Here’s an interesting video where Katee Sackoff talks about her experience working inside a viper fighter on the set of BSG. If you’re as big of a BSG fan as I am, you’ll really enjoy this… especially the part where she “plays” with one of Quantum Mechanix’s awesome $1500 Viper replica. Check it out:
Do you have acute pancreatitis? Do you think you might but don’t have hours and hundreds of dollars to spend at the doctor waiting to find out? Well look under those couch cushions and roll some pennies, because you can build a sensor for under one dollar. Even better? It takes an hour or less for the results to come back.
Students at the University of Texas at Austin have developed a low-tech, low-cost test to diagnose acute pancreatitis, a sudden swelling of the pancreas, often resulting in permanent organ damage (and sometimes death). Using a cheap LED light, aluminum foil, gelatin and milk protein, they have built what is essentially “a battery having a trypsin-selective switch that closes the circuit between the anode and cathode.”
There are two steps to the process of pancreatitis detection using the new device. First, a drop of blood extract is placed atop the gelatin and milk protein mixture. The enzyme trypsin, elevated in pancreatitis patients, will break down the gelatin and protein.
In step two, a drop of sodium hydroxide (caustic soda or lye) is added to the mix. If the blood extract has sufficiently broken down the gelatin (indicating high levels of trypsin), the sodium hydroxide will react with the aluminum foil below, corroding the final barrier over the LED cathode. Magnesium anode and an iron salt create a circuit and generate enough current to light the LED. If the light is activated within an hour, acute pancreatitis is diagnosed.
The device can be assembled quickly or purchased cheaply, and at just about a square inch in size, is extremely portable. Find out more about UT Austin’s sensor in Analytical Chemistry.
While Sony’s PSN could stay down for as long as another extra week, the National Nerd Relief Fund is raising money to help the company get their gaming network back online.
This. Is. Sppparrrrtaaaaaaa… Uh… Ok, it may not be Spppaaaartaaaa, but it looks awfully like it though, and with reasons, Immortal was made by the same people who adapted Frank Miller’s graphic novel for the big screen. Check it out:
This is a rant about the wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton. But it is not a rant about the wedding itself. Nor is it a rant about the hype surrounding the event. Instead it is a rant about a particularly ludicrous element of the hype that offends me as a rationally thinking geek.
Read almost any media report of the event and you will discover that an estimated two billion people will watch the event. This isn’t an isolated claim: search Google News and the figure is repeated in Manilla, Vancouver, Africa, India, Tulsa, and New Zealand. The world’s media is clear: TWO BILLION people will watch as William and Kate tie the knot.
Bullshit.
I’m not offended by the fact that somebody somewhere has come up with this figure and grossly exaggerated it. I’m not really offended by the fact that most media outlets have reprinted the claim without offering an original source. But I’m offended by the fact that none of these reporters appear to have given the issue the two seconds of thought that it takes to realize that the figure is absolutely ludicrous.
How can you tell the two billion claim is too high? You’re spoilt for choice.
Why not start from a perspective of being completely non-cynical and taking previous similar claims at face value. The highest ever audience claimed for the FIFA World Cup Final is 1.3 billion. Is even the grandest of high-profile wedding really going to get a 50% increase over the biggest sporting event on the calendar?
What if we then look at the extent to which such figures are routinely exaggerated? In 2007 a British newspaper looked into FIFA’s claims that the previous year’s final had achieved an audience of 715.1 million people world wide. By looking at the verifiable ratings estimates based on electronic ratings meters in 54 countries, covering 90% of all TV owners, it found the actual audience to be more like 260 million. In other words, it’s almost impossible that any broadcast of any event ever has come anywhere close to two billion viewers.
But even if you don’t consider the fact that two billion for the royal wedding is not only a lie, but the most spectacular in a long series of lies, the figure still falls apart with some basic mathematics. Two billion is 28.9% of the world’s estimated 6.91 billion population. That means that for the wedding to get two billion viewers worldwide, it needs to be seen by an average of 28.9 percent of the population of every country on earth.
That’s possible surely? Well, let’s work on the basis that with the exception of statistical quirks such as countries with very low population, the country with the highest proportion of people watching will be the United Kingdom, home of the event. Based on betting in the country, the most common forecast is an audience of below 30 million, less than 50% of the population. If you can’t get half of the population watching in the UK, can you seriously expect 28.9% across the world?
And what if we turn our attention worldwide? Well, let’s look at a few groups. First of all, there’s all the people who don’t have access to television whatsoever. That’s extremely difficult to quantify, but we could well be talking about hundreds of millions at least. And at the risk of stating the obvious, the proportion of people among this group watching the wedding will be 0, not 28.9%.
Then throw in China, which accounts for 1.34 billion people, a fifth of the world’s population. No doubt some people will watch the wedding in this country, but will it really be a mass event there? Hell, even the most bombastic estimate for the 2008 Beijing Olympics put the audience in China at 842 million. Take into account that’s an exaggeration, compare how culturally important the two events are, and it’s tough to see China’s proportion of wedding viewers coming anywhere close to 28.9%.
Let’s move over to the Americas. North and South America combined have around 900 million residents. Throw in the fact that the US and Canada are among the countries that appear most likely to contain people interested in the wedding, and it’s clear the Americas will have to play a big part in getting us to two billion.
But can they do this? Indeed, can they at least give us the 28.9% of the population needed to help keep up the worldwide average. The clock says no. The wedding ceremony itself kicks off at 11am UK time. That’s 3am on the US west coast, 6am on the east coast, and 7am in the eastern-most countries on South America. There likely won’t even be 28.9% of the population awake.
So how can we possibly get to two billion viewers? Well, throw in delayed broadcasts and then use the trick of measuring reach (the number of people who see at least a couple of minutes at some point in the broadcast) rather than sustained audiences, and you might get a decent number. Take it to extremes and include people who don’t intentionally watch “the wedding” but see at least a few seconds’ worth of clips in news broadcasts and you could possibly get to two billion.
But any reporter who believes that when Kate Middleton walks down the aisle, two billion pairs of eyes will be watching, is simply making a right royal idiot of themselves.
General Zod now has a Faora for the upcoming “Man of Steel.” Zack Snyder’s take on Superman will feature actress Antje Traue in the role.
So, who is Antje Traue? She was born in January 1981 in Mittweida, Germany. She started in musical theater, touring Europe with the lead in International Munich Art Lab’s “West End Opera.”
From there, Traue moved on to German film and made-for-TV movies until 2008, when after several auditions and test shootings the actress played her first lead opposite Dennis Quaid and Ben Fosters in “Pandorum”, directed by Christian Alvart.
Though there are many incarnations of Faora in the DC canon, Variety speculates Traue will play the version that debuted in Action Comics #779, wherein Faora is “an orphan metahuman with the ability to disrupt molecular bonds, which allowed her to create a mutagenic virus that served as the linchpin of Zod’s plan.”
What say you, Geeks? Is Antje Traue right for the role of Faora?