Monthly Archives: May 2013

Twisted Nightmares now on Kindle for just 99 Cents!

Twisted Nightmares now on Kindle for just 99 Cents!  I definitely recommend you pick up a copy of this anthology of horror short stories and poems.  It is a steal at 99 cents and includes works from yours truly – Michael Bradley.  Edited by Andrew Terech.

http://www.amazon.com/Twisted-Nightmares-ebook/dp/B00CNWVXLI/ref=sr_1_16?ie=UTF8&qid=1367870457&sr=8-16&keywords=twisted+nightmares

T-Nightmares-Cover

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Pilots Take Nap; Have Attendants Fly Plane

Air India pilot reportedly left attendants to fly plane while he took a nap

Published May 05, 2013

FoxNews.com

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    Jan. 30, 2013: An Air India passenger plane takes off from Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel International Airport in the western Indian city of Ahmedabad, India. (Reuters)

An Air India pilot has been suspended after reportedly leaving the cockpit during a flight to take a nap in business class, leaving two female cabin attendants to man the controls.

The incident happened 33,000 feet in the sky on a 160-passenger flight from Bangkok to Delhi in April, The Telegraph reports.

A complaint said the plane’s co-pilot asked one of the plane’s attendants to take his seat while he disappeared for a bathroom break. Shortly thereafter, the pilot asked another attendant to do the same so he could catch up on his sleep.

Both pilots returned to the cockpit 40 minutes later after one of the attendants accidentally knocked off the plane’s auto-pilot switch, The Telegraph reports.

Air India investigated the reported incident and suspended the pilot and both attendants, but said Friday that passenger safety was never compromised.

The airline said in a statement that both pilots never left the cockpit. However, it confirmed that the auto-pilot switch was turned off, and said the two cabin attendants spent too much time in the front of the plane.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/world/2013/05/05/air-india-pilot-reportedly-left-attendants-to-fly-plane-while-took-nap/?test=latestnews#ixzz2SU966IdA

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Cute Dogs For Your Monday Blues

Cute dogs for your Monday Blues!  Enjoy!

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Thank You! Over 200,000 hits!

As of right now, my blog site received 201,600 plus hits!  As you regular followers know, I put a lot of work and love into posting one to three times a day with a peculiar mix of things I find interesting.  I am so happy that my weird interests are also often of interest to you as well.  I do not get any compensation or advertising dollars for the blog site, but I would appreciate you consider stopping by my store on occasion.  If you get a copy of The Travelers’ Club and The Ghost Ship, you can buy it on Kindle for just 99 cents, of which I keep 35 cents.  Obviously, not in that for the money either, I just want more readers.  Thank you for your ongoing support!

200000

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The Causes of the Disappearing Bees

Feds blame combination of parasite, virus, bacteria, pesticides for strange bee disappearance

Published May 05, 2013

Associated Press

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    May 2, 2013: A bee looks for a pollen laden flower in Kennewick, Wash. A new U.S. report blames a combination of problems for a mysterious and dramatic disappearance of honeybees across the country since 2006. (AP Photo/The Tri-City Herald, Richard Dickin)

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    Jeffery Pettis, a top bee scientist at the Agriculture Department’s Bee Research Laboratory, talks about his work with honeybees, in Beltsville, Md in 2007. (AP Photo/Haraz N. Ghanbari)

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    A new federal report blames a combination of problems for a mysterious and dramatic disappearance of U.S. honeybees since 2006. The factors cited include a parasitic mite, multiple viruses, bacteria, poor nutrition and pesticides. Experts say having so many causes makes it harder to do something about what’s called colony collapse disorder. The disorder has caused as much as one-third of the nation’s bees to just disappear over the winter each year since 2006. (AP Photo/Haraz N. Ghanbari)

A new federal report blames a combination of problems for a mysterious and dramatic disappearance of U.S. honeybees since 2006.
The intertwined factors cited include a parasitic mite, multiple viruses, bacteria, poor nutrition, genetics, habitat loss and pesticides.

The multiple causes make it harder to do something about what’s called colony collapse disorder, experts say. The disorder has caused as much as one-third of the nation’s bees to just disappear each winter since 2006.

Bees, especially honeybees, are needed to pollinate crops.

The federal report, issued Thursday by the Agriculture Department and the Environmental Protection Agency, said the biggest culprit is the parasitic mite varroa destructor, calling it “the single most detrimental pest of honeybees.”

The problem has also hit bee colonies in Europe, where regulators are considering a ban on a type of pesticides known as neonicotinoids that some environmental groups blame for the bee collapse. The U.S. report cites pesticides, but near the bottom of the list of factors. And federal officials and researchers advising them said the science doesn’t justify a ban of the pesticides yet.

May Berenbaum, a top bee researcher from the University of Illinois, said in an interview that she was “extremely dubious” that banning the pesticide would have any effect on bee health. She participated in a large conference of scientists that the government brought together last year to figure out what’s going on, and the new report is the result of that conference.

Berenbaum said more than 100 different chemicals – not just the pesticides that may be banned in Europe – have been found in bee colonies. Scientists find it hard to calculate how they react in different dosages and at different combinations, she said.

Some of these chemicals harm the immune systems of bees or amplify viruses, said Penn State University bee expert Diana Cox-Foster.

At a news conference Thursday, Sonny Ramaswamy, a top USDA official, said the scientific consensus is that there are multiple factors “and you can’t parse any one out to be the smoking gun.”

USDA bee researcher Jeff Pettis also cited modern farming practices that often leave little forage area for bees.

Dave Gaulson of the University of Stirling in Scotland, who conducted a study last year that implicated the chemical, said he can’t disagree with the overall conclusions of the U.S. government report. However, he said it could have emphasized pesticides more.

The environmental group, Pesticide Action Network North America blasted the federal government for not following Europe’s lead in looking at a ban of certain pesticides.

Pollinators, like honeybees, are crucial to the U.S. food supply. About $30 billion a year in agriculture depends on their health, said Ramaswamy.

Besides making honey, honeybees pollinate more than 90 flowering crops. Among them are a variety of fruits and vegetables: apples, nuts, avocados, soybeans, asparagus, broccoli, citrus fruit and cranberries. About one-third of the human diet comes from insect-pollinated plants, and the honeybee is responsible for 80 percent of that pollination.

“It affects virtually every American whether they realize it or not,” said EPA acting administrator Bob Perciasepe.

Zac Browning, a fourth-generation commercial beekeeper who has hives in Idaho, North Dakota and California, said the nation is “on the brink” of not having enough bees to pollinate its crops.

University of Maryland entomologist David Inouye, who was not part of the federal report, said he agrees that there are multiple causes.

“It’s not a simple situation. If it were one factor we would have identified it by now,” he said.

Inouye, president-elect of the Ecological Society of America, said the problems in Europe and United States may be slightly different. In America, bee hives are trucked from farm to farm to pollinate large tracts of land and that may help spread the parasites and disease, as well as add stress to the colonies, while in Europe they stay put so those issues may not be as big a factor.

At the news conference, Berenbaum said there’s no single solution to the U.S. bee problem: “We’re not really well equipped or even used to fighting on multiple fronts.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/science/2013/05/05/feds-blame-combination-parasite-virus-bacteria-pesticides-for-strange-bee/?intcmp=features#ixzz2SQlUIKuZ

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1820 Clockwork Caterpillar

1820:Mechanical Robot Caterpillar

“Made by Swiss watchmaker Henri Maillardet for sale to aristocratic Chinese buyers. The gold, enamel, jewel and pearl-set automaton mimics the caterpillar’s crawl with a clockwork powered mechanism which drives a pair of gilt-metal knurled wheels. 

“It was titled ‘the Ethiopian caterpillar’ when Maillardet, in partnership with watchmaker Jaquet Droz, organized an exhibition to show off his miniaturised automata in London.”

– Daily Mail

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Fly-sized robot takes first flight

Fly-sized robot takes first flight

By Jillian Scharr

Published May 03, 2013

TechNewsDaily

  • RoboticInsect

    The RoboBee is the smallest flight-capable robot to date. (Kevin Ma and Pakpong Chirarattananon, Harvard University.)

Flies have tiny wings and even tinier brains, yet they are capable of flying swiftly and agilely through even turbulent air. How do they do it?

And could we create a robot capable of doing the same?

That’s the question that’s been buzzing around Harvard professor Robert Wood’s head for 12 years now. And finally, after years of testing and the invention of an all-new manufacturing technique inspired by children’s pop-up books, Wood and his team at the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard University have created a robot the size of a penny that is capable of remote-controlled flight. 

‘Large robots can run on electromagnetic motors, but at this small scale, you have to come up with an alternative.’

– Kevin Ma, a graduate student at Harvard’s School of Engineering and Applied Sciences 

You’d think that the smaller something is, the easier it’d be to make. But there’s a point at which making things smaller becomes harder rather than easier, which is why making a functional fly-sized robot has proved such a challenge.

The so-called RoboBee flaps its wings approximately 120 times per second, almost faster than the eye can track, and is capable of hovering and flying horizontally in multiple directions like a helicopter.

At 80 milligrams, which is less than one-twentieth the weight of a dime, the robot is so small that traditional components of flight-capable machines simply wouldn’t work, so the team had to create new ones.

“Large robots can run on electromagnetic motors, but at this small scale, you have to come up with an alternative, and there wasn’t one,” Kevin Ma, a co-lead author and graduate student at Harvard’s School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, said in a statement.

In place of electromagnetic motors, the team used ceramic strips that can expand or contract when hit with an electric field, a technique known as piezoelectricity. 

The problem of building these parts at a fly-sized scale was also an enormous obstacle. For example, the robot has no onboard power source — instead, it receives electricity via a thin wire connected to an external battery.

To build the other parts, the team looked for inspiration not from the natural world, but from children’s pop-up books and origami.

Their solution is a groundbreaking technique that involves layering and folding sheets of carbon fiber, brass, ceramic and other materials, and then using extremely precise lasers to cut these sheets into structures and circuits. After that, the sheets can be assembled into extremely small but entirely functional devices in a single movement, just like a children’s pop-up book.    

Wood and his team devised the pop-up technique in 2011, publishing a paper on it in February 2012. And last summer, after years of failed prototypes, the first RoboBee took flight in a Harvard robotics lab at 3 a.m.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/tech/2013/05/03/fly-sized-robot-takes-first-flight/?intcmp=trending#ixzz2SN5zkDo9

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Vadering

Vadering is a new photo fad where you use Vader skills and document them.  These include force chokes, force pushes, and even dark side lightning.  Enjoy!

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Star Wars Universal Holiday – May the Fourth (be with you)!

If you see a lot of Star Wars references today on social media and don’t know why – it is May the Fourth, Be With You Day.  The annual celebration of all things Star Wars.  As a result, I will make a few Star Wars posts today in homage to the very cool books and movies, of which sadly, I believe my personal collection includes every book, every movie, and an alarming number of miniatures and toys, still in their original boxes.

Having grown up poor, Star Wars was only the second movie I had ever seen at a theater.  My first was The Sting with Robert Redford and Paul Newman.  You have to understand that prior to Star Wars, you either had spaceships hanging from strings, or people in monster suits in sci-fi films.  When I sat there with my friend Mark Tunnell watching the movie, we saw the star battle in space with lasers, the shiny robots, Darth Vader boarding the ship…   We just looked at each other with open eyes, faces full of awe, and both thought – Oh my!  This is something totally awesome!

Here is the first Star Wars Post, a Skywalker family tree, and the women in Annakin and Luke’s life:

Skywalker-Family-Tree_NJO

 

 

L-R. Padme Amidala, Annakin's wife, Luke's mom;  Princess Leia Organa, Annakin's Daughter, Luke's Sister; Mara Jade, Annakin's former employee, future daughter-in-law, Luke's wife, mother of Annakin, future grandson of first Annakin.

L-R. Padme Amidala, Annakin’s wife, Luke’s mom; Princess Leia Organa, Annakin’s Daughter, Luke’s Sister; Mara Jade, Annakin’s former employee, future daughter-in-law, Luke’s wife, mother of Annakin, future grandson of first Annakin.

 

 

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1874 – Cincinnati Public Library – Impressive!

Today, we have that many books available on our phone through Kindle.  Makes you think what the next hundred years will bring.  As an author, I hope future generations care about reading as much as those in Cincinnati obviously did in 1874.

1874:

Interior of the Public Library of Cincinnati

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