Is it just me, or is 60 Minutes getting crappier? Apparently, it is under new management
Latest IE security hole: Don’t use Explorer, says CERT – I’ve been saying that for years
Upper Class Suite – The coolest airplane setup I’ve ever seen
Low-Carb Fad Seen as Unhealthy and a Ripoff – Ah, a new trade group
New Yorker Review of Farenheit 9/11 – Pretty good explainer with some cursory sniping.
One of the “Olsen Twins” is in treatment for an eating disorder – A symptom of our times, if “symptom” means insanity and “our times” means a pervasive culture created by “the media” that has convinced many Americans that they need to look for their entire lives like stick–thin pre–teens. This turn of events doesn’t surprise me. From the article: “We need to love our different shapes and sizes […a]nd we need to wake up, because women are dying.”
The Condensed Bill Clinton – Slate saves me $30 and 900 pages of my life. [Edit: The story appears to have disappeared. Odd]
Microsoft patents “personal area networking” – The good: people are seeing the potential for wearables. The bad: I read about implementations of this done years ago at MIT, IBM, and other places, and that MS can patent it is just another example of the stupidity of the US patent system and how it holds back innovation.
Iraq, Al Qaeda, and what constitutes a ‘relationship’ – Those pesky definitions
Where were you when the heavens opened?
This morning pilot Mike Melvill, 62 became astronaut Mike Melvill after touching the edge of space in Scaled Composites‘ SpaceShipOne, designed by Burt Rutan.
For two generations, the feats of space have been reserved for those test pilots and scientists who passed government muster. Now, the vapor trail of SpaceShipOne’s hurtling ascent hangs in the air, an indelible cosmic path for anyone with the money and moxie to follow.
The Christian Science Monitor has one of the better stories about this remarkable achievement, and NPR has the first of what will be many images. I watched the flight on a BBC internet stream, but if I could have I would have been there.
Like the barnstormers who crossed America in the early years of the 20th century, promising a future when any person could get on a plane and fly across the country, today’s space entrepreneurs speak about space with a sense of manifest destiny. Now, more people might listen.
NASA has held back space exploration long enough. SpaceShipOne and the 26 other entrants in the X-Prize competition are but the leading edge of a huge storm that will make life really exciting in the next few decades.
I decided long ago that my ultimate dream was to reach the Moon, to walk on it, to see its wonder, to look down at Earth with awe. I believed then, and continue to believe now, that it will be possible within my lifetime. And at a time like this, at a time when everyone is so focused on bickering and the on the many ills of the world, good news and optimism and a challenge and hope for the future is most welcomed.
News Agency Employees Detail Abuse by U.S. Forces – I missed this one last month.
A weird toilet – One-way glass at its oddest
Men’s health neglected
Today’s Sunday Morning featured a lengthy report about men’s health. I’ll try to decode the theme of it, since it is a little difficult to find. Apparently, there is some concern that men see doctors less frequently then women, ignore dangerous symptoms more often than women, and don’t talk about health problems as much as women. And that it is generally women who urge men to go see doctors. No, wait, that wasn’t a difficult theme to discern at all, considering that the viewer is bashed on the head with it over and over throughout the segment. Oh, and the correspondant uses the segment as an opportunity to plug her book — three times.
Putting all this aside, the issues are appear to be real. It does seem, however, that culture is slowly shifting and men’s health is finally getting talked about again. The segment notes a few “celebrity” examples: Mike Wallace talking about his depression, Colin Powell talking about prostate cancer. And it also notes more health services targeted at young males. Perhaps the insurance companies should be getting in on the act (or perhaps they already are). Encouraging young and middle-aged people — both men and women — to get regular checkups, and making it as cheap as possible to do so, will save them money.
Jeremy Hedley discovers that foreigners are now allowed to donate blood in Japan:
One of the questions on the form was whether I have Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. Really, how would I know? I sway a bit and dribble occasionally but I think I’m OK. I said no.
And when he was done, they gave him a towel:
(You get these small bath towels — good for hot springs — on all sorts of occasions in Japan. Open a bank account, get a towel. Bump into a stranger on the street, get a towel. Sneeze, towel.)
Well, you know, they are massively useful.