bob

bob
From bikinis to burkas - The Globe and Mail - http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news...
"As hundreds of thousands of migrant Yemeni workers in Saudi Arabia and neighbouring Gulf countries were expelled in retaliation, many of them settled in Sanaa. A small capital city in an impoverished country, already ill equipped to serve its citizens, it cracked under the pressure. Streets teemed with the unemployed, particularly young men, many of whom succumbed to the Wahabi brand of Islam that the exiled workers had picked up in Saudi Arabia and brought back. At the co-ed Sanaa University, female students began to complain about harassment from repatriated Yemenis who blamed women's education for the fast-rising unemployment. I don't recall seeing a single beggar in Sanaa during the early 1980s. Now, they stood at virtually every street corner. That medieval but safe city was now gritty – and still medieval. I paid a visit to my family in the spring of 1992, my first in almost six years, and was shocked to see how just a few years changed us both so dramatically. There was a defeatist quality to their lives, while mine had hopes of a better future. My sisters seemed especially dispirited. Four of them worked for a living, but although their jobs gave them some economic independence, their lives remained limited. Beyond their commute to work, they rarely ventured anywhere other than grocery or clothing stores...Under his watch, Yemen has gone from a poor country to the most destitute in the Arab world. He fortified his stronghold on the country's larger cities in the north (Sanaa, Taiz, Houdeida), but lost control of the vast tribal terrains outside them. The result is a political culture where the cities are riddled with government red tape, while everywhere else is virtually lawless. " - bob
"One photograph from April, 2006, particularly infuriates me. My family's penchant for group photos never wavers, but this time my eldest brother voices his concern about my sisters being photographed in their “indoor” clothes. “What if the men who work at the photo-developing shop get to see your sisters in short sleeves or without a head scarf?” he asks, as if it's something I should have thought about myself. This is the same brother who is standing behind me in that 1975 picture I love so much. My sisters immediately see his point. I'm stunned. We reach a compromise. I can pose with my sisters and mother if they wear the hijab , or at least long sleeves and skirts. I fake a smile as my heart breaks. The last thing I want is an argument on my last night in Sanaa. " - bob
Sounds familiar: "Collectively they have become television addicts. Satellite TV, featuring hundreds of channels from the Arab world and beyond, has taken over from reading and socializing as the main form of entertainment. Why? Because among the many channels you can watch are the more Islamist ones (Hezbollah's Manar TV, for example) that promote a rigid version of the faith. By the time I visited Sanaa again in 2006, anti-Western and pro-Islamist sympathies intruded on virtually every conversation with friends, neighbours and family. The presence of al-Qaeda is never spoken of as positive, but it's not challenged or condemned either. The real danger is the tacit acceptance – an acceptance that has been building slowly for more than two decades and has claimed even progressive families like mine." - Paul Buchheit
bob
Supercooling - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki...
"Pure water normally freezes at 273.15 K (0 °C or 32 °F) but it can also be "supercooled" at standard pressure down to its crystal homogeneous nucleation at almost 231 K (−42 °C).[1] If cooled at a rate on the order of 10^6 K/s, the crystal nucleation can be avoided and water becomes a glass. Its glass transition temperature is much colder and harder to determine, but studies estimate it at about 165 K (−108 °C).[2] Glassy water can be heated up to approximately 150 K (−123 °C)" - bob
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YouTube - Amazing Technology.... - http://www.youtube.com/watch...
table saw brake, high speed safety device, pretty cool actually - bob
bob
the crackle ... of pig skin
bob
Comet eaten up as it orbits too close to the sun | Mail Online - http://www.dailymail.co.uk/science...
"The space agency's solar-focused agency - Solar and Helioscopic Observatory (SOHO) - captured footage of the Kreutz Sungrazer as it made its fateful approach." - bob
bob
Hundreds of cars torched in France at New Year | Reuters - http://www.reuters.com/article...
"Youths burned 1,137 cars across France overnight as New Year's Eve celebrations once again turned violent, the French Interior Ministry said on Friday....Car burnings are regular occurrences in poor suburbs that ring France's big cities, but the arson is especially prevalent during New Year's Eve revelry. The number of vehicles torched was only 10 short of the record 1,147 burned this time last year, even though the Interior Ministry mobilized 45,000 police during the night -- 10,000 more than 12 months ago." - bob
Catholic School Girls? - Alex Scrivener
bob
You're doing it wrong! Chinese demolition men accidentally create the leaning tower of Liuzhou | Mail Online - http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news...
bob
Don't Mess with Yemen | World | AlterNet - http://www.alternet.org/world...
"Yemen has always been a dangerous place. Wonderfully beautiful, the mountainous north of the country is guerrilla paradise. The Yemenis are exceptionally hospitable, though this has its limits. For instance, the Kazam tribe east of Aden are generous to passing strangers, but deem the laws of hospitality to lapse when the stranger leaves their tribal territory, at which time he becomes "a good back to shoot at"." - bob
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Flight 253 passenger Kurt Haskell: 'I was visited by the FBI' | Detroit News - - MLive.com - http://www.mlive.com/news...
"Ever since I got off of Flight 253 I have been repeating what I saw in US Customs. Specifically, 1 hour after we left the plane, bomb sniffing dogs arrived. Up to this point, all of the passengers on Flight 253 stood in a small area in an evacuated luggage claim area of an airport terminal. During this time period, all of the passengers had their carry on bags with them. When the bomb sniffing dogs arrived, 1 dog found something in a carry on bag of a 30 ish Indian man. This is not the so called "Sharp Dressed" man. I will refer to this man as "The man in orange". The man in orange, who stood some 20ft away from me the entire time until he was taken away, was immediately taken away to be searched and interrogated in a nearby room. At this time he was not handcuffed. When he emerged from the room, he was then handcuffed and taken away. At this time an FBI agent came up to the rest of the passengers and said the following (approximate quote) "You all are being moved to another area because this area is not safe. I am sure many of you saw what just happened (Referring to the man in orange) and are smart enough to read between the lines and figure it out." We were then marched out of the baggage claim area and into a long hallway." - bob
"I ask, isn't this the more plausible story: 1. Customs/FBI realized that they screwed up and don't want to admit that they left flight 253 passengers on a flight with a live bomb on the runway for 20 minutes. 2. Customs/FBI realized that they screwed up and don't want to admit that they left flight 253 passengers in customs for 1 hour with a live bomb in a carry on bag. 3. Customs/FBI realize that the man in orange points to a greater involvement then the lone wolf theory that they have been promoting. Mr. Ron Smith I encourage you to come out of your cubicle and come up with a more plausible version number 4 of your story."" - bob
bob
No rise of atmospheric carbon dioxide fraction in past 160 years, new research finds - http://www.sciencedaily.com/release...
"Most of the carbon dioxide emitted by human activity does not remain in the atmosphere, but is instead absorbed by the oceans and terrestrial ecosystems. In fact, only about 45 percent of emitted carbon dioxide stays in the atmosphere....To assess whether the airborne fraction is indeed increasing, Wolfgang Knorr of the Department of Earth Sciences at the University of Bristol reanalyzed available atmospheric carbon dioxide and emissions data since 1850 and considers the uncertainties in the data. In contradiction to some recent studies, he finds that the airborne fraction of carbon dioxide has not increased either during the past 150 years or during the most recent five decades." - bob
Good luck with that sobriety thing... I'm hanging at home tonight, still recovering from a couple of days partying with my brother-in-law, who's ~10 years younger, and with a commensurately higher tolerance :) - Joel Webber
bob
Woman's blood alcohol content topples state records - http://www.rapidcityjournal.com/news...
"A Sturgis woman had a blood-alcohol level of .708 percent, possibly a state record, when she was found earlier this month behind the wheel of a stolen vehicle parked on Interstate 90, according to Meade County State’s Attorney Jesse Sondreal. A South Dakota Highway Patrol trooper discovered Marguerite Engle, 45, on Dec. 1 passed out behind the wheel of a delivery truck reported stolen in Rapid City. Her blood-alcohol level was almost nine times South Dakota’s legal limit of .08 percent. Checks with local and state labs where blood-alcohol levels are tested suggest Engle’s reading may be the highest ever recorded in South Dakota, Sondreal said. Sondreal said a state chemist recalled a sample that tested .53, but nothing higher, in his more than 30 years on the job. Dr. Robert Looyenga, who recently retired from the Rapid City Police Department’s forensic laboratory, told Sondreal that the highest blood-alcohol sample he tested measured .56 percent. Sondreal’s research indicates that a blood-alcohol level of .40 is considered a lethal dose for about 50 percent of the population." - bob
I wonder how long it would actually take to get that out of their system, particularly if their livers are already fried. - Victor Ganata
bob
FT.com / Technology - Secret mobile phone code cracked - http://www.ft.com/cms...
"Computer hackers this week said they had cracked and published the secret code that protects 80 per cent of the world’s mobile phones. The move will leave more than 3bn people vulnerable to having their calls intercepted, and could force mobile phone operators into a costly upgrade of their networks....“A year ago it would have required equipment costing hundreds of thousands of dollars, and serious expertise to listen in to a call,” said Simon Bransfield-Garth, chief executive of Cellcrypt, a mobile phone encryption company. “Today it is going to require $1,500 of network equipment and a computer. It is getting down to a mainstream price tag and moving to the point when it will be straightforward to do,” he continued." - bob
by "intercept" do they mean: "listen to" or "have routed to a different mobile phone"? If it's the former, I don't really care if any listens to me ask my wife if she needs anything from the Grocery store. If it's the later, that would just be annoying. I could see how many people in positions of power or wealth would be very concerned about either. - no name
They mean "listen to". They're talking about cryptanalysis of A5/1, a cipher used to protect GSM (non 3G) voice call privacy. It was always a weak (DES grade) cipher, developed in secret and weakened for political reasons. If you are very concerned with privacy, use your own encryption, not off the shelf GSM phones. - ⓞnor
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The Diamondhead Crater in Oahu, Hawaii, - http://pixdaus.com/single...
I know a guy who was born a little left of the lower left corner area of that pic - Josh Haley
Wow! - Kol Tregaskes
bob
How the brain encodes memories at a cellular level - http://www.sciencedaily.com/release...
"The production of new proteins can only occur when the RNA that will make the required proteins is turned on. Until then, the RNA is "locked up" by a silencing molecule, which is a micro RNA. The RNA and micro RNA are part of a package that includes several other proteins...When synapses got activated, one of the proteins wrapped around that silencing complex gets degraded." When the signal comes in, the wrapping protein degrades or gets fragmented. Then the RNA is suddenly free to synthesize a new protein." - bob
bob
Russian nuclear missile test fails, visible in Norway | Reuters - http://www.reuters.com/article...
"The submarine-based Bulava (Mace) missile has been billed as Russia's newest technological breakthrough to support its nuclear deterrent, but the repeated test failures are an embarrassment for the Kremlin. The missile failed in its 13th test on Wednesday morning, Russia's leading economic dailies Vedomosti and Kommersant reported on Thursday, quoting sources in the military-industrial complex. Hours later, the Defense Ministry admitted the failure, saying the launch had been made by the Dmitry Donskoi nuclear submarine from a submerged position in the White Sea. "It has been established ... that the missile's first two stages worked as normal, but there was a technical malfunction at the next, third, stage of the trajectory," a Defense Ministry spokesman said." - bob
bob
YouTube - Pope Benedict XVI taken down - Le Pape Benoît XVI agressé - http://www.youtube.com/watch...
bob
Plane overshoots Jamaica runway; more than 40 hurt - http://www.breitbart.com/article...
"KINGSTON, Jamaica (AP) - An American Airlines flight carrying 154 people skidded across a Jamaican runway in heavy rain, bouncing across the tarmac and injuring more than 40 people before it stopped just short of the Caribbean Sea, officials and witnesses said. Panicked passengers screamed and baggage burst from overhead bins as Flight 331 from Miami careened down the runway in the capital, Kingston, on Tuesday night, one passenger said. The impact cracked open the fuselage, crushed the left landing gear and separated both engines from the Boeing 737-800, airline spokesman Tim Smith said." - bob
http://aviation-safety.net/photos... roadside bank looks brutal - Thomas Page
bob
Philippine volcano on verge of eruption as lava spills down mountain... but villagers are refusing to leave | Mail Online - http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news...
"A rumbling volcano in the Philippines was on the verge of a major eruption today – but thousands of villagers living on its slopes are refusing to leave their homes. Already, 40,000 people have fled the no-go zone around Mount Mayon, which oozed crimson lava during eerie scenes captured last night. But around 3,000 residents, mostly farmers, remain – with some even returning after being evacuated up to three times by authorities." - bob
Get your lava spoon ready! - April Buchheit
Mordor? - Amit Patel
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Celebritology - Brittany Murphy dead at 32 - http://voices.washingtonpost.com/celebri...
"An ambulance was called to the home of Murphy's husband, screenwriter Simon Monjack, following a 911 call. According to the Los Angeles Times, the LAPD has opened an official investigation into the circumstances surrounding Murphy's death. " - bob
bob
Mt Washington Observatory, New Hampshire - http://pixdaus.com/single...
uh oh - j1m
holy moly - Chieze Okoye
bob
Apple Gestapo: How Apple Hunts Down Leaks - Apple Worldwide Loyalty Team - Gizmodo - http://gizmodo.com/5427058...
"The operation, as Tom calls it, is not anything special. It is not one of a kind event. It's just a normal practice, and the process is pretty simple: The manager will instruct all employees to stay at their desks, telling them what to do and what to expect at any given time. The Apple Gestapo never handles the communication. They are there, present, supervising the supervisors, making sure everything goes as planned. All cellphones are then taken. Usually, they collect them all at the same time, which means that the process could take a long time. If you need to contact the exterior during the time your cellphone is under examination, you will have to ask for permission, and your call will be monitored. They don't ask for cameras because there are no cameras at Apple: Employees are not allowed to get into the campus with them. If the cellphone is an iPhone, it gets backed up onto a laptop. "In fact, at the beginning they used to say that the iPhones were really their property, since Apple gave every employee a free iPhone," he points out. All the employees are asked to unlock and disable any locking features in their cellphones, and then the special forces will proceed to check them for recent activity. They back up everything and go through all the other phones' text messages and pictures. If you have porn in your phone, they will see it. If you have text messages to your spouse, lover, or Tiger Woods, they will see them, too. Just like that. No privacy, no limits." - bob
I dunno. Knowing how much pure drivel the tech "media" publish, I have trouble believing this is true. - EricaJoy
bob
Why Are Europeans White? (E1) - a knol by Frank W Sweet - http://knol.google.com/k...
"Too much UV penetrating the skin (too pale-skinned under intense sunlight) increases Vitamin D but reduces folate. Lack of folate causes neural tube defects in the fetus, causing such congenital abnormalities as craniorachischisis, anencephalus, and spina bifida, leading to many miscarriages. On the other hand, too little UV penetrating the skin (too dark-skinned under dim sunlight) increases folate but reduces vitamin D. Lack of vitamin D causes skeletal neonatal abnormalities (skull, chest, and leg malformations), rickets being the best known. Again, this causes miscarriages. And so, humans adapt very quickly to solar UV. Prehistoric groups that migrated towards the equator got darker. Prehistoric groups that migrated away from the equator got lighter. But this explanation fails for Europe. Northern Europeans are lighter than everyone to the south (Mediterraneans), to the east (Mongols and east-Asians), to the west (Native Americans across the Atlantic), and to the North (Inuit, Sammi, Chukchi, Aleut)....When the inhabitants of this region switched to grain about 6 KYA, they suddenly got insufficient vitamin D to survive. They had stopped eating mostly meat and fish in a place where sunlight was too dim to produce vitamin D in normally pigmented skin." - bob
I found this article very interesting, and well written to boot. - Will Higgins™
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looks nice
From the thumbnail I thought that was computer generated. Where is that? - Ryan Moulton
That's actually Palau: http://images.google.com/images... Known recently for being the setting for a Survivor season. - Mark Trapp
bob
YouTube - Process of burning a diamond - http://www.youtube.com/watch...
in liquid oxygen - bob
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let me show you the world in my eyes
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Great shot! - Seth