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Technorati Profile

 

Private Firm Plots Robotic Lunar Exploration

Nov 1st, 2008 · Astrobotic Technology has unveiled plans for a series of robotic expeditions to the Moon. The lunar rovers will explore high-interest areas of the Moon's surface and beam the data back to the Earth. The plan is to accumulate an extensive library of lunar …
see also: robots · Google · service · library · corporate · Lunar · private

Multiple Asteroid Belts Found Orbiting Nearby Star

Oct 28th, 2008 · Scientists have found two asteroid belts around the star Epsilon Eridani, the ninth closest star to our solar system. Epsilon Eridani also possesses an icy outer ring similar in composition to our Kuiper Belt, but with 100 times more material, and a Jovian …
see also: scientists · planet · Composite · Solar · terrestrial · Kuiper Belt · Asteroid

Best Terrestrial/OTA HDTV Setup For an Apartment?

Aug 19th, 2008 · I don't watch TV but keep an HTPC for watching movies. One of my relatives is very ill and I'll have a lot of family rotating through my apartment and I'd like to have a few more options for entertainment. I'm running Vista MCE and bought a Hauppauge …
see also: Linux · Hardware · ca · TV · HDTV · platform · entertainment

Apollo 14 Moonwalker Claims Aliens Exist

Jul 24th, 2008 · Former NASA astronaut and moon-walker Dr Edgar Mitchell — a veteran of the Apollo 14 mission — has stunningly claimed aliens exist. And he says extra-terrestrials have visited Earth on several occasions — but the alien contact has been …
see also: interview · NASA · Missions · terrestrial · astronaut · agency · veterans

Mars Had an Ancient Impact Like Earth

Jun 26th, 2008 · The BBC reports on a set of Nature articles showing that Mars had an impact about four billion years ago by a huge asteroid. This was about the same time that a much bigger object slammed into the Earth, throwing material into orbit around our infant …
see also: BBC · theory · planet · nature · ancient · universities · life

Radio Telescopes on Moon to Study Cosmic Dark Ages

Feb 21st, 2008 · The Narrative Fallacy brings news that NASA has awarded a $500,000 grant to develop plans for an array of radio telescopes to be located on the moon. The telescopes would be used to gather data from the earliest stars and galaxies, observations of which …
see also: NASA · Lunar · vehicle · construction · sponsored · emission · terrestrial

The Effects of the Fibre Outage Throughout the Mediterranean

Feb 3rd, 2008 · Analysts have been studying the effects of the fibre outage throughout the Mediterranean in terms of network performance, by examining the changes in packet losses, latencies and throughput. We initially discussed the outage yesterday. 'It is interesting …
see also: network · service · Internet · 2005 · countries · India · Pakistan

Radio May Have To Pay To Play

Dec 20th, 2007 · Ars Technica reports that Congress is considering two bills that will remove the exemption terrestrial radio broadcasters currently enjoy that allows them to broadcast music without compensating the artists or labels for it. In the current dispensation …
see also: Music · contracts · artist · Ars Technica · modern · RIAA · congress

Are Aliens Living Among Us?

Nov 20th, 2007 · In recent years scientists have begun to view the existence of life outside of our solar system as ever-more likely. If life does emerge readily under terrestrial conditions, then perhaps it formed many times on our home planet. To pursue this tantalizing …
see also: scientists · creature · planet · organization · Nuclear · reactor · environment

Internet Radio's 'Second Chance' Bogging Down in House

Aug 6th, 2007 · Wired is reporting that the Internet Radio Equality Act is failing fast in the House, with negotiations breaking down over fair pricing for internet radio broadcasters. 'A legislative setback could make it harder to dislodge the new fees, which took effect …
see also: payments · Deadline · Internet · customers · organization · legislation · revenue

RIAA Seeks Royalties From Radio

May 22nd, 2007 · First it was Napster; then it was Internet radio; then it was little girls, grandmothers, and dead people. But now our friends at the RIAA are going decidedly low-tech. The LA Times reports that the RIAA wants royalties from radio stations. 70 years ago …
see also: Music · CD · Internet · Tech · friends · satellite · RIAA

Harvesting Energy in the Sky

Apr 4th, 2007 · The Economist magazine has an article on Flying wind farms. Mind you, we're not talking about ordinary, terrestrial windmills here. We're talking about actual airborne — up to 10km in the sky — wind farms intended to harvest the immense supply …
see also: proposal · energy · magazine · eccentric · generator · terrestrial · airborne

Study Says $2.3B in Net Radio Royalties by '08

Mar 10th, 2007 · According to a newly published report, the music industry will have a nice pile of cash to collect from net radio owners in 2008 — a staggering $2.3 billion to be exact. The report is based on current performance royalties paid by terrestrial radio …
see also: Music · Internet · corporate · industry · songs · 2008 · terrestrial

A New Angle on Martian Methane

Oct 6th, 2006 · A recent hypothesis paper entititled 'Martian CH4: Sources, Flux, and Detection' delves into the production of methane on Mars. This hypothesis compares Mars with South Africa, and draws the conclusion that the radiolysis of martian ice and water while …
see also: products · 2005 · Public · South Africa · concentration · Solar · life

Is Distributed Computing Being Distributed Badly?

Jun 28th, 2006 · Distributed computing could help researchers studying climate change or Alzheimer's, but SETI@home's search for extra-terrestrial intelligence continues to dominate. Wall Street Journal columnist Lee Gomes says that's a big waste, especially because SETI …
see also: intelligent · medical · computer · scientists · planet · global · competitions

NASA's 20-G Centrifuge Machine

Apr 30th, 2006 · Scientists from NASA and two U.S. universities are using a 20-G centrifuge machine that can simulate up to 20 times the terrestrial gravity to evaluate the effects of hypergravity on humans. This 58-foot diameter centrifuge has three cabins, one for humans …
see also: Hardware · pictures · scientists · NASA · Machine · health · population

Internet Radio Failing to Find Support?

Feb 10th, 2006 · WOXY, one of the Internet's larger radio stations, has announced that it will soon implement a monthly subscription fee, to support operations. When the Cincinnati based station went from terrestrial broadcast 97.7 to Internet only, they vowed to keep …
see also: Streaming · Music · business · advertising · ITunes · Internet · digital

'The IT Crowd' UK Sit-com

Jan 12th, 2006 · The Register reports that "A new sitcom - set among IT workers in the dingy basement of a glamorous company - is due to arrive on the UK's Channel 4 next month. The IT Crowd, written by Graham Linehan (the scribe behind Father Ted, Black Books), will …
see also: Internet · UK · company · register · com · Books · workers

Swarming And Hopping Planetary Robots

Dec 10th, 2005 · Recently Dr. Penelope Boston (U. New Mexico) and Dr. Steven Dubowsky (MIT) discussed their NASA advances to develop 'hopping microbots' capable of exploring hazardous terrain, including underground caves and planetary extremes. 'We came up with the idea …
see also: Swarms · robots · prototype · NASA · Planetary · collection · energy

DARPA Awards $53 Million for Solar Power Research

Nov 5th, 2005 · Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) will be giving a consortium led by the University of Delaware nearly $53 million in funding to more than double the efficiency of terrestrial solar cells within the next 50 months. DARPA wants the consortium …
see also: products · affordable · awarded · research · prototype · Cell · funding







Louis Pasteur