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Arty Awesomeness Featured Photoworthy Science & Technology Weirdness

Zoom and Enhance: Incredibly Close-up Insect Images

Word around the scientific cooler is that the Scanning Electron Microscope (or SEM) can magnify images 250 times better than a light microscope. The expensive bit of kit valued up to 500,000 pounds blasts materials with a high-energy beam of electrons and the messages sent back build up a super-detailed image.

Retired scientific photographer Steve Gschmeissner gets to play with this high-tech toy and has produced some amazing close-up images of insects. Check out some of his shots after the jump.

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News Science & Technology

PS3 Torne

Sony has announced that they will be launching a digital video recorder (DVR) called “Torne”, in Japan this week.

The Torne (similar to the PlayTV DVR in Europe)  connects to your PS3 via a USB cable. It’s got an easy to use interface and the possibility to record shows with a timer function. Shows are recorded to the PS3’s hard drive, or can also be stored on an external hard drive if you don’t have enough space on the internal drive.

Torne will automatically record pre-programmed content in Stand-by Mode, during game play or when using the XMB (XrossMediaBar).

Users can control control the program guide via the DualShock 3 controller.

Finally, users can transfer recorded content to a Memory Stick Pro Duo or Memory Stick Micro to view on the Blu-ray disc application to initiate DVR functionality.

The Torne will retail Japanese consumers ¥9,980 (872 ZAR) and will go on sale this March. There will also be a bundle available which includes a 250GB PS3 and the Torne for ¥42,800 (3736 ZAR). However there is no news on whether this will be released in other countries.

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Arty Awesomeness Science & Technology Video Clips

The Known Universe

It’s that time of year when people take stock of their lives and ponder things done right, and choices gone horribly awry. I prefer to forgo that and consider something a little more “spacey”.

The Known Universe is a short film made by American Museum of Natural History and takes you on a trip from the roof of the world to the edge of the known universe, and back again. Sit down, relax, and enjoy the ride.

Every star, planet, and quasar seen in the film is possible because of the world’s most complete four-dimensional map of the universe, the Digital Universe Atlas that is maintained and updated by astrophysicists at the American Museum of Natural History.

See it in HD on YouTube.

[via Metafilter]

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Arty Awesomeness Featured Science & Technology Video Clips

Toshiba’s “Space Chair” Ad Campaign Soars to New Heights

My mind usually switches off during ad breaks on the TV, I don’t want to be reminded for the 20th time that I can save a rand on feminine pads at my local super market. Perhaps if you sent something into space and video-taped it, I may take an interest.

For their Space Chair ad campaign, electronics manufacturer, Toshiba, did just that to advertise their new REGZA SV LCD TV series. Using a helium balloon, they sent a biodegradable chair to the edge of space and filmed the journey with their own ultra-compact HD camera. Have a look at the ad below.

How awesome was that? The tag line was great – “Armchair viewing, redefined” – pretty cool, no? Hit the jump to see the making of video and some trivia about the project.

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Cautionary Tales Science & Technology Video Clips

Dr Megavolt!

Austin Richards has a Ph.D. in particle physics and has been building Tesla coils since the early 80s. Calling himself Dr Megavolt, he wowed audiences Burning Man since hi debut show in 1998. Fast-forward several years to 2009, with his stainless steel knitted mesh suit and a Tesla coil capable of producing 200 000 volts, the good doctor gives another electrifying performance at the Exploratorium in San Francisco. Check it out below.

[via Wired | image credit: Exploratorium]

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Cautionary Tales Science & Technology Video Clips

Trillions: A Look Into The Future of Computing

I love infographics, especially the animated ones. Trillions is a short film but technology research lab MAYA that takes a look at the evolution computing from its humble beginnings to the future that possibly awaits us. Have a look at it below.

[via Crunch Gear]

Categories
Entertainment Science & Technology

The 2009 Ig Nobel Prize Winners

Surprise buttseks! I don’t mean it literally, but our blog’s downtime certainly took me from behind. I don’t quite know what happened, but I would like to send my apologies to you if you tried to visit and failed miserably. It’s not you, it’s me (well it’s due to our hosting company an internet backbone connectivity problem if we really want to point accusatory fingers). Needless to say, we’re back and we have some news.

Hosted by the scientific humor magazine, Annals of Improbable Research, the IgNobel Prize seek to highlight mankind’s achievements resulting from research that “cannot, or should not, be repeated”. In its 19th year, the prizes were presented to the winners by genuine Nobel laureates, at a gala event at Harvard University. This year’s achievements ranged from the power of Panda poo to diamonds made from Tequila. Africa got a mention as well, specifically to Gideon Gono, Zimbabwe’s professor of hard sums, creating a staggering range of bank notes.

Here’s a quick round-up of the winners:

Veterinary Medicine: Catherine Douglas and Peter Rowlinson for showing that cows who have names give more milk than cows that are nameless.

Peace: Stephan Bolliger, Steffen Ross, Lars Oesterhelweg, Michael Thali and Beat Kneubuehl for their extensive beer bottle vs skull research. They determined – by experiment – that empty or full, a beer bottle is strong enough to break a skull before the skull breaks it.

Economics: The directors, executives, and auditors of four Icelandic banks for demonstrating that tiny banks can be rapidly transformed into big banks, and vice versa.

Chemistry: Javier Morales, Miguel Apátiga, and Victor M. Castaño for creating diamonds from liquid, more specifically from Tequila.

Medicine: Donald L. Unger for investigating a possible cause of arthritis by cracking only the knuckles of his left hand for more than 60 years.

Physics: Katherine K. Whitcome for determining why pregnant women don’t tip over.

Literature: Ireland’s police service for issuing more than 50 traffic tickets to a man they thought to be the most persistent driving offender in the country. Mr Prawo Jazdy is Polish and in his native language, his name means “driver’s license”.

Public Health: Elena N. Bodnar, Raphael C. Lee, and Sandra Marijan for inventing a brassiere that can quickly be converted into a pair of gas masks.

Mathematics: Gideon Gono, the governor of Zimbabwe’s Reserve Bank, for printing bank notes that range from one cent to one hundred trillion dollars.

Biology: Fumiaki Taguchi, Song Guofu, and Zhang Guanglei from Japan, for determining that bacteria from Giant Panda faeces can be used to reduce kitchen refuse by more than 90% in mass.

Congratulations to the winners. You can see previous IgNobel laureates at Improbable Research.

[via Neatorama]

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Featured Science & Technology

Take The Face Memory Test

I have trouble remembering names, and cover it up by telling people that I never forget a face. I haven’t had to test that theory, until now. The BBC has a face memory test up on their website to determine how good you are at remembering things. It’s composed of three parts, and at the end of it, you are scored on two things – how well you remembered the photos you were presented with (this tests your recognition memory),  and how well you matched the photos to the section they were taken from (this tests your ‘temporal’ memory).

Sleep scientists say that your recognition memory isn’t affected by sleep loss, whereas your temporal memory is. I went to sleep at 1:41 this morning (thank you Batman: Arkham Asylum) and my test results seems to prove that theory – recognition score: 95%, temporal memory score: 82%.

Take the face memory test and drop us a comment with your scores.

[via Plime | Image credit: “Electronic Faces” by Anton van Dalen]

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Awesomeness Science & Technology

The Milky Way Panorama

I’m told the universe is big and I’m not the centre of it. I thought it was really jealousy on the part of my detractors, but the European Organisation for Astronomical Research in the Southern Hemisphere (ESO) has proved them right. Bugger.

The ESO’s Gigagalaxy Zoom project has managed to condense the entire Milky Way Galaxy into one cosmically awesome image. Over 1200 raw photographs taken with a Nikon D3 camera and 120 hours of collective exposure resulted in a stunning 800-million-pixel composite panorama of the Milky Way, as seen from Earth. Serge Brunier and Frédéric Tapissier were the two French photographers that took the photos from the Atacama Desert in Chile and on La Palma, one of the Canary Islands.

This starscape is one of three high resolution images that make up the GigaGalaxy Zoom project. The other images are slated for release this month.

Take a drive through the Milk Way using GigaGalaxy Zoom.

[via Popular Science]

Categories
Awesomeness Science & Technology

Breathtaking Deep Space Photos From Hubble

After a much need 1 billion dollar refurbishment in May, the 19-year old Hubble space telescope has been made more powerful and able to peer even deeper into the cosmos. And last week, NASA shared the some breathtaking deep space photos taken by Hubble since the repair. Take a look at some of the galactic images after the jump.