If you’re looking for scientific or scholarly results. This has been necessary for a while, with all of the pr0n swamping some search results on regular Google.
Category Archives: Technology and Society
Telehunting
I’m not sure just what the Texas officials’ problem is with this:
Hunters soon may be able to sit at their computers and blast away at animals on a Texas ranch via the Internet, a prospect that has state wildlife officials up in arms.
A controversial Web site, http://www.live-shot.com, already offers target practice with a .22 caliber rifle and could soon let hunters shoot at deer, antelope and wild pigs, site creator John Underwood said on Tuesday.
Texas officials are not quite sure what to make of Underwood’s Web site, but may tweak existing laws to make sure Internet hunting does not get out of hand.
Seems like a great idea to me. It would let you bag venison from the comfort of your own home, from anywhere in the world. It would be a good way to keep the deer from scenting you, and could reduce the overpopulation in many states.
It also sounds like just the ticket for John Kerry. He could crawl on his stomach in one of his own mansions, with his virtual shotgun, instead of having to go out in the cold and mud.
[Update on Thursday morning]
The deer aren’t going down quietly. It seems they’ve adapted the tactics of the Islamakazis, and are taking us with them.
[Update early Thursday afternoon]
For anyone who wants to give it a try (shooting over the internet, not crashing into deer), here’s the web site.
[Another update on Thursday night]
We’re under siege.
Half A Century
Of teevee dinners. Happy anniversary, Swanson.
Can Flying Cars Be Next?
Check it out. 3-D television.
Exponential
Phil Bowermaster has an interesting post on what the future may hold in terms of information storage and processing.
Shiftless
Tim Blair is hosting a lively discussion on the virtues of clutches.
I’ve never owned a car with an automatic transmission.
How Long Can And Should We Live?
Stephen Gordon has a review of a new book on the prospects for indefinite lifespan.
They Never Learn
Another victory for the blogosphere over a professor who tried to resurrect the authenticity of the fake CBS memos.
But, hey, what’s a little academic fraud? It’s all in the service of the cause, right? The most important thing is to get rid of chimpie.
What frightens me is that the ability to create such fakery without getting caught (given a little intelligence, something in short supply so far on the part of the Bush haters) is improving every day. Authenticating documents (and records of events) is going to become a major societal issue in the future, and it’s starting to become one already.
A Latter-Day King Canute
We discussed various means of mitigating hurricanes in the comments to this post, but now comes a southern Florida businessman with a different idea.
Color me extremely skeptical. My confidence is less than buoyed by his association with Ed Mitchell, definitely one of the wackier Apollo astronauts, but hey, it’s his money, and if by some miracle it works, great. Of course, we won’t ever really know if it works, at least for this particular storm, because there’s no control on the experiment (i.e., we’ll have no idea what would have happened if he hadn’t done anything).
Liquid Cooling Garments
…for the masses. Astronauts have always had coolant loops in their clothes when performing extravehicular activity, to carry away the heat in the only way possible, but now it’s becoming an off-the-shelf item, thanks to Israeli ingenuity. Expect to see the space startups employ it.