Monthly Archives: November 2012

Cherie Priest At the Poisoned Pen Tonight

I met Cherie Priest at Phoenix Comic Con 2010.  I did not know who she was.  My hip was hurting, which I later found out was the bone dying (replaced this spring), and her and I noticed two open comfy chairs.  If you have been to Phoenix Comic Con, you know there are 50,000 people and maybe ten chairs.  So we sat and chatted.  She was very nice and told me she had to head to a panel, I said the same.  Turns out we were heading to the same one, her as a panelist, having had her best-selling novel Boneshaker become popular, and I as an audience member, considering retiring to write novels.

Cherie Priest

Cherie’s Latest – Inexplicables

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tonight she was at the Poisoned Pen for a book signing.  She has had several books out since then, and I now have three books out, write for ConNotations Newszine, and have published thirty-five short stories.  My wife was able to meet her this time and thought she was great.  It was a small crowd, maybe thirty in all.  With her were writers Sam Sykes, who I have met several times before, and Rhodi Hawk, who I just met tonight.

Sam Sykes – Very funny, cool author

Rhodi Hawk

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

While I am still navel lint in the writing world, it is exciting to see the process writers go through to be successful.  Cherie Priest talked about how she had written and published many books through the traditional agent and publishing route and felt her career had plummeted to the point she would have to start with a new name.  She had written four or five chapters of Boneshaker, and her editor asked her to do that instead of the other book she almost had done.  It took off and now she is famous in the Steampunk world.  I believe she has fourteen books now, of which I am only able to name six, and I am a big fan.

As an independent author the world is changing away from traditional publishing, but even so, I see many writers who have “been made” to use a mafia term, but still struggle even after the monumental tasks of acquiring an agent and a publisher.  Congratulations to Cherie Priest on your great writing, your perseverance, and most of all, your charming personality.  It was very nice to see you again.

Also, a shout out to Will at the Poisoned Pen.  If you stop by, tell him you want him to stock my books.  🙂  They rarely stock indies, so maybe a few of you stopping by to ask for them would help.  It couldn’t hurt…  🙂

 

 

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The Travelers’ Club Sequel is Released! For a Limited Time Book One on Kindle for just 99 Cents!

The Travelers’ Club Sequel is Released!  For a Limited Time Book One on Kindle for just 99 Cents!

The sequel to the highly rated, The Travelers’ Club and The Ghost Ship is now on Kindle, available in book format on this site under the Store page, and can also be purchased in local bookstores.  The first book starts with a ghost ship drifting in the Mediterranean Sea.  Our intrepid members of Her Majesty’s Travelers’ Club go to find out why in early 1880.  In the new second book, The Travelers’ Club – Fire and Ash, our explorers are sent from London, across the pond to the United States in late 1880, an expedition that takes them across the nation to a fiery conclusion near Phoenix, Arizona.  While they can be read in any order, the first book has been dropped in price on Kindle to just 99 cents!  That is right, the entire full length adventure for less than a dollar.  This has been done so readers can catch up on this adventure from the very start.  You won’t want to miss the excitement!


 

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Invisibility Cloak Invented

reposted:

Invisibility cloak now a reality, scientists say

By 

Published November 13, 2012

FoxNews.com

  • duke university invisibility cloak.jpg

    Nov. 12, 2012: A member of the lab at Duke University’s Pratt School of Engineering has made a giant leap toward creating an invisibility cloak. (Duke University)

Let’s hope Star Fleet perfects the technology before the Romulans get their hands on it.

Scientists have made the impossible possible, disappearing a cylinder by guiding light around it before putting those photons back on their original path — essentially bending light around the object. This new approach achieves invisibility where others have failed. With a catch, however: It only works from one direction.

The math is incredibly complex and the materials necessary difficult to produce. And while the underpinning concepts allow invisibility in microwaves and hold promise for radar, it won’t be easy to make it work at optical wavelengths, cautioned Duke University’s Nathan Landry and John Pendry of London’s Imperial College, who published their results in the journal Nature Materials.

‘We built the cloak, and it worked.’

– Nathan Landy, a graduate student at Duke’s Pratt School of Engineering

Still, it’s a breakthrough six years in the making. The team made their initial discovery in 2006, a new approach to “transportation optics”: artificially structured stuff called meta-materials designed with specific properties. In this case, they move light around in particular ways to shape an electromagnetic signature, hiding an object from radar and some types of cameras.

Their “cloaking” concept ignited a meta-materials research boom and the field of invisibility exploded. But most of the most promising approaches to rely on meta-materials that reflect some of the incident light, making invisibility impartial.

This involved seeing a reflection of what lies behind an object. Now this team has introduced a diamond-shaped cloak allowing the edges to match up.

By doing so, they bent light around their 1 centimeter high, 7.5 centimeter wide cylinder without reflections.

“We built the cloak, and it worked,” said Landy, a graduate student working in the laboratory at Duke’s Pratt School of Engineering. “It split light into two waves which traveled around an object in the center and re-emerged as the single wave minimal loss due to reflections.”

There are drawbacks to even this research effort, of course. It can only hide objects so small they are not visible to the naked eye, and that success has predominantly been in wavelengths longer than what the eye can, see such as infrared, microwaves and radio.

Although media reports have hyped the breakthrough as producing an invisibility cloak for Harry Potter, this is not the case. The ultimate result would not be flexible material.

It may prove a whole lot easier to hide objects from other waves such as from heat, magnetic fields or acoustics — think a “Get Smart” cone of silence.

For defense applications, much of the research focuses on meta-materials to make platforms from tanks, planes and helicopters to light tactical vehicles invisible – at least to certain light and sound wavelengths. BAE’s Adaptiv technology has shown huge promise in this area.

Next stop, invisible jet? Has anyone told Wonder Woman?

Ballet dancer turned defense specialist Allison Barrie has traveled around the world covering the military, terrorism, weapons advancements and life on the front line. You can reach her at wargames@foxnews.com or follow her on Twitter @Allison_Barrie.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/science/2012/11/13/invisibility-cloak-now-reality-scientists-say/#ixzz2C8l854KB

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Pictures of Egypt 1860 – 1880

reposted from:

http://www.retronaut.com/2012/11/the-levant-by-felix-bonfils/

1860s-1880s:

The Middle East by Félix Bonfils
Chris Wild
Arabians

Arabians
Barber shaving boy's head

Barber shaving boy’s head
Beirut

Beirut
Cairo

Cairo
Cairo

Cairo
Cairo

Cairo
Cairo

Cairo
Constantinople

Constantinople
Damascus

Damascus
Entrance to the Great Pyramid

Entrance to the Great Pyramid
Gates of the Holy Sepulchre

Gates of the Holy Sepulchre
Giza

Giza
Giza

Giza
Jerusalem

Jerusalem
Jerusalem

Jerusalem
Jerusalem

Jerusalem
Karnak

Karnak
Mummies for sale

Mummies for sale
Palmyra

Palmyra
Petra

Petra
Pyramids

Pyramids
Road to Bethlehem

Road to Bethlehem
Sakkara, Egypt

Sakkara, Egypt
Sphinx

Sphinx
Syria

Syria
Temple of the Sun

Temple of the Sun
The Great Pyramid

The Great Pyramid
The Sphinx

The Sphinx
Tomb of El-Kefr

Tomb of El-Kefr
Tombs of the Judges

Tombs of the Judges
Western Wall

Western Wall
‘Félix Bonfils (1831-1885) was a French photographer and writer who was active in the Middle East. Four years after his arrival he reported 15,000 prints of Egypt, Palestine, Syria, and Greece, and 9,000 stereoscopic-views

– Wikipedia

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Cute Dogs with Captions for Monday!

As every Monday, here are your cute dogs, these have captions, or more precisely, phrases on the picture itself.  Enjoy!

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‘Star Trek’ Marriage Proposal

reposted:

‘Star Trek’ Proposal Photo Captures Everyone Off Guard, Including Cast (PHOTOS)

Posted: 11/07/2012 2:32 pm EST Updated: 11/08/2012 2:06 am EST

star trek wedding proposal photo
An unexpected marriage proposal in front of the cast of “Star Trek: The Next Generation” made for a memory that is truly out of this world.

A “Trek” fan popped the question during a cast photo op Sunday at Austin Wizard World Con, according to actor Wil Wheaton, who played Wesley Crusher on the popular ’90s sci-fi show — and was seated to the immediate left of the bride-to-be during the proposal (she said “yes”).

The photo rose to the top of Reddit’s front page on Nov. 7. Wheaton, an avid user of the social news site, wrote in the comments:

About 30 minutes or so into this particular session, these two people came in. The girl went to stand between Patrick [Stewart] and [Jonathan] Frakes, and the guy directed her to stand in the front, instead. All of us tried to figure out what was going on… and the guy said, ‘I really love ‘Star Trek,’ but I love (her name) even more.’ He got down on one knee, and proposed to her.

Cast member Marina Sirtis had apparently met the couple earlier in the day and given them a hard time for not yet being married. According to Wheaton, Sirtis was a little embarrassed by the proposal.

“I guess when the cast of ‘Star Trek’ tells you to engage, you make it so,” observed one Reddit user, co-opting catch phrases from the show.

An awkward shot of the “Star Trek” proposal from a slightly different angle also circulated on the Internet, but Wheaton remarked that the unflattering photo did not do the moment justice.

“Once we knew what was happening, it was awesome. I’m incredibly happy for these people, and I love that I got to be part of what is hopefully a moment they’ll celebrate and remember for the rest of their lives,” Wheaton wrote.

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Survivor Truck for Armageddon

reposted:

Survivor Truck: For those who take armageddon seriously

By Kurt Ernst

Published November 05, 2012

High Gear Media

  • survivortruck660.jpg
    Jim DeLozier
  • st660.jpg
    Zombies, it seems, have turned the end of the world into a commercial opportunity for businesses ranging from auto customizers through ammunition suppliers. While many companies build products that look stout, there are no guarantees they’ll get the job done when the fertilizer really does hit the fan.
In all likelihood, the end of civilization won’t come at the hands of comic-book monsters. Instead, all it will take is a few simultaneous natural disasters, an EMP from a rogue nuke detonated in the atmosphere or a new strain of hemorrhagic fever, imported fresh from Central Africa to Manhattan. Someone once said we’re three missed meals away from anarchy, and we’re inclined to believe them.

If you believe that, too, you also know that the current “zombie survival” trucks on the market may protect you from an angry mob of the fictional undead, but they won’t help with a nuclear, biological or chemical emergency. Most will be rendered useless by an EMP, meaning that you’ll enjoy the end of the world from your driveway, not your mountain retreat.

Read: Best car to survive a zombie apocalypse

Enter the SEMA 2012-displayed Survivor Truck, the brainchild of security consultant Jim DeLozier. While the converted Chevrolet C70 may look like just a tree-service truck on steroids, the build sheet tells a different story. DeLozier put some serious thought into this, and his truck is aimed at protecting occupants from real-world emergencies, not just fictional ones.

As PickupTrucks.com explains, the design features a Faraday cage (to shield  electronics from EMP), filters for nuclear, biological and chemical threats, a water desalinization system, water purification and multiple ways to generate electricity, including solar panels.

Its engine is designed to run on a variety of fuels, as is its primary generator. There’s ample storage, and by DeLozier’s calculations a family in a fully stocked Survivor Truck could live off the grid for up to two years. If dad has special forces training, that window could probably be pushed out even further.

To that end, the truck and its accessories are bulletproof, and it comes stocked with gas masks, chemical suits, night vision equipment and camouflage netting that provides 360-degrees of virtual invisibility around the truck. If you believe the best defense is a good offense, the roof is meant to serve as a sniper platform, though you need to provide your own Barrett .50 caliber.

Let us remind you that guaranteed survival comes at a high price, meant to discourage those looking for a mere weekend adventure vehicle. Supply your own platform and go light on the options, and a Survivor Truck will start at around $100,000. If you want the full-meal-deal, expect to pay as much as $600,000.

That may sound like a lot of money now, but when the lights go out and no one picks up when you dial 911, we suspect it will seem like a bargain.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/leisure/2012/11/05/survivor-truck-for-those-who-take-armageddon-seriously/?intcmp=features#ixzz2Br0X8KF7

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Glow in the dark highway of the future

reposted.

Glow in the dark highway of the future to begin tests next year

Published November 07, 2012

FoxNews.com

  • glowroads660.jpg

     

  • glowroads4660.jpg

     

  • glowroads2660.jpg

     

  • glowroads3660.jpg

     The look of your local roads may be ready for a reboot in the coming years.

A Dutch design firm will begin real world tests of a new “Smart Highway” next year, that aims to be safer and more energy efficient than current road networks.

The first stage of the project will be the implementation of special paints that glow in the dark to provide both illumination and information about road conditions. Lines in the road coated with a special powder will be able to glow for up to 10 hours after being charged during daylight hours, reducing the need for overhead electric lights, while temperature sensitive dynamic paints become visible when the surface gets cold, causing large snowflake designs to appear to warn drivers that the pavement may be slippery.

Next step technologies envisioned by the team of designer Daan Roosegaarde and Heijmans Infrastructure include the use of small wind-powered pinwheel-style lighting fixtures and dynamic illumination that comes only when it senses a car approaching.

But the most futuristic innovation, which the team hopes to start testing within five years, are lanes designated for electric vehicles that are fitted with induction coils that will allow the vehicles to run off of grid power instead of batteries, virtually eliminating the range and charge time issues that have proven to be the biggest impediment to the widespread adoption of electric cars.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/leisure/2012/11/07/glow-in-dark-highway-future-to-begin-tests-next-year/?intcmp=obnetwork#ixzz2BnoQelLs

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I Will Be Signing Books at Steampunk Second Friday In Mesa!

Thanks to Bob Leeper at Evermore Nevermore and the other folks who put together the Mesa Second Fridays!  This Friday, November 9th, from 6pm to 10pm I will be signing copies of my three books, The Travelers’ Club and the Ghost Ship, Twisted History – and the freshly released The Travelers’ Club – Fire and Ash, which is book two of the Steampunk series.  Come by and say hello.  In bookstores The Travelers’ Club novels are $14.95 each, and Twisted History $7.95.  You can buy them for $10 and $5 tomorrow night, respectively, signed and personalized with your name.  There will also be other Steampunk vendors, food, fun, and one of my favorite Steampunk bands, local favorite Jellied Brainz.

 

 

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Ready for the Presidential Election on December 17th?

Ready for the Presidential Election on December 17th?

That is correct!  You just thought we had put the election in the past when you cast your ballots on November 6th, but those were more suggestions than votes depending on which state you live in and its election laws.  The actual votes are cast by the Electoral College.  Some are bound to vote for the candidate picked by their state, some not, some have to for a certain number of rounds.  These people will actually decide the President of the United States on December 17th, 2012.

So why an Electoral College?  What happened to one man one vote?  Why not go by the popular vote?  The Founding Fathers had two reasons to create the Electoral College.  One was a distrust of the masses.  What if they elected an idiot, a felon, someone unqualified?  Then the Electoral College could “fix it” by voting for someone else.  Second, were states rights.  We have a Senate and a House in Congress.  Each State gets two Senators regardless of population.  Then, the country’s population is divided by 435 each ten years during the census, and the House is based on population.  This keeps smaller states more important.  The Electoral College is based on your number of Senators and House members.  100 in the Senate, 435 in the House, for 535.  Why then are there extras?  Those are territories, not states.  Confused yet?

So why not change it to popular vote?  Well, if you live in a less populated state like Montana, the Dakotas, Nevada, etc., you would never want that.  No candidate would ever campaign or run an ad in your state again.  All the money would be spent in the big media markets like New York, Los Angeles, Miami, Chicago, etc.  The urban vote would be the only one sought, because the rural vote would not matter.  It takes 2/3 of the states to ratify a change to the Constitution.  There is no way a small state would want that, so it is unlikely to ever change.  Let us look at a map by county of the recent election:

If you look at that map, you see RED, or Republican.  Almost the entire country is Republican by land mass and space.  So how did the Democrats win?

Here is a look by state:

You can see that those little blue areas are urban populations, so they have a lot more people than the huge area of red voters.  The states with more large cities, mainly the two coasts, vote blue.  The south and midwest vote red, and the Great Lakes area tends to be the swing area, along with Florida.  This urban versus rural polarization is a recent phenomenon of the last twenty years.  When I was growing up, Reagan was Governor of California, and the south always voted Democrat.  There has been a huge shift to city versus rural.  Another reason the rural voters are unlikely to ratify a change to eliminate the Electoral College and further dilute their voting impact.

 

This explains the Electoral College Process from the US Department of Archives:

Summary of Key Dates for the 2012 Presidential Election

June through October 2012

The Office of the Federal Register, on behalf of the Archivist of the United States, prepares Electoral College instructional materials for the Archivist to send to the governors of the 50 States and the mayor of the District of Columbia.

The materials include:

Under the 23rd Amendment of the Constitution, the District of Columbia is allocated 3 electors and treated like a state for purposes of the Electoral College. For this reason, in the following discussion, the word “state” also refers to the District of Columbia and the word “governor” also refers to the Mayor of the District of Columbia.

November 6, 2012—Election Day

Registered voters cast their votes for President and Vice President. By doing so, they also help choose the electors who will represent their state in the Electoral College.

Mid-November through December 17, 2012

After the presidential election, the governor of your state prepares seven Certificates of Ascertainment. “As soon as practicable,” after the election results in your state are certified, the governor sends one of the Certificates of Ascertainment to the Archivist.

Certificates of Ascertainment should be sent to the Archivist no later than the meeting of the electors on December 17, 2012. However, federal law sets no penalty for missing the deadline.

The remaining six Certificates of Ascertainment are held for use at the meeting of the Electors on December 17, 2012.

December 11, 2012

States must make final decisions in any controversies over the appointment of their electors at least six days before the meeting of the Electors on December 17, 2012. This is so their electoral votes will be presumed valid when presented to Congress. The deadline for resolving any controversies is December 11, 2012.

Decisions by states’ courts are conclusive, if decided under laws enacted before Election Day, November 6, 2012.

December 17, 2012

The Electors meet in their state and vote for President and Vice President on separate ballots. The electors record their votes on six “Certificates of Vote,” which are paired with the six remaining Certificates of Ascertainment.

The electors sign, seal, and certify six sets of electoral votes. A set of electoral votes consists of one Certificate of Ascertainment and one Certificate of Vote. These are distributed immediately as follows:

  • one set to the President of the Senate (the Vice President) for the official count of the electoral votes on January 6, 2013;
  • two packages to the Secretary of State in the state where the electors met—one is an archival set that becomes part of the public record of the Secretary of State’s office and the other is a reserve set that is subject to the call of the President of the Senate to replace missing or incomplete electoral votes;
  • two packages to the Archivist—one is an archival set that becomes part of the permanent collection at the National Archives and Records Administration and the other is a reserve set that is subject to the call of the President of the Senate to replace missing or incomplete electoral votes; and
  • one set to the presiding judge in the district where the Electors met—this is also a reserve set that is subject to the call of the President of the Senate to replace missing or incomplete electoral votes.

December 26, 2012

The deadline for receipt of the electoral votes by the President of the Senate and the Archivist is December 26, 2012. States face no legal penalty for failure to comply.

If votes are lost or delayed, the Archivist may take extraordinary measures to retrieve duplicate originals.

On or Before January 3, 2013

The Archivist and/or representatives from the Office of the Federal Register meet with the Secretary of the Senate and the Clerk of the House in late December or early January. This is, in part, a ceremonial occasion. Informal meetings may take place earlier.

January 6, 2013

The Congress meets in joint session to count the electoral votes on January 6, 2013. Congress may pass a law to change this date.

The Vice President, as President of the Senate, presides over the count and announces the results of the Electoral College vote. The President of the Senate then declares which persons, if any, have been elected President and Vice President of the United States.

If a State submits conflicting sets of electoral votes to Congress, the two Houses acting concurrently may accept or reject the votes. If they do not concur, the votes of the electors certified by the Governor of the State on the Certificate of Ascertainment would be counted in Congress.

If no Presidential candidate wins 270 or more electoral votes, a majority, the 12th Amendment to the Constitution provides for the House of Representatives to decide the Presidential election. If necessary the House would elect the President by majority vote, choosing from the three candidates who received the greatest number of electoral votes. The vote would be taken by state, with each state having one vote.

If no Vice Presidential candidate wins 270 or more electoral votes, a majority, the 12th Amendment provides for the Senate to elect the Vice President. If necessary, the Senate would elect the Vice President by majority vote, choosing from the two candidates who received the greatest number of electoral votes. The vote would be taken by state, with each Senator having one vote.

If any objections to the Electoral College vote are made, they must be submitted in writing and be signed by at least one member of the House and one Senator. If objections are presented, the House and Senate withdraw to their respective chambers to consider their merits under procedures set out in federal law.

January 20, 2013 at Noon—Inauguration Day

The President-elect takes the Oath of Office and becomes the President of the United States.

General Authority

The Archivist of the United States, as the head of the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA), is responsible for carrying out ministerial duties on behalf of the States and the Congress under 3 U.S.C. sections 61112, and 13.

NARA is primarily responsible for coordinating the various stages of the electoral process by helping the States prepare and submit certificates that establish the appointment of electors and validate the electoral votes of each State.

The Archivist delegates operational duties to the Director of the Federal Register. The Federal Register Legal Staff ensures that electoral documents are transmitted to Congress, made available to the public, and preserved as part of our nation’s history.

The Office of the Federal Register Legal Staff reviews the electoral certificates for the required signatures, seals and other matters of form, as specified in federal law.

Only the Congress and the courts have the authority to rule on substantive legal issues.

Office of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration

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