Friday, June 14
Wall of Wind Turbines
A wind fence developed by New York-based designer Joe Doucet is set to bring clean energy production into urban landscapes. The fence consists of vertical wind turbines, is modular, and, most importantly, is pleasing to the eye, making it more likely to be adopted in hotels, corporate buildings, and residential units.
Wind energy is an important component of the renewable energy mix that countries have adopted as they aim for a future away from fossil fuels. To achieve maximum energy gain and efficiency, original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) build bigger turbines every year for large installations.
This has been preventing wind energy from participating in distributed energy generation, much like solar panels can be installed on rooftops, in gardens, and now even on balconies.
In 2021, Doucet was researching distributed energy products for wind energy and found that few good options were available. So, the designer did what he could best: design a new product that was both efficient and scored on aesthetics. READ MORE...
Thursday, June 13
In The NEWS
Sports, Entertainment, & Culture
> The 2024 James Beard Awards announced; Michael Rafidi from Albi in Washington, DC, named outstanding chef and Portland's Langbaan won outstanding restaurant (More)
> Ben Potter, YouTube content creator known as Comicstorian who had amassed over 3 million subscribers, dies at 40 of "unfortunate accident;" details of accident have not been made public (More)
> Dallas Mavericks take on the Boston Celtics tonight (8:30 pm ET, ABC) in Game 3 of the NBA Finals; Celtics lead the series 2-0 (More) | WNBA pulling in 1.3 million TV viewers per game, a record for the league and triple last year's average (More)
Science & Technology
> Expert panel recommends experimental Alzheimer's drug donanemab, finding its slowing of cognitive decline outweighed safety concerns (More) | What is Alzheimer's and how does it work? (More, w/video)
> Cancer-spreading gene identified by researchers; silencing the gene prevented metastatic cancer cells—responsible for 90% of cancer deaths—from growing and spreading in mice tests (More)
> Evidence discovered of skull elongation of women in medieval Viking culture; finding provides new insight into body modification practices of the region during the period (More)
Business & Markets
> US stock markets close mixed (S&P 500 +0.3%, Dow -0.3%, Nasdaq +0.9%) with Apple shares closing up 7%; Federal Reserve to share interest rate policy decision today (More)
> Raspberry Pi—creator of tiny computers used for robotics and dashboards, among other purposes—goes public on the London Stock Exchange, valued at $690M; retail investors able to buy shares beginning Friday (More)
> Shari Redstone, controlling shareholder of Paramount Global through National Amusements, reportedly rejects Skydance's offer to purchase the company; instead will pursue a sale of National Amusements (More)
Politics & World Affairs
> Malawi's vice president and nine others confirmed dead after thesmall military plane they were traveling in crashed due to bad weather conditions in the mountainous northern region near the city of Mzuzu (More)
> Ukraine strikes missile launch sites in Russia (More) | See updates on the war (More) | Israel and Hamas signal openness to UN-backed cease-fire proposal as negotiations continue (More)
> Boat carrying migrants from Ethiopia and Somalia capsizes off the coast of Yemen, with 49 people dead as of this writing and more than 140 missing (More)
Looking Back Wisdom
I am 76 years old and had a working career that lasted 45 years. None of the places where I worked had a retirement program. Consequently, my retirement is based upon SOCIAL SECURITY and the amount of money that my wife and I managed to save before retiring.
My wife and I spend about $4-$5,000 each month and the money coming in each month is about the same amount of money - however, half of that money is withdrawn from our savings each month.
We are living about the same as when we were both working - and if you would like to look at it another way, we are at about 90% of the way we used to live - maybe a little bit higher or lower.
Others that we know our age because of one thing or another (usually it is still paying off debt) is not living as well as we are <OR> they are having to still work either parttime or full time.
One of the issues that has bothered me ever since I turn 50 years of age is that nothing was taught to me while in high school or college as to how to prepare for my retirement. Not only was nothing ever taught to me but there was no focus or emphasis on RETIREMENT PLANNING.
If I had been taught something in high school, I would have had 50 years to save for retirement.
Later in life, right around the age of 50, I discovered that if I had saved $2.50/day for 40 years and invested that money each month in a Mutual Fund, I would have $500,000.
TWO DOLLARS AND FIFTY CENTS is not much money at all and could have easily been increased to FIVE DOLLARS.
I also learned about the age of fifty the importance of being DEBT FREE. Most of what I had acquired over the years, I really did not NEED - they were items I WANTED. Once you realize that you should buy only what you need, your expectations of life change.
Quantum Mechanics in Ultra Cold
There's a hot new BEC in town that has nothing to do with bacon, egg, and cheese. You won't find it at your local bodega, but in the coldest place in New York: the lab of Columbia physicist Sebastian Will, whose experimental group specializes in pushing atoms and molecules to temperatures just fractions of a degree above absolute zero.
Writing in Nature, the Will lab, supported by theoretical collaborator Tijs Karman at Radboud University in the Netherlands, has successfully created a unique quantum state of matter called a Bose-Einstein Condensate (BEC) out of molecules.
Their BEC, cooled to just five nanoKelvin, or about -459.66°F, and stable for a strikingly long two seconds, is made from sodium-cesium molecules. Like water molecules, these molecules are polar, meaning they carry both a positive and a negative charge.
Wednesday, June 12
In The NEWS
Sports, Entertainment, & Culture
> Florida Panthers top Edmonton Oilers 4-1 in Game Two of the NHL Stanley Cup Final to take 2-0 lead in the best-of-seven series (More) | Three soccer fans sentenced to prison in Spain for hurling racial insults at Real Madrid's VinÃcius Júnior (More)
> Rev. James Lawson, American civil rights leader instrumental in Nashville sit-ins and the Freedom Rides, dies at 95 (More)
> UConn men's basketball coach Dan Hurley turns down six-year, $70M deal to coach Los Angeles Lakers (More) | NCAA men's College World Series eight-team field set; see bracket (More)
Science & Technology
In partnership with EnergyX
> Engineers develop biodegradable 3D-printer floor panels strong enough to replace steel in some construction applications; composite is made from wood flour and corn residue (More)
> Researchers detect frost on the peaks of Mars' tallest volcanoes, challenging current understanding of the planet's climate dynamics; thin layer is estimated to constitute about 150,000 tons of water (More)
> Scientists discover how zebrafish reverse scar tissue that forms on the heart muscles following heart attacks; may lead to treatments to undo permanent heart damage in humans (More)
Business & Markets
> US stock markets close higher (S&P 500 +0.3%, Dow +0.2%, Nasdaq +0.4%) with S&P 500, Nasdaq notching fresh records; investors look to this week's consumer price index report and the Federal Reserve's two-day policy meeting (More)
> Nvidia shares begin trading around $120 after chipmaker executes planned 10-for-1 stock split; Nvidia shares traded near $1,200 before the split (More) | What is a stock split? (More)
> OpenAI hires former Nextdoor CEO as its first chief financial officer, appoints a chief product officer (More) | Activist hedge fund Elliott Investment Management amasses $1.9B stake in Southwest Airlines; firm also seeks to replace Southwest's CEO and chairman (More)
Politics & World Affairs
> Delaware jury resumes deliberations today in Hunter Biden's federal trial over criminal gun violations; if found guilty, he would be the first son of a sitting president convicted in federal court (More)
> UN Security Council adopts US-led resolution calling on Hamas to accept a cease-fire and hostage-release plan offered by Israel; resolution on ending Israel-Hamas war is first to be endorsed by the Security Council (More) | See plan details (More)
> Fatal tornado outbreaks across southern and central US last month caused $4.7B in damages, federal government estimates; over 165 tornadoes were recorded from May 6-9 (More) | View chart of billion-dollar weather disasters in the US (More)
AGING
I recall watching numerous commercials primarily designed for women on what you can do to slow down the aging process of the skin, so that you will never look your age.
I am amazed by how many women have spent money on products like that to remove wrinkles or tone up their skin... and personally I am glad that it may have worked for them.
HOWEVER...
looking good on the outside is not going to change all the organs on the inside of your body that are aging. While some of these organs can be replaced if they go bad, bear in mind that replacement can only take place if they go bad.
Women may have younger looking skin and thicker hair, but NOTHING can stop the body from experiencing a sensation of IMBALANCE that causes you to fall.
- NOTHING can keep your bones from breaking once you are older and have a fall.
- NOTHING can reduce the healing time once you are older.
- NOTHING can stop you from getting sick as you grow older due to a reduced immune system.
- go out to dinner
- watch a movie
- go shopping
- sit together in an airplane
- go out drinking/dancing
- be seen together
- gamble together in Vegas
- lifted weights
- spent hours body surfing
- ran 5 miles a day
- played football, baseball, basketball, track
- could drive all night to a destination
- move the contents of a house
- had no arthritis
- could lift more than my weight
- did not have lower back problems
- was never considered obese
1300-Year-Old Viking Boat
In Norse tradition, ship burials were used to honor the dead and give them a permanent resting place underwater. A discovery on the Norwegian island of Leka suggests that these rituals date back farther than previously thought.
Archaeologists working for the Norwegian Directorate for Cultural Heritage found possible ship fragments while investigating the area around the Herlaugshaugen burial mound, named for the ninth-century Viking king Herlaug who, according to legend, had himself and 11 of his companions buried alive rather than be killed by an opposing leader.
Tuesday, June 11
In The NEWS
Sports, Entertainment, & Culture
> Dick Van Dyke becomes oldest Daytime Emmy Award winner ever at 98 for role in "Days of Our Lives" (More) | See complete list of 51st Daytime Emmy winners (More)
> Chet Walker, Basketball Hall of Famer and seven-time NBA All-Star, dies at 84 (More) | Team USA women's basketball roster for 2024 Olympics announced; Caitlin Clark among notable players left off 12-player team (More)
> Poland's Iga ÅšwiÄ…tek wins third women's French Open title in a row (More) | Spain's Carlos Alcaraz wins men's French Open title, his third Grand Slam victory (More) | Dornoch wins 156th Belmont Stakes, the final leg of horse racing's Triple Crown (More)
> Geologists map complex structures making up the Cascadia Subduction Zone, a megathrust fault off the Pacific Northwest coast (More) | Region believed to generate large-scale earthquakes every 500 years on average, with last being in 1700 (More, w/video)
> The New York Times confirms internal data breach; more than 270GB of source code, an estimated 3.6 million documents, posted to internet message board (More)
> Brain anatomy in baby baboons predicts which hand the animals will use to communicate when grown; brain region associated with language is larger in the left hemisphere for 70% of newborns (More)
Business & Markets
> US stock markets close lower Friday (S&P 500 -0.1%, Dow -0.2%, Nasdaq -0.2%) on reduced expectations for lower interest rates following Friday jobs report (More) | See previous write-up (More)
> Norwegian wealth fund Government Pension Fund Global—owning a 0.98% stake in Tesla—says it will vote against a $56B pay package for Tesla CEO Elon Musk this week (More)
> Berkshire Hathaway purchases over 2.5 million shares of Occidental Petroleum, adding to its existing 28% stake in the company (More)
Politics & World Affairs
> India swears in Prime Minister Narendra Modi for historic third term, the country's second leader to reach the milestone following India's founding Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru (More)
> Iran's Guardian Council approves six candidates to run in June 28 presidential elections, including hardliner parliamentary speaker; most prominent candidate is former Tehran mayor known for crackdowns on university students (More)
> South Korea announces it will restart loudspeaker broadcasts of anti-North Korea messages over the border following North Korea's delivery of an additional 330 trash- and sewage-filled balloons into South Korea (More)
Higher Power
We have spent most of our lives believing in GOD... and that it was GOD that created the universe... and that it was GOD who created earth, mankind, all the animals and put them together to procreate and build a civilization... and that it was GOD that inspired mankind to write the Bible to record what HE had done in the hopes that a religion would be started in HIS NAME.
However, we also learned that there were ELEVEN other religions all of which also believed in a creation story from which mankind originated. Each of these religions basically started in different parts of the world except for Christianity, Jewish, and Islamic beliefs - they were all in and about the same location geographically.
Those of us who are somewhat education and there are some that are not educated at all, believe that GOD does not exist, nor does anyone believe that multiple gods exist as was the case thousands of years ago.
We also know that the Bible is flawed in many ways because it does not take into consideration time dilation nor that the universe is still expanding. Some of us find it odd that after our so-called BIG BANG took place millions of years ago that our universe could still possibly be expanding.
As strange as it sounds, it is true.
But one thing is certain and based upon what we currently know, it seems relatively IMPOSSIBLE for our universe to have been created out of NOTHING. It takes something to make something. You cannot take nothing and make something.
SO...
where does that leave us?
It leaves us with the notion that our universe had to have come from somewhere or something.
Some scientists believe in spontaneous creation but that does not make sense either, because you have to have something in order for the spontaneous to happen... like spontaneous combustion.
You can believe in a GOD if you want.
You can believe in a CREATOR if you want.
Neither of those beliefs can be proven or disproven.
However, we do have a universe... that is factual.
Our universe is expanding... that is factual.
Our universe is curved - proven by gravity.
So, could the end of time curve back into the beginning of time?
And, at that point of connection, could there have been an advanced human who was responsible for connecting it all?
Railguns
Despite efforts from countries like China, Japan, and the U.S., challenges like the immense energy required and the wear on conductive rails have hindered progress. The U.S. Navy invested heavily in electromagnetic railguns, but the technology remains mostly in the research stage. Future success hinges on overcoming power and durability issues, making practical deployment still a distant goal.
Why Railgun Development Faces Immense Hurdles
Among the earliest efforts occurred during the First World War, when French designer Andre Louis Octave Fauchon-Villeplee proposed an electric cannon could fire a projectile further than the explosive ordnance of the era.
The First World War ended before Fauchon-Villeplee's design could be perfected – and more than a century later, the development of the weapons has continued with only limited success. READ MORE...
Monday, June 10
Tomb of China's First Emperor
Qin Shi Huang’s reign brought about the unification of China and an end to the Warring States period in 221 BC.
He constructed a series of walls to connect fortifications along the empire’s northern frontier (the precursor to the Great Wall of China) and abolished the feudal system of loose alliances and federations.
Qin Shi Huang was buried in the Mausoleum of the First Qin Emperor, a large complex located in present-day Lintong District in the city of Xi’an. READ MORE...