Month: August 2016
20nm imaging
The technology incorporates several innovations in fluorescence microscopy and super-resolution microscopy and harnesses the same kind of “adaptive optics” technology used in astronomy – deformable mirrors that change shape to compensate for light distortion. In astronomy the deformable mirrors are used to compensate for atmospheric distortion to yield clear images of celestial objects. Deformable mirrors also can be used to counteract the distortion caused when light passes through biological tissue.
Stop to smell the flowers
pretty much.
$35B fraud
The SEC temporarily halted trading of Neuromama Ltd., citing “potentially manipulative transactions” in a stock that soared to $35B even though it hasn’t filed financial results in years.
How does this kind of total nonsense slip through? is it just technical incompetence (accounting was supposed to be in computer-readable formats years ago) or is it just regular bankster fraud? probably both.
Excel stop motion
one of the most useful applications for excel yet.
The Idiomatic
Stuck for something smug to say? The Idiomatic randomly generates idioms by gluing together parts of other idioms, allowing you to control conversations and stymie unwelcome trains of thought through the power of confusion.
Ancillary Justice Fan Trailer
Future Glimpses
TV used to be the primary way for the edge-of-grid have-nots to discover what they want to have. Today it is discovering geotagged images from nearby places, sometimes 100s of km away.
$1t wasted
just imagine if that money had been spent on infrastructure instead of mall cops.
Since 9/11, the United States has spent $1 trillion to defend against al-Qaeda and ISIL, dirty bombs and lone wolves, bioterror and cyberterror. Has it worked?
Is US Any Safer?
In fact, this may be a path only a lame duck could risk. The politically easier path is to promise “never again.” As Trump’s hard-line rhetoric about the president being weak on terrorism demonstrates, Obama and anyone who follows him and tries to continue on that path will be an easy target for opponents who will claim that transforming homeland security from the fantasy of never-again prevention to a combination of prevention and mitigation and recovery is throwing in the towel. That this is still a debate in an election season 15 years after the 9/11 attacks is evidence that although we’ve made progress, we’re still a long way from adjusting—politically and psychically—to this new normal, where, unlike during the Cold War, there is no relying on deterrence for protection.