Monthly Archives: January 2013

Steampunk Aircrew Part 2

So you just got yourself the second airship in your future fleet.  You can trade, pirate, fight for Queen and Country, be a merc, or simply travel.  The following are some crew choices, but you can’t have them all…

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Tom Cruise Here to Fight Aliens

Tom Cruise thinks he’s on planet to fight aliens, according to book

Published January 13, 2013

New York Post

  • tom cruise ret.jpg

    Cast member Tom Cruise poses at the premiere of “Rock of Ages” at the Grauman’s Chinese theatre in Hollywood, California June 8, 2012. The movie opens in the U.S. on June 15. REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni (UNITED STATES – Tags: ENTERTAINMENT)

Tom Cruise will save the world from aliens — not on the big screen but in real life.

His day job as an actor pales next to the billion-year contract of service he signed with the Church of Scientology, according to a bombshell new book, “Going Clear: Scientology, Hollywood & The Prison of Belief.” New Yorker writer Lawrence Wright details Cruise’s demigod status within the church, as well as the group’s ultimate purpose — protect humanity from aliens living in our bodies, who are bent on destroying us and ultimately the planet.

Cruise was introduced to the religion when he was 23 years old.

Cruise was introduced to the religion when he was 23 years old by his then-girlfriend, actress Mimi Rogers. Seven years his senior, Rogers was an avowed member of Scientology; they married in 1987. Cruise was quickly intrigued, but he kept his initial participation low-profile. He began undergoing “auditing” — a process in which church members are queried about every aspect of their lives — under his given name, Thomas Mapother IV.

It took several years for church leaders to realize that for all of their celebrity acolytes — including John Travolta, Priscilla Presley, Kirstie Alley, Kelly Preston and Sonny Bono — they had a true superstar at their disposal.

Cruise would later come to believe that in the hierarchy of Scientology, he was No. 3, behind only the founder, the late L. Ron Hubbard (known as LRH) and No. 2 David Miscavige, who goes by COB, for Chairman of the Board of the Religious Technology Center.

Click for more from the New York Post.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/2013/01/13/tom-cruise-thinks-on-planet-to-fight-aliens-according-to-book/?intcmp=trending#ixzz2Hw6DesGK

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Largest Structure in the Universe

Largest Structure In Universe, Large Quasar Group, Challenges Cosmological Principle

Large Quasar Group

Large Quasar Group

Posted: 01/11/2013 9:45 am EST  |  Updated: 01/12/2013 5:34 pm EST

By: Mike Wall

Published: 01/11/2013 04:34 AM EST on SPACE.com

Astronomers have discovered the largest known structure in the universe, a clump of active galactic cores that stretches 4 billion light-years from end to end.

The structure is a large quasar group (LQG), a collection of extremely luminous galactic nuclei powered by supermassive central black holes. This particular group is so large that it challenges modern cosmological theory, researchers said.

“While it is difficult to fathom the scale of this LQG, we can say quite definitely it is the largest structure ever seen in the entire universe,” lead author Roger Clowes, of the University of Central Lancashire in England, said in a statement. “This is hugely exciting, not least because it runs counter to our current understanding of the scale of the universe.”

Large Quasar Group

Large Quasar Group

Quasars are the brightest objects in the universe. For decades, astronomers have known that they tend to assemble in huge groups, some of which are more than 600 million light-years wide.

But the record-breaking quasar group, which Clowes and his team spotted in data gathered by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, is on another scale altogether. The newfound LQC is composed of 73 quasars and spans about 1.6 billion light-years in most directions, though it is 4 billion light-years across at its widest point.

To put that mind-boggling size into perspective, the disk of the Milky Way galaxy — home of Earth’s solar system — is about 100,000 light-years wide. And the Milky Way is separated from its nearest galactic neighbor, Andromeda, by about 2.5 million light-years.

The newly discovered LQC is so enormous, in fact, that theory predicts it shouldn’t exist, researchers said. The quasar group appears to violate a widely accepted assumption known as the cosmological principle, which holds that the universe is essentially homogeneous when viewed at a sufficiently large scale.

Calculations suggest that structures larger than about 1.2 billion light-years should not exist, researchers said.

“Our team has been looking at similar cases which add further weight to this challenge, and we will be continuing to investigate these fascinating phenomena,” Clowes said.

The new study was published today (Jan. 11) in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.

Follow SPACE.com senior writer Mike Wall on Twitter @michaeldwall or SPACE.com @Spacedotcom. We’re also on Facebook and Google+

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Even More Dog Shaming for Your Monday Blues

Every Monday I post dog pictures, this week I am doing more dog shaming photos.  If you want to see more dog pictures, type “dog pictures” or “cute dogs” in my search on home page.  For more dog shaming, search for “dog shaming.”  Enjoy!

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Anthology Submission Deadline – January 31st!! Just Two more weeks!!

You need to get me those submissions by January 31st!!!

For all of you writers or aspiring writers, each year I help publish an anthology on one subject.  Last year, we published Twisted History, and all the stories were alternative history.  It was “twisted” because we had comedy writers, fiction, non-fiction and other genre writers all writing alternative history.  This year, the topic is horror, and the working title is Twisted Nightmares.  Twisted History has sold thousands of copies, and we expect Twisted Nightmares to do even better.  It will be available on Kindle, Nook, Smashwords, Goodreads, Barnes and Noble Online, at several bookstores, and in printed form for your resale.

We accept any form of writing, poems, flash fiction, or short stories up to 5,000 words.  Your submissions are judged anonymously by a panel of writers and editors.  Selected submissions will then be professionally edited and returned to you for changes.  The deadline for submissions is January 31, 2013.  Expected publication date is March 1, 2013.  Here is a flyer which has more detail, and also has our cover, supplied to us by the original photographer for use.  (more on them later :-) )

Twisted Nightmares!

Horror Anthology

 Submissions Needed, 5,000 words or less, only horror themes.  WORD format preferred, only electronic submissions accepted.

Publishing by Michael Bradley, President, Eiverness Consulting Group, Ltd., An Arizona Corporation in Good Standing

Senior Editor – Andrew Terech

 

Blademouth

Submissions required by January 31, 2013.  Expected publication prior to May 2013 and published in Kindle format.

Please send inquiries and submissions to:

eiverness@cox.net

For the subject put:  Anthology Submission

This publication is designed to be an additional opportunity to highlight the talents of aspiring writers.  Those chosen for publication will receive two free copies of the printed version and will be able to buy printed copies at cost for their own use or sale.  All other profits and expenses, including electronic sales will be retained by the publisher.

Original Makeup and Character by: Kiera Von D – Blademouth (see more of Kiera’s work here:www.facebook.com/nytroxsfx)
Shared by: Jona Than

To see how pretty Blademouth is in real life and learn more:

http://www.examiner.com/slideshow/seattle-s-sweetheart-blade-mouth-aka-kiera-von-d-an-aspiring-special-effects-make-up-artist

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NSFW Unintentionally Funny Comic Book Panels

WARNING:  Adult themes/sex innuendo in this post.  I don’t normally post off-color posts, so forgive me if it offends.  There are a lot of these, so I had to thumbnail and reduce them, so click to enlarge.  These are all comic book panels that are not meant to be funny or crude for the most part, but are in today’s modern sexual centered society.  I found them funny for the most part.  They are taken from six or seven sites, among them The Chive, which is also a re-post blog, but unlike this one, gets paid.  I just get the satisfaction of sharing.  🙂

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More Unusual Guitars

If you want to see previous posts on this topic, enter “guitar” into the search box on my home page.  Enjoy:

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Star Trek Replicators for the US Army

In my ongoing efforts to explain that 3d printing is THEE revolutionary invention of today…  The US Army is now using 3d printing for onsite manufacturing of equipment in war zones.  Star Trek style replicators are here.  Now.

replicator-menageatroi

Star Trek replicators for the Army

By 

Published January 10, 2013

FoxNews.com

  • 3D Replicator Knife.jpg

    A design for a knife made from a 3D printer to help dismounted soldiers probe for IEDs. The tool had to be plastic so as to not conduct with any IED surfaces it might uncover. (Army Rapid Equipping Force)

  • 3D Replicator Flashlight guard design.jpg

    A commonly used Army-issue flashlight has raised, exposed button that allow the light to be accidently turned on in pocket or pouch. This guard was developed and printed to prevent accidental power up and to save batteries. (Army Rapid Equipping Force)

  • 3D Replicator Flashlight guard.jpg

    A commonly used Army-issue flashlight has raised, exposed button that allow the light to be accidently turned on in pocket or pouch. This guard was developed and printed to prevent accidental power up and to save batteries. (Army Rapid Equipping Force)

  • 3D Replicator thermal cameras.jpg

    Soldiers needed a way to see immediately right or left of a vehicle. This camera system was developed and printed in a lab, including CNC-made mounting brackets and a 3D-printed monitor mount. (Army Rapid Equipping Force)

There’s a new force on the front lines, and it’s anything but out of this world.

Remote operating bases in Afghanistan are using Star Trek-style replicators, 3D printers capable of fabricating on the spot whatever the Army may need — from replacement vehicle parts to an entirely new piece of technology.

The Army’s Rapid Equipping Force (REF) worked with Applied Minds, Inc. and Exponent to make the science fiction dream a reality.  Thanks to their efforts, a lab equipped with the 3D printers is only a helicopter ride away.

‘[It’s] basically like a huge glue gun.’

– Westley Brin, product manager with the Army’s Rapid Equipping Force

While the locations cannot be released, the first two labs were posted to forward operating bases in Afghanistan. The third is currently under construction and due to deploy around June this year.

There are four types of computer-driven replicator: 3D printers, CNC mills, laser cutters and water cutters.

The state of the art lab is contained in a 20,000 pound, 20-foot long container that can be carried by a Chinook helicopter. It’s equipped with a 3D printer and a CNC mill, machines that resemble very large microwaves.

With them an engineer can build essentially anything.

How does it work?
“Soldiers walk into the lab and say, ‘this is my problem.’ The PhDs then do the work and show it to the soldiers. The soldiers give them feedback,” and they work together tinkering with the tech until it is exactly fit for purpose, explained Westley Brin, product manager with the REF.

The team uses software similar to that an architect would use, like CAD or computer-assisted design programs, to design their solution in the battlefield. After a design is drawn, they send the file to the 3D printer or the CNC.

3D printers, sometimes called rapid prototypers, take glue or resin and layer it to build the design from scratch.

Brin describes their 3D printer as “basically like a huge glue gun. When you pick up the object created, you can feel the ridges because it builds the object layer by layer. That’s why it’s so fragile.”

The 3D printers can make only softer plastics that last for a month or two — it’s a short-term solution in the field. They can also build several soft models and send them back to the U.S. or anywhere else for volume manufacturing.

CNC mills work differently: Using a drill bit, they take a hunk of aluminum or metal and carves it out as a human would carve a sculpture.

HELP BUILD SOMETHING

REF and the labs use the Broad Agency Announcements (BAA) site to solicit solutions. Anyone can submit a solution and if they think it shows promise they will send someone out to take a look. Know a MacGyver up for creating something for the troops? Check out the site.

A CNC can cut parts from more durable material; Brin describes its output as the “end-all, be-all piece” — meaning it isn’t a stop-gap but a screw, knife, distributor cap or whatever that can be used for the duration.

The lab also lets technicians dial out of Afghanistan to anywhere in the world for advice, whether it’s the CEO of a Fortune 500 company, a college professor or a 13-year-old girl. Anyone with a bright idea to solve the problem or improve the current solution is accessible.

From several thousand miles away, the pinch-hitting engineer can design and feed a solution to the lab in Afghanistan, where the 3D printer and CNC will work overnight. When the team arrives in the morning, presto, a new part is waiting.

What does it make?
Project Powerhand is one of the labs many success stories. Soldiers in Afghanistan use hand-held, ground penetrating radar to detect mines — devices with a very limited battery life.

By creating tech that took the lifespan from 60 minutes to a whopping 36 hours, they immediately made soldiers safer and gave them a tool they could use on a three-day patrol.

Next in the replicator pipeline for the Army is a bigger printer that will combine the CNC and the 3D capabilities and most likely reside at a major base. The labs posted to forward operating bases will be able to communicate with this monster to produce parts as well.

As operations in Afghanistan draw down, the Star Trek-style lab will still have enormous utility, going out with the Army to accompany first-responders at natural disasters within 24 to 48 hours for example.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/tech/2013/01/10/star-trek-replicators-for-army/#ixzz2HjnNRuJd

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Flexible Batteries

Printable, flexible, rechargeable, non-toxic zinc batteries could challenge lithium

A flexible, printed zinc battery

The familiar button battery is the workhorse of small electronics. While it is likely to continue to power our existing watches and calculators for a little while, it has become the limiting factor for many key design points of these devices. Like a shipping container in a world of instant messaging, it has no future. One company, Imprint Energy, has assembled the total assault package which might sound the death knell — a rechargeable, flexible, customizable, and printable battery that is cheaper, safer and more powerful.

The key technology developed by Imprint Energy is a polymer electrolyte that allows zinc-based batteries to be recharged. It prevents the formation of fingers which typically bridge across typical liquid electrolytes over time and make charging impossible. The flexible and customizable zinc anode, electrolyte, and metal oxide cathode of the battery are printed in the form of electrochemical inks. The printing process is similar to old-fashioned silk-screening where material is deposited in a pattern by squeezing it through a mesh over a template. While this screen printing is different from what we tend to think of nowadays as3D printing, the use of inkjets and other technologies are driving new convergent, hybrid techniques.

printed sensor

The implication of this for product designers is that instead of building the device around the power source, not only can the power source be built around the device, it can be the device. Screen printing is also being used to fabricate electronic components that will address the need for cheap and disposable electronics. Norway-based Thin Film Electronics has created prototype all-printed devices that include temperature sensors, memory, logic, and a battery from Imprint Energy. Smart stickers for time-sensitive food or medicines could be printed that might store details of its temperature, chemical exposure, freshness, and history of shock and vibe during handling. A target price of $0.30 would open up a lot of applications where previously a simple temperature sensor and a few bits of storage might currently run $30.00.

The machinery to print different kinds of electronic components from just a few materials still needs to evolve to where it can become a flexible and affordable all-in-one platform. As a raw material, zinc has already proved itself to be extremely versatile. It has neither the danger nor cost of lithium and has built an expansive resume of interesting devices that it can be fashioned into. For example, zinc nanowires with diameters of only 40nm can be made with different properties depending on whether they are crystalline or non-crystalline. They can also be made to exhibit piezoeletric behavior and can woven into clothing for sensing or providing higher voltages for other applications. Zinc aerographite, 5,000 times less dense than water, can be fabricated by vapor depositing carbon layers onto zinc backbones to provide a light conductive matrix similar in structure to aerogel.

At the present time, Imprint Energy is claiming that its battery has an energy density at least as good as lithium-polymer batteries, and that is likely to improve. This may even give the higher-energy-density zinc-air battery technology pause for concern, considering its other advantages. Hearing aids, for example, put a premium on high power capacity and tolerate the high self-discharge rates and non-rechargeability of zinc-air batteries. These batteries are typically activated only when needed by removing a sealing strip that lets air enter the cell, but thereafter have a maximum lifetime of just a few weeks. A battery which eliminates these issues and at the same time opens up new approaches to hearing aid design would be welcome.

It may not be possible for one battery technology to address every power need effectively, but Imprint Energy appears to be taking aim at several of them. Once its technology begins to catch on, we might say goodbye to the button battery.

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Ugly Portrait of Kate Middleton

Paul Emsley was selected to paint the official portrait of Kate Middleton.  He made her, in my opinion, look like a maudlin middle-aged spinster.  I can’t believe the Queen Mother did not say, “Off with his head!”  What do you think:

Kate Middleton with her vibrant smile and personality.

Kate Middleton with her vibrant smile and personality.

Kate Middleton's official portrait...

Kate Middleton’s official portrait…

Kate Middleton Duchess of Cambridge first official portrait unveiled

Published Friday, Jan 11 2013, 6:14am EST | By 
The first official portrait of Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge has been unveiled.

The 2012 painting by Paul Emsley is on display at the National Portrait Gallery from this afternoon (January 11).

Kate Middleton's first official portrait, Duchess of Cambridge

© Rex Features

Emsley told BBC News: “I think it was the right choice in the end to have her smiling. That’s really who she is, I think.

“Everyone, I think, recognises her partly through her lovely hair.

“I’ve altered the color of the eyes slightly to match the color of the blouse and the blue background.”

He added: “I don’t have lots of things in the background. I do like large faces, I find them strong and contemporary.

“I’m interested in the landscape of the face, the way in which light and shadow fall across the forms.

Paul Emsley by his new portrait of the Duchess of Cambridge after its unveiling at the National Portrait Gallery in central London

© PA Images / John Stillwell/PA Wire

“That’s really my subject matter. To have anything else in there is really just an interference.”

Speaking at the unveiling of the portrait, Kate reportedly told the artist: “It’s just amazing, I thought it was brilliant.”

Catherine sat for Emsley once at his studio in May 2012 and a second time a month later at Kensington Palace.

He worked from a series of photographs to complete the image over several months.

National Portrait Gallery director Sandy Nairn picked Emsley for the portrait. Catherine is a patron of the gallery.

The image can be bought from the gallery shop as a single postcard for 70p, or as a set of six for £3.50.

Read more: http://www.digitalspy.com/celebrity/news/a450249/kate-middleton-duchess-of-cambridge-first-official-portrait-unveiled.html#ixzz2Hi2p00Zh

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