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Kilauea eruption
I guess it’s volcano day today. Just after my last blog post about the Nyiragongo Crater in Africa, I read about a new eruption of Kilauea. Of course I had to find a map to see how far I was away from this eruption.
Wikipeda has a nice little map, you can click it to embigen it:
The eruption was in the east rift zone by the Pu’u O’o Crater. We weren’t over there, but we weren’t too far away. We drove down the Chain of Craters Road all the way down until it was blocked by an old lava flow. We saw the Holei Sea Arch, which is a well photographed sea arch, and a scary cliff that I didn’t want to get too close to the edge of.
It would be pretty cool to be in Hawaii today.
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Volcanoes are so cool
After experiencing a volcano close up, or as close up as a normal person can get, last summer, volcanoes have interested me. Last summer we hiked down into Halema`uma`u crater on Mt Kilauea, and we also got an even closer view of it in a helicopter ride. It was pretty amazing.
Today I ran across some amazing pictures at The Big Picture of the Nyiragongo Crater in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. I don’t think of volcanoes when I think of Africa, especially in central Africa where this one is, but man these are some gorgeous pictures.
Thanks to Phil Plait for bringing these amazing pictures to my attention.
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Joey Cape Doesn’t Play Well With Others
Yesterday I got a surprise package it the mail. It was the new Joey Cape album on CD and vinyl. For those of you who don’t know who Joey Cape is—well—he is a musician who has many bands, most notability, Lagwagon. I have been a Lagwagon fan since the early 90s when I was listening to a lot of Fat Wreck Chords bands.His latest album was a project he started in January 2010. For the year 2010 he released a song a month digitally, and when the project was done you got the hard copies of the album too. Of course I was going to sign up for this. As I have said many times, I love supporting artists when I know they are actually getting the money. I love it when I can buy their stuff directly from them. It’s a pretty cool CD, and DVD package. The artwork was done buy his daughter who appears on the DC and DVD, and it’s pretty darn cool.
Plus how cool is it to see the man himself packaging up his album to ship out?
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North Dakota: least visited state
via youtube.com@cmellmer posted this on Twitter and it made me lol. Just for the record I am really a Minnesotan, I just live a few miles across the border into ND.
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Links of interest for 3-5-11
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Unimpressed with the iPad 2
So if you weren’t in a cave yesterday you heard about the iPad 2 announcement. Will I be upgrading? No. My iPad does everything I need it to do. Nothing in the update really excited me. I’m not one to upgrade to keep up with the Joneses. I love gadgets, but I don’t actually buy them unless I know I am going to use them a lot, and I don’t upgrade until I absolutely need to. The iPad 2 is the iPad they should have released last year. I think they purposely left out the cameras last year just so they would have something to add this year. Apple’s yearly product updates kind of bug me. They are always trying to make last year’s products seem old so you upgrade. I don’t know why any current iPad owners would upgrade. Sure it’s a little faster, a little lighter, and has cameras, but I have never complained that mine was too slow, or wish it weighed 0.2 lbs less, or even had a camera.
To me the big news is you can now get a refurbished iPad for $349. That’s a great deal. I always buy my iPods refurbished, and may buy my next laptop refurbished. I am still rocking the 1st gen MacBook, and it’s working just fine despite a little yellowing, but the time for a new laptop is getting closer.
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Sick again
I am usually pretty lucky with colds. I very seldom get sick, but this year I am on my second cold of the season. Because I seldom get sick, I don’t always get a flu shot. Not because I am against them, mostly it’s just out of laziness. This year I did get my flu shot though. Many people would correlate getting sick twice proving that the flu shot doesn’t work, but remember correlating doesn’t always equal causation. I haven’t gotten the flu this season—and if I did, it would mean I just caught a different strain—just some annoying colds.
I blame being around more people than usual this season as the cause. With my Mother-in-Law’s situation, I have spent much more time in hospitals and around family than usual, and I have spend time around a bunch of people making sandbags to help fight this years flood. Being in close quarters with other people is probably the number one way to get sick. Being sick more this year will probably just encourage me to make sure I get my flu shot next season.
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Links of interest for 2-26-11
I’ve been blogging since August of 2000. I remember it because that was when I first got broadband, and the internet was finally fast enough to enjoy it. I have never really taken blogging all that serious. Most of my archives are long lost, and I don’t really care who reads this.
I mainly blog because I like to have my own place on the internet to call home, and I like to share things that I find cool and interesting on the internet. Sometimes when I find something cool and have a comment about it I will blog it, but most of the time I just post it over there —> in my sidebar. If you are reading this in your RSS reader, you probably aren’t getting my links unless you are also subscribed to my links RSS feed. So now I am going to try and post a recap of the weeks links every Saturday. I’m pretty bad at keeping things like this going, but we will see how it works. Here is the past week’s links:
- Contrails vs. Chemtrails, or Why Local News is Inane
- The true origins of Christianity…
- Eyelid shutter glasses: fake but still a hack
- Watson: Linux Basics
- How Far Away is the Moon? (The Scale of the Universe)
- The Top Ten Misconceptions About Atheists
- Pseudoscience and meme fitness
- NASA’s Space Shuttle – From Top to Bottom
- Christchurch earthquake – The Big Picture
- The Likability of Angry Birds
- Amazing Shuttle launch video from an airplane window
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Power Balance scam
via revision3.comThis weeks episode of Scam School was a great one. Brian Brushwood shows how the Power Balance guys are scamming everybody out of their money for their stupid little bands. I don’t like how he pussy foots around by saying he isn’t sure how the real Power Balance bands work, when we all know they are a scam and work exactly the same as the Placebo Bands do. He was probably just covering his ass.
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American scientific literacy
On the latest episode, episode #292 of The Skeptics’ Guide the Universe —my favorite podcast by the way— one of their “Science or Fiction” items was that adult Americans with basic science literacy has increased from 10% to 28% over the last 20 years, and it was in fact true! Sure, 28% is pretty pathetic, but at least it’s going up. Someone mentioned that it’s probably due to the internet, and I would have to agree. I think I got a pretty poor science education in high school. Mostly what I remember about science class in high school was trying to memorize equations. Even back then I though trying to memorize things that you could look up in seconds stupid, so I cheated a little. I had a scientific calculator that I would program the equations into and it would run them for me. Sure it may have been cheating, but it’s really just something you would do if you had to use those equations in real life. In fact at my current job I did a similar thing with calculations we constantly have to make —I make an Excel spreadsheet to calculate them.
I was so frustrated of high school science that my first year in college I took a chemistry and astronomy class and found them totally interesting. Too bad I found the rest of my college classes totally boring and dropped out after a year.
The internet makes it so easy for the people that are interested in science to continue learning. I believe that is where the 28% comes from. The rest of the population that isn’t interested in science just goes on living there lives scientific illiterate. While that in itself isn’t a horrible thing; it’s the people making money off them that I find disgusting. Late night TV and radio is chock-full of scammers trying to make money off of the scientific illiterate. They drive me crazy, but until Americans become more scientific literate, we will all have to put up with the Power Balance bracelets and the many other products of similar ilk.