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Festo – SmartBird

November 22nd, 2011 by admin


Festo – SmartBird.

SmartBird is an ultralight but powerful flight model with excellent aerodynamic qualities and extreme agility. With SmartBird, Festo has succeeded in deciphering the flight of birds – one of the oldest dreams of humankind.

This bionic technology-bearer, which is inspired by the herring gull, can start, fly and land autonomously — with no additional drive mechanism. Its wings not only beat up and down, but also twist at specific angles. This is made possible by an active articulated torsional drive unit, which in combination with a complex control system attains an unprecedented level of efficiency in flight operation. Festo has thus succeeded for the first time in creating an energy-efficient technical adaptation of this model from nature.

Posted in SciTech Tuesday, Technology, Video | No Comments »

Amon Tobin ISAM: Mixed-Media Sound and Projection Mapping

November 22nd, 2011 by admin

Visualizing ISAM from Leviathan on Vimeo.

Leviathan worked with frequent collaborator and renowned VJ Vello Virkhaus on groundbreaking performance visuals for electronic musician Amon Tobin, creating ethereal CG narratives and engineering the geometry maps for an entire stage of stacked cube-like structures. Taking the performance further, the Leviathan team also developed a proprietary projection alignment tool to ensure quick and accurate setup for the show, along with custom Kinect control & visualization utilities for Amon to command.

Hat tip to Chris Arkenberg…  Amon Tobin ISAM – Mixed-Media Sound & Projection Mapping Author:  

 

Posted in Art, Music, SciTech Tuesday, Technology, Video | No Comments »

9/11 Theories: Expert vs. Expert

November 18th, 2011 by admin

9/11 Theories: Expert vs. Expert

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Why can’t the experts get their stories straight?

Posted in Conspiracy, Science, SciTech Tuesday, Technology, Video | No Comments »

Guy Rundle ’From Cold war to Cyberwar: Power, the State and the Wikileaks Effect’

November 15th, 2011 by admin

 

 

Guy Rundle  ’From Cold war to Cyberwar: Power, the State and the Wikileaks Effect’.

This is the first lecture in a series of five, as part of The Wednesday Lectures – Hosted by Raimond Gaita.

WACA will be posting videos of each of the Wikileaks lectures and would like to thank the Melbourne Law School for granting us permission to film the entire series.

Details of the Wikileaks Series of The Wednesday Lectures :

8 June – Guy Rundle ‘From Cold war to Cyberwar: Power, the State and the Wikileaks Effect’

Two decades after the Berlin Wall came down, and a decade after 9/11 became the pretext for a relentless attack on citizenship and civil liberties, a series of releases by the Wikileaks website threw the operation of secrecy and state control of information into chaos. From the Icelandic rebellion against financial crisis, to the Arab Spring, both the quantity and quality of information released has changed the relationship between state, citizen and information.

These momentous events allow us to rethink the inherited privileges and assumptions of state and corporate power, and to ask if a new relationship can be created between global citizens, states and international organisations – indeed, it causes us to ask how it could not be.

Guy Rundle is currently the UK correspondent for Crikey and a regular contributor to The Age, Sydney Morning Herald and many other publications. A former editor of Arena Magazine, and a writer of several stage shows for Max Gillies, his most recent book is The SHellackling, on the rise of the US ‘Tea Party’.

15 June – Raimond Gaita ‘ Power and Consent’

This is the second lecture in a series of five, as part of The Wednesday Lectures – Hosted by Raimond Gaita.

At the heart of democratic ideals is the contrast between legitimate and illegitimate persuasion. To a large extent, the difference is marked by the ways that forms of persuasion respect – or fail to respect – what Simone Weil called our “faculty of free consent.” The lecture will explore what we should make of the distinction and what its implications are for political action when democratic governments become more secretive, more authoritarian and more reliant on spin.

Raimond Gaita is Professorial Fellow in the Melbourne Law School and The Faculty of Arts at University of Melbourne and Emeritus Professor of Moral Philosophy at King’s College London. He is a Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities. His books include: Good and Evil: An Absolute Conception, Romulus, My Father, A Common Humanity: Thinking About Love & Truth & Justice, Breach of Trust: Truth, Morality and Politics and, as editor and contributor, Gaza: Morality Law and Politics and Muslims and Multiculturalism.

22 June – Panel Discussion ‘Secrecy, Power and Democracy’

This is the third lecture in a series of five, as part of The Wednesday Lectures – Hosted by Raimond Gaita.

Join this panel of experts as they discuss the overall theme of this lecture series.

Raimond Gaita: Raimond Gaita is Professorial Fellow in the Melbourne Law School and The Faculty of Arts at University of Melbourne and Emeritus Professor of Moral Philosophy at King’s College London. He is a Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities. His books include: Good and Evil: An Absolute Conception, Romulus, My Father, A Common Humanity: Thinking About Love & Truth & Justice, Breach of Trust: Truth, Morality and Politics and, as editor and contributor, Gaza: Morality Law and Politics and Muslims and Multiculturalism.

Guy Rundle: Guy Rundle is currently the UK correspondent for Crikey and a regular contributor the The Age, Sydney Morning Herald and many other publications. A former editor of Arena Magazine, and a writer of several stage shows for Max Gillies, his most recent book is The Shellacking, on the rise of the US ‘Tea Party’.

Gerry Simpson
: Gerry Simpson is the Director of the Asia Pacific Centre for Military Law at Melbourne Law School, and is a Professor of Public International Law at the London School of Economics and Political Science. He is the author of Great Powers and Outlaw States (Winner of the American Society of International Law’s Certificate of Merit in 2005) and more recently Law, War and Crime: War Crimes Trials and the Reinvention of International Law and Outside International Law.

Robert Manne
: Robert Manne is Professor of Politics at La Trobe University and a member of the Australian Academy of the Social Sciences. He is one of Australia’s best-known public intellectuals. His publications include The Petrov Affair, The Shadow of 1917, The Culture of Forgetting, In Denial, and The Howard Years. Whitewash: On the Fabrication of Aboriginal History (editor and contributor), Dear Mr Rudd: Ideas for a Better Australia (editor and contributor), Left, Right Left and Making Trouble. He contributes regularly to The Monthly).

29 June – Kevin Heller ‘Can the U.S. Prosecute WikiLeaks for Espionage? Should It?’

This is the fourth lecture in a series of five, as part of The Wednesday Lectures – Hosted by Raimond Gaita.

Kevin Heller is Senior Lecturer at Melbourne Law School. He is the author of The Nuremberg Military Tribunals, The Origins of International Criminal Law and The Handbook of Comparative Criminal Law (with Markus Dubber). He is also a permanent member of the international-law blog Opinio Juris. He has written for numerous journals of international law and been advisor numerous international criminal trials including those of Saddam Hussein and Radovan Karadzic.

6 July – Helen Pringle ‘Gimme Shelter: The Power of Secrecy and Silence in Democracy’

This is the fifth lecture in a series of five, as part of The Wednesday Lectures – Hosted by Raimond Gaita.

This talk offers an appreciation and defence of the power of secrecy and silence in a democracy. It is often assumed that secrecy shelters domination and that silence provides a license for coarse exercises of power by government or business.

Breaking the silence and the triumph of a principle of general transparency are not only the apparent aims of the Wikileaks project, but form a broader injunction to publicise the smallest details of every aspect of our lives. Pringle argues that this is not an emancipatory project: a general breaking of silence shatters the shelter within which our intimate lives are conducted, and in turn guts public life of its standing and dignity.

Helen Pringle is in the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences at the University of New South Wales. Her research has been widely recognised by awards from Princeton University, the Fulbright Foundation, the Australian Federation of University Women, and the Universities of Adelaide, Wollongong and NSW. Her main fields of expertise are human rights, ethics in public life, and political theory. Dr Pringle is currently working on a project concerning the place of pornography within considerations of free speech, entitled Practising Pornography. She is also involved in an international research project on ethnography and sexual slavery in early colonial Queensland.

http://wikileaksaustraliancitizensallia … %E2%80%99/

Posted in CommUnity, Government, Humanity, Internet, Military, News, ParaPolitics, Politics, SciTech Tuesday, Surveillance Society, Technology, Video | No Comments »

National Strategy for Trusted Identities in Cyberspace (NSTIC)

November 15th, 2011 by admin

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National Strategy for Trusted Identities in Cyberspace (NSTIC).

Obama moves forward with Internet ID plan
news.cnet.com/8301-31921_3-20054342-281.html

Posted in CommUnity, Government, Internet, News, ParaPolitics, Police State, Politics, SciTech Tuesday, Surveillance Society, Technology, Video | No Comments »

TSA Scanners

November 15th, 2011 by admin

TSA AIRPORT SCANNERS RADIATION CANCER X-RAY SKIN CHERTOFF‬‏.

The new airport scanners being used by the TSA are machines that use a type of X-Ray usually filtered out in medical machines because they are so readily absorbed by the body. The new machines have been rushed into use thru a recommendation of the former Secretary of Homeland Security Michael Chertoff. His company subsequently got a big contract with the largest manufacturer, Rapiscan. The machines are not as good as a metal detector when it comes to seeing a hidden gun but they were bought to see underwear bombs. one of the problems is that they may not do their job well and will irradiate an entire population certainly causing some cancers. Further the machines are extremely mechanically complex and any error or failure could lead to an unintended very high does of radiation. Since the machines apparently do not check each dose nobody would know that the machines were giving each victim a carcinogenic dose. If you burn easily in the sun or are prone to cancer or have skin cancer in your family you might be well advised to not only get a pat down instead, but avoid the area within 2 yards of the machine. That’s because radiation is being scattered out of the machine and may be leaking from behind it, unknown to the TSA agent. The TSA agent is also in danger of overexposure and the effect of X-Ray exposure is cumulative, so each dose gets a person closer to cancer and other illnesses which may not show up for many years. Almost no research or testing has been done, contrary to the statements of Janet Napolitano. The few scientific peer review research papers that have been written make a case for the exposure being higher than stated. They also predict that the X-raying of an entire population will eventually precipitate some fatalities. At our site AfterthePress.com we are uploading, and will have links to more information about the machines and real research papers from qualified scientists.

 

 

Posted in Government, Health, News, Science, SciTech Tuesday, Technology, Video | No Comments »

Flashback: Terrorism Analysis – Recorded Future

November 15th, 2011 by admin


Terrorism Analysis.

This video provides a quick look at some of the analytic tools Recorded Future provides for counterterrorism analysts using open sources on the web. We have a long way to go, but wanted to share our progress thus far. As always, we welcome your feedback.

Posted in Internet, ParaPolitics, SciTech Tuesday, Surveillance Society, Technology, Video | No Comments »

The Condo at the End of the World – Life Inside a Nuclear Missile Bunker

November 8th, 2011 by admin

The Condo at the End of the World – Life Inside a Nuclear Missile Bunker

Edward Peden purchased a former US military launch site in the 1980s, and has been living in it ever since. Meanwhile, Larry Hall is building million-dollar condominiums inside of an underground missile silo.

Read the full article here: Video: Life Inside a Nuclear Missile Bunker | The Verge

 

Posted in SciTech Tuesday, Technology, Video, War, Weird | No Comments »

Red light camera ticket on a green light

November 8th, 2011 by admin

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Support TheNewspaper.com

Texas: Red Light Camera Tickets a Man Running a Green Light
Port Lavaca, Texas issues $75 ticket to man who ran a green light.

Green light ticketCities that use automated ticketing machines at intersections routinely assert two things: The camera does not lie, and at least three humans review each citation before it is dropped in the mail. That did not happen in Port Lavaca, Texas. On September 12, Port Lavaca Police Sergeant Kelly Flood signed a ticket accusing Dale Price of running a red light and demanding he pay $75 by October 12, but the light was green.

“Based upon my review and inspection of the recorded images, I state that a violation of ordinance #S-1-08 did occur,” the ticket stated just above Flood’s signature. “I declare under penalty of perjury under the laws of the state of Texas the foregoing is true and correct.”

On September 6 at 12:04pm, Price drove his grey 2009 GMC pickup through the intersection of US 35 and Travis Street. He was making a left-hand turn, with turn signal active, at 17 MPH. According to the red light camera, the light had been red for more than a minute. According to the photographs (view first photo, view second photo), and the video evidence, the light remained green throughout his turn. After being notified of the citation, local officials scrambled to order Redflex Traffic Systems, the Australian company in charge of the program, to cancel the ticket (view ticket). That is not good enough for Port Lavaca Citizens Against Red Light Cameras, a group working on a petition that would allow voters to decide the camera program’s future.

“This is one of the reasons that we’d want to shut down the program,” group co-founder Dwayne Buehring told The Newspaper. “We don’t know how many people have paid tickets without looking at the video. Because of the scare tactics they use, some people are just going to pay. This cop down there is just mailing them out to everyone.”

The group is looking to collect the 200 signatures needed to place a ban on red light cameras before voters. Earlier this year, the group succeeded in gathering those signatures, but the city cited the court case in Houston as a reason not to place the measure on the ballot. With a new petition, activists are say the law is now firmly on their side. They cite the very ruling of federal Judge Lynn Hughes that attempted to save Houston’s red light cameras as a reason why the Port Lavaca vote must proceed (view ruling).

“Clearly the city was in error when they rejected placing our petition on the ballot,” Carl Baugh and Dwayne Buehring wrote in a June 20 letter to the city council. “The case you were waiting on for vindication of denying a vote has not gone your way. While the judge did rule that Houston was in error for placing the issue on the ballot it was merely because it was untimely as Houston has a thirty-day limit on referendums. The Port Lavaca charter has no such restriction. By your own statements as well as your ministerial duty to the citizens of Port Lavaca you have an obligation to immediately proceed with the process to place our petition on the next legal election.”

Buehring, who recently moved to Houston, is still helping to collect signatures.

“We know the 500 people who signed it last time, we just have to go see them,” he said.

View the video of the green light camera ticket:

Red light camera ticket on a green light.

Posted in Government, News, Police State, SciTech Tuesday, Surveillance Society, Technology, Video | No Comments »

Death wail of a meteor as it burns up in our atmosphere

November 1st, 2011 by admin

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Hear the death wail of a meteor as it burns up in our atmosphere | DVICE.

Posted in Science, SciTech Tuesday, Space, Video | No Comments »

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