxy is somewhat alone in the universe, or more aptly described, it isn't surrounded by large clumps of galaxies like much of the rest of the observable universe- but I'll let him describe that as he does a much better job.
Sunday, November 23, 2008
South Park Sunset
Saturday, November 22, 2008
False Alarm!
It actually turns out the test was negative, soooo yeah. No baby today!
80% chance of having a baby today?
Chances are we'll be delivering in Green Bay if the baby hasn't dropped yet.
Friday, November 21, 2008
PC's new book
You might want to take John Hodgman's new book, "More Information Than You Require," with a grain of salt. Or maybe the whole shaker.
Like its predecessor, "The Areas of My Expertise," Hodgman's latest is an almanac-style compendium of facts ranging from the historical to the trivial. Except it's largely bogus, often completely made up and delightfully absurd.CNN:Why did you decide to do a second book?
John Hodgman: My first book was called "The Areas of My Expertise," and like my new book, it was a collection of fascinating trivia and historical oddities and amazing true facts -- with the advantage that all the amazing true facts were made up by me.
I really wanted to write the second book, "More Information Than You Require," because [with] the first book of fake facts [being] only 236 pages long, people might think that I was a sane person. By adding an additional 300 pages to the total world knowledge count, I now look completely insane.
CNN: How do you go about researching your book?
Hodgman: I compile it by not doing any. My research generally involves me sitting down and thinking of all the half-truths and common misperceptions I've picked up along the way, and then I'll supplement that with a little bit of surfing the Internet, which is my favorite repository of dubious scholarship, and then I fuse that into the kind of world-complete knowledge that only my book can provide -- unresearched, largely fictional and entirely true.
CNN: Your book contains some interesting information about the electoral process, for instance.
Hodgman: It is that time of year that we pretend to vote for a president -- and I say "pretend" because, of course, we cast our ballots and create the popular vote and then all of those ballots are taken to a vault in upstate New York and hidden away and never looked at again. And then it goes to the Electoral College.
Now the Electoral College is a beautiful college in upstate New York. A lot of people have visited its campus. The town of Electoral is not much to speak of, I have to say.
CNN:And in your book we learn some strange but "true" things about America's presidents, including Woodrow Wilson.
Hodgman: Yes, Wilson was incapacitated after he had a stroke, so they had to put him in a special "stroke box," and from that time on, his wife really acted as the de facto president. That's why he was given the nickname "The President Who Is Secretly a Lady," and lots of people thought she was running interference and making all the decisions, and from time to time, they would say "Look, we need to see the president."
He was locked away in a closet, and she would bring him out, and even then they were suspicious -- they thought he might be a ventriloquist dummy shaped as Woodrow Wilson. But she had them tricked -- it was ventriloquist dummy made entirely out of Woodrow Wilson.
HAHAHAH!!!!!
Tuesday, November 18, 2008
Its happened...
It snowed yesterday briefly, and although it was brief, the snow hasn't melted completely. First signs of winter are finally here.
Time to get out the shovels... (and snow blowers for you luckier ppl)
Dev strikes it rich with iPhone game
http://www.cnn.com/2008/TECH/11/18/iphone.game.developer/index.html
Makes me feel all warm and fuzzy inside...
Monday, November 17, 2008
Another Update
I have to send out a huge thanks to my family for all their love and support in all of this. My mom and sister took Isabella for a few hours on Saturday that really helped, and my dad has been awesome helping me with various projects around the house.
We're lucky to have the family and friends we do. Anyways, I hope everyone can enjoy their day today. The sun was out this morning which was super refreshing (and still no snow- so woot!)
Thursday, November 13, 2008
Prego Update
She's had these confounded things for about 7 weeks now, I don't know how she does it... Anyways, she's at the hospital now, and I'm sitting here missing her! Isabella and I brought her dinner and watched Finding Nemo for about an hour and a half before we left for home, so she had some company tonight at least...
As much as I love my little girl, and love the idea of having another child.... I don't think I'll ever put Ashley through this again. Looking forward to when Braden is born and she can be comfortable again!
You're a trooper Ash, I love you!
Wednesday, November 12, 2008
Solar Panels get efficiency boost
Pretty neat article. My hope is that in the near future, all homes will have the option of placing solar panels on their roofs, thereby generating their own power. It would surely revolutionize the way we produce power...
Tuesday, November 11, 2008
Congratulations Paul & Stacey!
Phoenix Lander goes silent
Well, looks like the Phoenix rover has died due to the harsh Martian winter, just as was predicted. NASA knew they only had a small window with which to actually use the rover before winter set in and cut off the lander's solar power source, and today they issued a statement declaring the mission officially over.
Maybe next summer the rover will again become functional, but that is highly unlikely to happen.
Space: Who Knew, #12
Last post
Today's rant will be on Absolute Zero.
So what is Absolute Zero anyways? If we were to convert it to Fahrenheit, the Absolute Zero wouldn't be zero at all- it'd be a staggering -459.67 degrees. Nor would it be zero if we converted it to Celsius, Absolute Zero would still be -273.15 degrees. Now that's somewhat chilly!
So in what system is Absolute Zero actually equal to zero? That would be the Kelvin scale. It is defined more precisely as "the theoretical absence of all thermal energy". That means that on the molecular level, all atomic movement slows. As the temperature drops closer to absolute zero, atoms and even light, or the particles that make up light (the photon) behave different than at higher temperatures.
You'd think that the outer reaches of space might grow this cold, but in reality, the closest we humans have cataloged to absolute zero thus far is 1 degree K, recorded in the Boomerang Nebula:
In February 2003, the Boomerang Nebula, was found to be −272.15 °C; 1 K, the coldest place known outside a laboratory. The nebula is 5,000 light-years from Earth and is in the constellation Centaurus.[7]And actually, scientists have been able to push temperatures down far closer to absolute zero (but can never feasibly reach absolute zero) in the lab than has ever been observed in space. At these temperatures even light behaves differently, check it out:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Absolute_zero
The speed of light, as we've all heard, is a constant: 186,171 miles per second in a vacuum. But it is different in the real world, outside a vacuum; for instance, light not only bends but also slows ever so slightly when it passes through glass or water. Still, that's nothing compared with what happens when Hau shines a laser beam of light into a BEC: it's like hurling a baseball into a pillow. "First, we got the speed down to that of a bicycle," Hau says. "Now it's at a crawl, and we can actually stop it—keep light bottled up entirely inside the BEC, look at it, play with it and then release it when we're ready."What an amazing concept...
http://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/12359501.html
So what does all this really have to do with space? Well, I recently read Michio Kaku's book "Parallel Worlds", and am currently chewing through Brian Green's "The Elegant Universe". In Parallel Worlds, he speaks a little about what our universe looks like, and the properties it exhibits. Scientists widely believe that the universe is still expanding, but many hypothesized that the expansion was slowing. Recent studies have shown that the data suggests otherwise- the expansion of the universe is actually speeding up.
From the moment of the big bang, the universe, like the outside of a balloon, seems to be expanding. Just as if you were inflating the balloon. He talked a little about what would happen if the expansion kept going, pushing our galaxy, and our solar system further away from the known cosmos. He called it the Big Freeze I believe:
The idea of heat death stems from the second law of thermodynamics, which states that entropy tends to increase in an isolated system. If the universe lasts for a sufficient time, it will asymptotically approach a state where all energy is evenly distributed. In other words, in nature there is a tendency to the dissipation (energy loss) of mechanical energy (motion); hence, by extrapolation, there exists the view that the mechanical movement of the universe will run down in time due to the second law.So anyways, theres no real need to fret, because as Sir Martin Rees so elequently puts it in his TED talk: "...by that time... human beings will look nothing like they do now..."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Freeze
Who knew???
Monday, November 10, 2008
Isabella-isms
I give it a 10 on the cuteometer
The other funny one that I can think of is when we go to the hospital with Isabella (or any place that has an elevator for that matter), when we use the elevator, we've gotten into the habit of calling it the "Bellavator".
Nice.
Friday, November 7, 2008
Ascension update
We've recently set some major benchmarks and have locked down a schedule, and are planning for a beta release during the summer of next year. It's so awesome seeing how far we've come on the game to this point, but also, looking forward we realize just how much is left to go. It's exhilarating and scary at the same time!
We're lucky to have the team members we do- everyone is so enthusiastic and they're all giving it so much attention. Keep your eyes peeled, we'll have more to update as time pushes ever on.
News: Snow storm drops 4 feet
http://www.cnn.com/2008/US/weather/11/06/wintry.weather.ap/index.html
Thats ALOT of snow!
Thursday, November 6, 2008
Wednesday, November 5, 2008
Hackers and Spending Sprees
http://www.newsweek.com/id/167581/page/1
This is somewhat shocking, though I can't say that I didn't see it coming:
NEWSWEEK has also learned that Palin's shopping spree at high-end department stores was more extensive than previously reported. While publicly supporting Palin, McCain's top advisers privately fumed at what they regarded as her outrageous profligacy. One senior aide said that Nicolle Wallace had told Palin to buy three suits for the convention and hire a stylist. But instead, the vice presidential nominee began buying for herself and her family—clothes and accessories from top stores such as Saks Fifth Avenue and Neiman Marcus. According to two knowledgeable sources, a vast majority of the clothes were bought by a wealthy donor, who was shocked when he got the bill. Palin also used low-level staffers to buy some of the clothes on their credit cards. The McCain campaign found out last week when the aides sought reimbursement. One aide estimated that she spent "tens of thousands" more than the reported $150,000, and that $20,000 to $40,000 went to buy clothes for her husband. Some articles of clothing have apparently been lost. An angry aide characterized the shopping spree as "Wasilla hillbillies looting Neiman Marcus from coast to coast," and said the truth will eventually come out when the Republican Party audits its books.
Also... a candid Obama moment on page 2, made me laugh.
TED Talk: The Power of Glamour
Tuesday, November 4, 2008
Ramble: Election day in America
We're finally to that day where we know tomorrow we won't receive 10+ phone calls from the republican party pleading for us to cast our vote for that "maverick" McCain for president.
I hope all of you who read this, today and any day after, can say that today you cast your vote. In times such as these, it is so imperative that we don't take our freedoms for granted. This year's election is perhaps the single largest political event in my life to date. My hope is that in 30 years, I can look back on this time in our country's history and proclaim: "I was there. I was part of that."
It's no secret that my family supports Obama, our prayer is that the Obama/Biden team can step up and fulfill the plans that they have laid out. We'll be watching today, as American's flood in to the polls, eager to participate in the 2008 election.
And we'll be watching tomorrow, as I hope, will all of you.
One other thing- thank GOD for absentee ballots. We waited a whole of 5 minutes when we cast our vote two weeks ago...
How old are you?
Needless to say, it was a chance to work off some of her energy before lunch. So Isabella and I did that for about an hour, and then we ran home and had lunch.
Now, some of you parents know that kids say the silliest things. Isabella caught us by surprise today when we were talking about how old she was. Let's recount the tale....
Dad: "Yeah, daddy's 28 years old. How old is mommy?"All three of us bust into laughter. It wasn't that she just called me old. It was that she called me old with so much enthusiasm, as to say- haha Bella's silly (and right, no need to argue). She preceded to stand by her statement for the next twenty minutes, trying to make her case that indeed... daddy is old.
Mom: "Mom is 26 years old, how old is Bella?"
Bella points to each: "Bella, two.. Daddy three, mommy three"
Dad & Mom laughing: "Nooo silly!"
Dad: "How many years is daddy?"
Bella: "Daddy oOoOold."
I think she's right!