Validate Your Life

Polemics, Plausible Progress, and Protuberant Projects

Science: The journal of Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion

Science: The journal of Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion just announced a possible breakthrough for astronauts enduring long-distance space travel. The earth is protected from meteorites, high velocity cosmic rays, and other space debris from its surrounding “magnetosphere”. Cutting edge physicists aim to simulate this magnetosphere around a space craft. Scientists intelligiently merely mimicked the sophisticated protection mechanism already surrounding the earth and voila, a new breakthrough that could extend space travel incredibly.

Bottom-Line: Magnetic Force field aims to protect astronauts from space harshness.

Future astronauts could benefit from a magnetic “umbrella” that deflects harmful space radiation around their crew capsule, scientists say.
The super-fast charged particles that stream away from the Sun pose a significant threat to any long-duration mission, such as to the Moon or Mars.
But the research team says a spaceship equipped with a magnetic field generator could protect its occupants.
Lab tests are reported in the journal Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion.
The approach mimics the protective field that envelops the Earth, known as the magnetosphere.
Astronauts’ risk
Our star is a constant source of charged particles, and storms that arise on the Sun’s surface result in huge numbers of these particles spilling into space.
As well as this plasma, or “solar wind”, high velocity particles known as cosmic rays also flood through our galaxy.
The Earth’s magnetosphere deflects many of these particles that rain down on the planet, and our atmosphere absorbs most of the rest.

The first time we switched it on, it worked
Ruth Bamford
International space agencies acknowledge that astronauts face a significant risk of ill health and even death if they experience major exposure to this harsh environment.
And even the spacecraft themselves are not immune to the effects. A solar flare crippled the electronics on Japan’s mission to Mars, Nozomi, in 2002, for example.
But researchers from the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory (RAL), the Universities of York and Strathclyde, and IST Lisbon have shown how it might be possible to create a portable mini-magnetosphere for spaceships.
People scale
In its experimental set-up, the team simulated the solar wind in the laboratory and used magnetic fields to isolate an area inside the plasma, deflecting particles around the “hole”.
It was not initially clear the idea would work, said Ruth Bamford, who led the research.
“There was a belief that you couldn’t make a little hole in the solar wind small enough to do this at all,” Dr Bamford, from RAL, told BBC News.
“It was believed that you had to have something very large, approaching planetary scale, to work in this way.”
The team has had to take into account the physics of plasmas at the comparatively tiny human scale. To create its metre-sized trial, the team used a plasma jet and a simple $20 magnet.
“The first time we switched it on, it worked,” said Dr Bamford.
What is more, the trial field seems to adjust itself automatically. “It does have the capacity to be somewhat self-regulating, just like the Earth’s magnetosphere is,” Dr Bamford explained.
“When it gets a strong push from the solar wind, the bubble gets smaller. The video shows us increasing the pressure of the solar wind, and the shield gets smaller but brighter.”
Power issues
Many more experiments are needed, Dr Bamford admits, to understand how best to harness the effect; and a practical implementation is probably 15 to 20 years away.

(more…)

, , , ,
2008/11/09 at 3:50 AM Comments (0)

Around the World in 80 Days

135 years ago, Jules Verne Published Around the World in 80 days. The geography of the globe is roughly the same, but the economy and global boundaries have changed.

Phileas Fogg navigated the globe with 20,000 pounds or roughly $40,000 with currency conversion. Factoring inflation, however, one realizes good ol’ Mr. Fogg circumnavigated with the equivalent of #### modern pounds or $$$$.

Great. Now that we are up to speed on the economics of 1873, we can launch into the story.

, ,
2008/07/01 at 3:00 AM Comments (0)

Productivity Heros

This details the list of all productivity heros of which I can conjure

  • David Allen – The “Father” of modern productivity. His GTD is referenced in myriad productivity apps, resources, and books. The uber-productivity trend-setter, David coined words like “mind like water productivity” “blackbelt GTD” and other Zen-like terms. He has a martial arts background, lives in Ojai (sweet, a neighbor!), and has to have some kind of computer programming background with his references to LIFO, FIFO, and the entire “closed” loop GTD system is set up like a computer program with if-then statements. If anyone wants to know about productivity, they’ve got to understand or at least get the gist of Collect, Process, Organize, Review, Do. Here’s David giving a stellar speech to Google:
    I suggest you subscribe to some of his RSS Feeds and checkout the DavidCo Forum.
  • Merlinn Mann — If anyone knows GTD high-tech style, it’s Merlin Mann. In a way he’s like David Allen 2.0. He invented an amazing program called Quicksilver for the mac. With that handy gem you can load most any program or document with the keyboard, making it an essential for keyboard jockeys. Using words like “byzantine”, “email bankruptcy”, and “attrition” all in the same paragraph, he really cracks me up and reminds me of a high-tech jim Carrey infused with hyper-intelligence. Check out his hyserical mockery FlockedUp site debut.
    or the more traditional presentation of his essential productivity material “Inbox Zero” with this video presentation at google or at the main Merlin Mann hub. The guy has numerous pages, blogs, and sites, so it’s hard to pinpoint a central hub, but if one existed it would be 43folders.com.
  • Cameron Johnson – This may be transforming into a “leaders of business” by listing Cameron, but I had to include this guy. Cameron wouldn’t typically make the productivity list because his expertise is entrepreneurialism, not productivity. But, come on…if you started 12 business by the age of 21, how could you call that NOT productive! Here’s a rundown of his startups:
    TrueLoot.com 2004
    CertificateSwap 2004
    KazaaGator 2003
    AimBuddy 2003
    ChooseYourPrize.com 2002
    Zablo.com 2001
    SearchOmega 2001
    VoteStation.com 2001
    SurfingXChange 2001
    SurfingPrizes.com 2000
    EmazingSites 1999
    MyEZShop.com 1999
    MyEZMail.com 1998
    Cheers and Tears/
    Beanie Wholesale 1997
    Cheers and Tears
    Printing Co.
    His book is well-written, well-organized, and massively helpful for anyone eager to launch their own business. The best part? Cameron writes from my (Generation Y) generation, so instead of hearing some garbage about 1980s reveries at Harvard or how “back in the day we didn’t have computers”, you just get waves of solid, clean, lucid business advice…plus the guy’s just massively intelligent. Additionally, he wrote “You Call the Shots” like an autobiography, giving it the “true novel” flavor to the prose.
  • TDK — You must saying, I’m getting more and more off-track, but I had to list my dad, Thomas Dale Kuczmarski. Sure, I’ve seen him stressed out and carrying jumbles of paper, and still using paper calendars, he definitely isn’t the most technologically advanced fellow but really, he knows how to get things done. Some of his highlights for cognitive productivity and avoiding stoppages and blockages of doubt are failure parties: simply celebrating any feedback, by not labeling it as positive or negative. Such an approach has major congruence with an essential presuppositions of NLP.

(more…)

, , , ,
2008/06/27 at 6:15 PM Comments (0)

Los Angeles Facts

In the United States

#1 Largest County
#2 2nd Largest City

Zip codes in CA run from 90000-96199. If you’re outside of that range, you’re in the wrong place!!! Haha!

,
2008/05/23 at 2:28 AM Comments (0)

The Best Anti-Psych Post

Pharmaceutical firms linked to defining DSM diagnostic criteria. Proving, it’s all about the money. This is a brilliant reference! I knew this, and rhetorically have asked people why so many of the so-called “disorders” could fit symptomatic criteria of almost any person (insinuating that the pharmaceuticals need to make money from diagnoses, and, thus, make diagnostic criteria incredibly generalized), but your reference illustrates the financial evidence behind the malign and deception. Thanks, WP, for revealing this! Here’s a juicy quote:

“Every psychiatric expert involved in writing the standard diagnostic criteria for disorders such as depression and schizophrenia has had financial ties to drug companies that sell medications for those illnesses, a new analysis has found.”

The Insanity of Psychiatry
I think one of the most obvious examples that illustrates how the psychiatric sham can’t consistently diagnose even the most simple subjects (obviously, because such diagnoses simply do not exist!) is the famous Rosenhan experiment. Designed by David Rosenhan of 1972, the experiment involved “pseudopatients” consisting of perfectly healthy grad students, phycians, psychiatrists, and pediatricians” acting as if they had hallucinatory symptoms and trying to get accepted by 12 prestigious hospitals around the country. They were all accepted. And the greatest blunder of psychiatry is revealed when the hospital staff (after being informed that some of the patients were part of the experiment) couldn’t identify the pseudopatients from the real ones and thought some actual patients were pseudopatients! The misdiagnosis of their own misdiagnosis! Ultimately, David Rosenhan single-handedly proved (with his experiment team, of course) that the psychiatric business not only inherently possesses flaws in diagnoses, but also in remission and contingency diagnoses. In short, shrinks don’t have the capacity to correctly scrutinize “patients” before and after diagnoses, making the entire diagnostic process a pathetic, ridiculous joke, only to be believed by greedy pharmaceutical companies, shady psychiatrists, or the blundering status quo.

(more…)

,
2007/11/23 at 8:47 PM Comments (2)
This blog is monetized using Are-PayPal WP Plugin This work is licensed by John Thomas "Kooz" Kuczmarski and Validate Your Life under the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/.