Block the rain with blinking Blade Runner umbrellas – The Boston Globe

From my Boston Globe column this week: LED umbrellas and tougher OLEDs… — MB

“The Blade Runner Style LED Umbrella is my new favorite for, as ThinkGeek’s brilliant copywriters put it, staying dry on my “walk to the noodle shop.’’Evocative of Ridley Scott’s rain-soaked, futuristic Los Angeles, the Blade Runner umbrella has a pushbutton, light-up shaft. The umbrella comes with three button batteries that will probably outlive its fabric, if this spring’s rains are a sign of things to come.”

via Block the rain with blinking Blade Runner umbrellas – The Boston Globe.

Welcome to the New World of the "Anthropocene"

Force of nature. Photo: Ville Miettinen/Flickr CC

Scientists are wielding a nonscientific term in an effort to modify human behavior. — MB

Humans have wrecked the planet so badly in the past two hundred years — on an order of magnitude equivalent to meteor strikes, or tectonic plate shifts — that we’ve earned a place in the geologic record, a group of scientists say.

Led by the Nobel Prize-winning atmospheric chemist, Paul Crutzen, they write in the latest issue of Environmental Science and Technology (excerpt and link, below) that we are living the “Anthropocene Epoch,” in which humans are cracking ice sheets and wiping out vulnerable critters with their CO2 emissions and settlement habits.

Shockingly enough, Crutzen, who first came up with “Anthropocene” (New Human) ten years ago, admits the term is “informal and not precisely defined.”

In other words, Anthropocene is not a scientific term at all.

But that doesn’t mean that scientists can’t use the term to push an agenda:

“The concept of the Anthropocene might, therefore, become exploited, to a variety of ends. Some of these may be beneficial, some less so. The Anthropocene might be used as encouragement to slow carbon emissions and biodiversity loss, for instance; perhaps as evidence in legislation on conservation measures 31; or, in the assessment of compensation claims for environmental damage. It has the capacity to become the most politicized unit, by far, of the Geological Time Scale—and therefore to take formal geological classification into uncharted waters.”

via The New World of the Anthropocene1 – Environmental Science & Technology ACS Publications.

Small talk sucks, scientists discover

Conversation: Keep it heavy. Duncan Harris/Flickr CC

The next time someone wants to talk sports around the water cooler, tell them, “sorry, bud, but you’re bringing me down.”

Turns out, according to a University of Arizona study, deep conversations leave us feeling better.

Here’s a bit of the Telegraph’s coverage:

Volunteers wore an unobtrusive recording device to monitor conversations with friends and colleagues for four days.

Researchers then listened to the recordings and identified them as trivial small talk or substantive discussions.

via Idle chit chat can make you unhappy – Telegraph.

Zorgy Awards: Put Tim Binnall over the top

I just picked Tim Binnall’s podcast, Binnall of America, for the Best Paranormal Podcast of 2009.

Loren Coleman gets my vote for top paranormal researcher.

Both are on my list of Ten New England Esotericists to Watch in 2010.

From The Other Side of Truth, which hosts the Zorgy Awards (only a few days to go):

“Voting begins… now!

The polls will close on March 7, 2010, at 11 pm AST.

via The Other Side of Truth: The 2009 Zorgy Awards – Voting Begins.

Mars in a month: now doable

Well, make that a month, a week, and a weekend, thanks to a plasma rocket developed by this MIT physicist and former astronaut:

A journey from Earth to Mars could soon take just 39 days, cutting current travel time nearly six times, a rocket scientist who has the ear of the US space agency NASA has said.

via Scientist eyes 39-day voyage to Mars.

Georgia Tech nanomagnets snag cancer cells

Incredible. Another nano-therapy that might be available in the short term:

Scientists at Georgia Tech and the Ovarian Cancer Institute have further developed a potential new treatment againsat cancer that uses magnetic nanoparticles to attach to cancer cells, removing them from the body. The treatment, tested in mice in 2008, has now been tested using samples from human cancer patients. The results appear online in the journal Nanomedicine.

via Magnetic Nanoparticles Show Promise for Combating Human Cancer.

You might also recall this mind-blowing interview on NPR, in which Georgetown researcher Esther Chang reports a method for using nanoparticles to deliver tumor suppressor genes to kill tumors.

DOE: Big — really big — 'puters wanted

Photo: Erik Pitti/Flickr CC

DOE will spend $5 million for folks to help governments analyze the exabytes of data from climate studies and the Large Hadron Collider.

From the grant announcement:

The activities supported by this FOA may be a combination of basic research, creation of algorithms for advanced architectures, and development of usable data management and analysis tools for scientific discovery. Partnerships among universities, National Laboratories, and industry are strongly encouraged.

via Grants.gov – Find Grant Opportunities – Opportunity Synopsis.

Theory: CERN & the Large Hadron Collider 'Being Sabotaged from the Future'

Red Ice’s Henrik Palmgren interviews one of the founders of string theory Holger Bech Nielsen

It hardly gets more out there, than this. Kudos to Red Ice, for bringing us the most challenging esoteric chat in weeks:

We ask why the LHC haven’t been working properly? We further discuss Holger’s claim that he made in an interview with the New York Times that the Large Hadron Collider is being “Sabotaged from the Future”. We talk about “god”, time, history and the future.

via Red Ice Radio – Holger Bech Nielsen – CERN & the Large Hadron Collider ‘Being Sabotaged from the Future’.

Heretic on 2012: Fear people, not God (news video feature)

The young Boston investigative journo Dan Rowinski recently produced this news feature about 2012 (below), as part of his graduate studies at BU.

Dan interviews me (I’m cited as an “apocalyptic expert”), along with Mayan and millennial experts from BU, and end-timers on the street.

I enjoyed watching the piece. The point I make in it is that the risk of chaos in 2012 is very real: not from above, mind you, but from crazy people getting amp’d up with anticipation.

Apocalyptic – 2012 News Feature from Dan Rowinski on Vimeo.

What's up with the Moon?

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There’s a definite synchromystical, Moon “thing” going on, at the moment…

President Obama might not let us go to the Moon, but in Düsseldorf, you can see the largest sculpture of Earth’s sole satellite, as part of a new solar system exhibit (from a pres release I received today):

Düsseldorf, Germany – The inside of a 380-foot tall obsolete gas holder, the Gasometer in Oberhausen, is the space for a new exhibit called “Out Of This World – Wonders of The Solar System.” It includes the largest moon sculpture in the world — an 82-foot wide replica of the moon hanging in a cathedral-like space under the holder’s 328-foot roof, as well as replicas of the sun and its planets in a space 223 feet wide. The exhibit explores scientific, cultural and artistic perspectives on the creation and death of our solar system in the vast dimensions of the cosmos.

I’d be the first to say, of the Moon, “been there, done that.” But that was before a team led by Brown University professor Carle Pieters confirmed the presence of H20 up there.

And then there is Richard C. Hoagland’s idea of combing the Moon for ancient ruins.

Source: Sternstunden: RUHR.2010.