Flying Yachts anyone?

A friend pinged me on FB this morning with a very interesting link.  For those of us who have millions to throw around, hang on to your wallets because this one’s on the drawing board:

At last, a hi-tech superyacht that can fly.

Designed by noted futurist Yelken Octuri, the boat’s sails are a take off on the design from the America’s cup winning yacht which proved that a vertical wing was a viable sail design. This yacht features 4 which can be lowered to a horizontal position to provide fore and aft wings. Then, open ‘er up and set sail for the other side of the world. Check out Yelken’s site for some of his other more down-to-earth (or is it up-in-the-air) aircraft designs.

I don’t know about you, but I’ve put a few gazillion bucks aside for this gizmo…

Posted in Gizmos | Comments Off

NOVA: The Parthenon

I was haunting the finish carpentry forum of one of my favorite construction sites JLC Online last night when I ran across an interesting thread.  It seems that the Parthenon has been a restoration project for the last 40 years with no end in sight yet.  What’s amazing is the fact that the Parthenon itself was built in a mere 8 years to a mind boggling precision level that we can’t seem to match.  Anyway, this Nova episode goes into not only the incredible capabilities of ancient Greek engineers, but also the mysteries surrounding how they did it.  Unbelievable and great watch too.  Here’s the link to the Hulu stream:

NOVA: The Parthenon

Posted in Our Fragile Planet | Comments Off

Here’s something cool!

I ran across this one last night.  How about a plug-in solar panel!  Ok, not rocket science you might think but not so fast…  Here’s a quote from a recent CNN article on this:

“The company, Clarian Power, aims to be the first to bring a plug-in solar power system to the market, in 2011.

Clarian’s president, Chad Maglaque, says the company’s product is different from existing micro-inverters, which convert solar panels’ power into AC current. Maglaque says his system has built-in circuit protection, doesn’t require a dedicated electrical panel and plugs directly into a standard electrical outlet.”

What’s massively cool about this concept is the technology behind the micro-inverter.  Chad goes on to state that his product can be front-ended by any source.  So, replace the solar panel with say, a wind turbine or maybe a fuel cell.  The true coolness of this is that we homeowners will conceptually be able to plug in any source of green energy without fear of burning the house down.   More importantly, we’ll save a lot of money too by eliminating the expensive infrastructure traditionally required to adapt green power to grid power.  We can’t run those electrical meters backwards without it!

And lookey here… Clarian power is an American Startup too!  I’ll be keeping my eye on this one…

Posted in Gizmos | 1 Comment

Why our planet is “fragile”

By now, it should be pretty obvious to everybody that global warming is a fact.  More likely than not, it is we humans who are precipitating it as well.

Given this, the “There is no global warming” camp now appears to be evolving to a “the earth has always had climate swings so there’s no big worry” camp.

“The earth has always had climate swings”.  True.

The problem of course is that global warming is a potentially catastrophic event no matter where our opinion lies.  Because the earth is fragile.  To us.

The planet has always had great climate swings.  The people who say this are completely correct.  However, with those swings, life has changed.  Dominant species have been wiped out, replaced by others more suited to the new environment.

While life is adaptable, the individual species that comprise it are not.  By changing our environment in the manner we are now doing, we risk wiping out our species in less than 10 generations.

This is why we live on a fragile planet.

Posted in Our Fragile Planet | 1 Comment

Why can’t we build Interstate systems any more?

Think about it.  In 1956 the largest public works project in our history was undertaken.  Today, what would be considered the unthinkable occurred: government came in and took possession of homes, sometimes whole towns as part of a plan to run superhighways from coast to coast.  People were displaced, individual livelihoods were lost, workers were let go.

But what was built was the backbone of America.  According to Wikipedia, its the single largest construction project in history.  Something only a great nation could do.  Arguably, the Interstate system is what continues to make us great.  Commerce from coast to coast is something we take for granted.  You can push “Buy it now” on ebay and your package arrives from the other side of the country in 3 days.

The Interstate project couldn’t happen now.  Legal  battles would ensue,  individuals would decry government, lobbyists would leverage special interests, “how do we pay for it” would fuel the minority party’s rhetoric, and come November, the idiots who dreamed of the Interstate system would be out the door.

Sad, isn’t it?  Today we face the same situation.  Our great country needs to remove it’s dependence on oil and switch to alternate technologies.  We have the opportunity to distance ourselves from the rest of the world and in so doing adopt technologies that will fuel worker productivity and create jobs into the rest of the 21st century.  We could be leading the pack in fuel cell manufacturing, community sized nuclear powerplants, and Solar technologies.  We could be the go-to nation for next generation energy.  We could be saving our fragile ecosystem by reducing our carbon footprint.

But “Green Energy” initiatives are dead here because jobs could be lost and governmental spending to fuel research, development and manufacturing will “increase the deficit”.  Instead America should be drilling harder, Government should be lifting moratoriums on deep water oil extraction because “drilling rigs will leave and countless support jobs will be lost all along the gulf coast”.  We should be using the hydraulic fracture process to extract more gas. Who cares about its effect on groundwater.  We need more fossil fuel damn it!

What the heck happened to our great nation?

Posted in Politics | Comments Off

WordPress Template Customization

Steep learning curve. It took a bit of work to get EW working for CSS customizations on this site.

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off

WordPress Installation

I just completed the wordpress install. Interesting time. To actually get the “5 minute install” working I had to set up the wordpress site and launch the readme file.  That took 45 minutes…

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off