OK This is New
One of The Brickmuppet's Crack Team of Science Babes takes time from her eggnog to alert us to a surprising development in the fight against terminal decrepitude.
"Sadly it does not seem to regrow limbs"
Human
trials of NAD+ treatments will begin in 2014. If the results are
anything like what was experienced by the mice, it will be the
equivalent of a 60 year old having the fitness of a 20 year old. - See
more at:
http://www.iflscience.com/health-and-medicine/anti-aging-formula-slated-begin-human-trials#sthash.RBZvhED8.dpuf
For years we've heard stories about how some mouse had its lifespan radically extended by something or other...however, this never seems to result in any human trials...until now.
Human trials of NAD+ treatments will begin in 2014. If the results
are anything like what was experienced by the mice, it will be the
equivalent of a 60 year old having the fitness of a 20 year old.
- See more at: http://www.iflscience.com/health-and-medicine/anti-aging-formula-slated-begin-human-trials#sthash.RBZvhED8.dpuf
Human
trials of NAD+ treatments will begin in 2014. If the results are
anything like what was experienced by the mice, it will be the
equivalent of a 60 year old having the fitness of a 20 year old. - See
more at:
http://www.iflscience.com/health-and-medicine/anti-aging-formula-slated-begin-human-trials#sthash.RBZvhED8.dpuf
Human trials of NAD+ treatments will begin in 2014. If the results
are anything like what was experienced by the mice, it will be the
equivalent of a 60 year old having the fitness of a 20 year old.
- See more at: http://www.iflscience.com/health-and-medicine/anti-aging-formula-slated-begin-human-trials#sthash.RBZvhED8.dpuf
Human trials of NAD+ treatments will begin in 2014. If the results are anything like what was experienced by the mice, it will be the equivalent of a 60 year old having the fitness of a 20 year old
Human
trials of NAD+ treatments will begin in 2014. If the results are
anything like what was experienced by the mice, it will be the
equivalent of a 60 year old having the fitness of a 20 year old. - See
more at:
http://www.iflscience.com/health-and-medicine/anti-aging-formula-slated-begin-human-trials#sthash.RBZvhED8.dpuf
Human trials of NAD+ treatments will begin in 2014. If the results
are anything like what was experienced by the mice, it will be the
equivalent of a 60 year old having the fitness of a 20 year old.
- See more at: http://www.iflscience.com/health-and-medicine/anti-aging-formula-slated-begin-human-trials#sthash.RBZvhED8.dpuf
Human trials of NAD+ treatments will begin in 2014. If the results
are anything like what was experienced by the mice, it will be the
equivalent of a 60 year old having the fitness of a 20 year old.
- See more at: http://www.iflscience.com/health-and-medicine/anti-aging-formula-slated-begin-human-trials#sthash.RBZvhED8.dpuf
Of course the treatments will be hideously expensive for the foreseeable future and they are tests...so they might not pan out. However, human tests of a life extension treatment are going to be conducted next year! This could be very, very big!
"Science Babe" is actually Rin Tezuka, from Katawa Shoujo.
1
Not only that, but some great advances are being made in breaking up blood clots, post-stroke. As in, a few hours post-stroke unfortunately. Would have been nice if someone had thought to hit me with tPA that first time in ER, instead of just letting me lay there for six hours until they got a room available. "Hm, yes, it looks like you might have had a stroke." Gubberment is supposed to make this all better? Tell me another one.
Two visits after that was even worse, if you can believe it.
Posted by: ubu at Fri Dec 27 00:10:35 2013 (GfCSm)
Amazon Has Doomed Us All
Last night I checked to see if the hard to find second half of Last Exile 2 is available there. It is not. I did see something there unrelated...Perhaps in an effort to make good on what has been an off year in retail sales, Amazon was announcing that he deadline for free shipping to be delivered by Christmas had been extended...to midnight last night.
I took this as an ill omen.
It was.
I've been at UPS 22 years, I've never seen a day like today. I imagine tomorrow will be similar.
Aren't We Lucky?
The popular leader of a comedy troupe that looks like a zombie version of ZZ Top has made a somewhat edgy and vulgar comment that has the ministry of acceptable discourse all in a tizzy. The fellow has been fired. There are thoughts i generally agree with on this matter of great importance here, here, here, here and from the always interesting Camille Paglia here. This is at once silly, disturbing and perhaps even a bit heartening...
You see, so quiet is the domestic and international stage that it is the only news story worth talking about.
1Fortunately we live in a world where the top story is that a Duckhunter has been fired by a TV network.
I for one approve of this.
Posted by: Wonderduck at Sun Dec 22 19:07:52 2013 (Izt1u)
2
There was no "edgy and vulgar" comment. The interviewer asked: "what do you consider a sin", and the dude replied with a fairly standard list, for a bible-thumper. It's like Bush's WMD that were #16 in the Colin Powell's List Of Reasons To Remove Saddam. Suddenly it's the only one anyone know about because MSM decreed so.
Posted by: Pete Zaitcev at Mon Dec 23 14:45:29 2013 (RqRa5)
3
I stand by it. His attempt to explain why straight men might find the topic icky did stray into vulgarity. Also, any speech in a national venue that does not treat said topic with fawning adoration is pretty edgy nowadays, as his firing demonstrates.
("Edgy" meaning skirting at or just over the edge of cultural acceptability.)
OTOH, as for the networks cherry picking his words and rearanging them to make the statement maximally 'ungood'...well yeah. You get no argument from me.
Your comparison to Bush's many reasons for removing Saddam is pretty close to the mark. I was particularly offended that his closing quote on the matter was so thoroughly excised from the reports that I didn't even read it until Sunday night
Posted by: The Brickmuppet at Mon Dec 23 16:11:44 2013 (DnAJl)
A Blitzkrieg of Boxes
...continues . Yesterday nearly a fifth of our workforce called in sick, I was, for several hours, the only person processing the "irregulars"....that's parcels that are really big, sharp edged, cutty, painful, and/or 70-150 pounds. This is normally a six person job and usually doesn't involve me in any way, or any of my blood. Yesterday and today were complicated by the fact that a weather delay earlier in the week caused three quarters of a metric buttload of parcels to show up all at once. Today may have been the longest day I have ever worked at UPS that I was not driving.
A few minutes ago, I got home, changed my bandages and discovered via Don that some quisling has revealed by dark secrets to the world, resulting in my being struggled against.
This could potentially complicate my plans to steal the Pueblo next summer.
I feel as sore as I was in boot camp...I'm gonna go to bed. Blogging will resume briefly this weekend.
Oh look:
A Santa hat...
...though despite the exquisite rendering of said headgear, I'm not sure that Panderion has captured the essence of the holiday.
..not that I'm complaining.
2
Actually, it will be about three weeks before things get back to normal. There used to be a huge drop off after Christmas, but due to a terrible and onerous recent development (the Amazon Gift Card) things continue at a somewhat reduced but still well above average pace for about three weeks. This will of course be done without temps as any temps carried past the 24th are contractually permanent hires, leaving the inside operation slightly shorthanded.
Still, that will be far less than the next two days and a day like Friday is very unlikely.
Posted by: The Brickmuppet at Sun Dec 22 14:13:40 2013 (DnAJl)
Here we have a guy with actual super-powers and he's using them to fry fish instead of fight crime.
One can only assume that this is just a cover for his secret identity as Asbestos Man.
1
Video won't load for me, but is he dipping his hand and removing it fast enough for that whatchacallit effect used when demonstrating liquid nitrogen (or was done with boiling lead by the Mythbusters a few years ago?)
Posted by: RickC at Tue Dec 17 16:37:00 2013 (A9FNw)
2
William Seabrook writes in his biography of Robert Wood that when they got acquianted, Wood handed him a handful of flames. He took it, and surmised he would not be writing the biography if he didin't. The fire was "not hotter than a cucumber".
Posted by: Pete Zaitcev at Tue Dec 17 23:48:30 2013 (RqRa5)
3Surely you're Joking, Mr. Feynman has a hilarous anecdote where Feynman, as an adult, remembered doing as a kid magic tricks, and doing one where he dipped his hand in rubbing alcohol or something and lit it on fire, and didn't burn himself. Nobody believed him, so he tried it again and discovered that as an adult, it doesn't work, because the hair on his hand and wrist wicked up the alcohol.
Posted by: RickC at Wed Dec 18 20:45:56 2013 (swpgw)
4
RickC - the Leidenfrost Effect, that's what I was thinking too. It's hard to judge from the video, but he doesn't seem to be doing it that quickly.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at Thu Dec 19 06:56:04 2013 (PiXy!)
Oh, So THAT Explains it....Wait, No It Doesnt!
So a friend sent me this the other day asking the perfectly logical question "Whaa...?" To which my response was "Derp."
It appears to be traditional Chinese, and appears to be about the Christmas story so one would guess that it's a Sunday school flyer except for the little matter of Pinky Pie there glaring at the savior....
While We Weren't LookingDominica is an island nation in the Lesser Antilles, variously described as the Northernmost of the Windward islands or Southernmost of the Leeward Islands. The first British Colony governed by a majority black Legislature (in 1838 ), it was granted full independence in the 1970's.
Dominica boasts the second largest hot spring in the world, Boiling Lake. This was only discovered in 1878, because,the island is rugged enough that despite its small size and having been visited on Columbus's second voyage and colonized soon after, parts were not fully explored for centuries One happy result is that Dominica is home to one of the few remaining populations of of the Carib People, with 3,000 on a small self governing reservation that was established on the northeast coast in 1901. The island's vegitation ranges from lush jungles to xeric
Dominica lacks a good natural harbor but its position at the juncture of the Leeward and Windward chains makes it a fairly strategic location. This is of particular interest now that the Chinese have bought the isla...
....Wait WHAT!
Dominica and China have signed a new 300 million dollars cooperation
agreement that includes the construction of a hotel, construction of an
international airport and building a new hospital. The sum involved is
equivalent to a third of the small Caribbean island GDP, which could
mean Beijing virtually is 'purchasing' the small territory.
China's military might relative to us is not great with two major exceptions, their vast army and their nuclear arsenal. Their army is located on the other side of the world with no real way to threaten anyone outside of Asia. Their nuclear arsenal is nowhere near as big as the US or Russia and they lack delivery systems...only about 80-150 warheads can reach USA (up from 20-30 last year thanks to their SSBNs). Depending on yield though, that might represent 20-80 of our cities pulverized and their citizens killed or rendered destitute...a fairly consequential capability. This could become more worrisome if staging areas were available on our doorstep.
The prospect of a million or so troops launching an attack from various of our Central American or Caribbean neighbors, and/or Chinese fighter planes delivering airstrikes that might include nukes, is, of course, laughable now, but China thinks very long term. If current trends continue, 20 years down the road, it might be rather less funny.
1
While France claimed Dominica in the 1630s, they didn't actually colonize it for another century - mostly because the locals were fairly hard-assed and the terrain was difficult, without any notable gold deposits, and steep slopes not particularly suitable for sugar cultivation. It went two hundred years in one of the most hotly contested colonial viper pits in the early modern world without being seized by Europeans.
Don't quote me on this, because I'm not a sailor, but I get the impression their ports and harbors aren't especially useful, either. The island lies square in the middle of hurricane alley, and is very vulnerable to extreme weather, getting raked over by large, destructive cyclones every couple years on average. It is poor as hell and lacking in natural resources.
In short, Chinese neo-colonization of such a place makes them look even more than ever, like a new Second Reich - irredentist, militarized, pugnacious, expansionist-minded, diplomatically immature, and hellbound for a destructive confrontation with the world.
Posted by: Mitch H. at Mon Dec 16 18:51:41 2013 (jwKxK)
"otherkin" is a fannish name for things like elves, fairies, vampires, lycanthropes, and similar mythical beings who look similar to humans but aren't really. According to the Urban Dictionary:
Otherkin are a fringe group of human society who, for one reason or another, believe themselves to be the reincarnation of mythic creatures, typically elves, though others include dragons, demons, vampires, ogres, deities, and so on. Related groups include therianthropes, who believe themselves reincarnations of animal souls, and otakin/otakukin, people who think they are reincarnations of fictitious characters from Japanese anime, manga, and video games.
Otherkin often find themselves the subject of ridicule. In the majority of cases, it is because their beliefs fly in the face of rational, critical thinking and tend to fall apart very quickly under hard scrutiny. One of the most common beliefs is of an Elven Holocaust in which humankind supposedly wiped the elves from the Earth, despite the fact that no such evidence, archaeological or otherwise, exists anywhere in the geologic record either for the supposed holocaust, let alone the existence of elves.
Other aspects common to Otherkin belief include a sense of superiority over their fellow human beings. This takes a variety of forms, such as a tendency to ascribe positive aspects of the human personality as something only unique to Otherkin. "Mundanes", the rest of humanity who do not share their beliefs or are simply unaware of them, are looked down upon as inferior brutes.
Otherkin often exhibit certain personality traits common to dissociative disorders and manic depression. This includes what are known as grandiose, persecutory, and religious delusions.
4
A lot of them share the Otherkin delusion of being some kind of animal spirit trapped in a human body, hate humanity, and have a persecution complex about it (excuse me, fursecution).
Now it may have started out as an Animation and Comics fandom (I kinda got involved with it in the mid '80's at an Anime club) but I watched it evolve and finally washed my hands of the whole freak show in 2001, so I know of what I speak.
Posted by: Mauser at Sun Dec 15 17:49:44 2013 (TJ7ih)
5
Once there were enough people insisting that gender was a social construct, extending it to species was inevitable. I'm sure there's someone on Tumblr right now convinced that rhe is actually a Boulder trapped in a human body, filled with rage about organic privilege and lichen-shaming, and engaged in a mighty flamewar against some piece of Schist.
-j
Posted by: J Greely at Mon Dec 16 12:40:04 2013 (+cEg2)
6
I ran across the "Otherkin" pages years ago, when I was still cataloguing Every Single Filksong on the internet. The really disturbing bit wasn't the fact that they were delusional; it was that they gave instructions on "how to find your Otherkin self" that were basically a handbook to achieve psychological dissociation and split off a few personalities. Apparently, delusional loves company.
Posted by: Suburbanbanshee at Mon Dec 16 20:59:43 2013 (cvXSV)
Never forget that those who wish to do one harm can be at least as smart as one assumes oneself to be. Furthermore, when they make their move it will often be when and where one feels least threatened.
Last seconds of USS Arizona
It also bears remembering that one should not start a fire one cannot reasonably expect to contain, because winds are fickle and the flames one sets care not who they burn.
1
I figured I'd wait a few days before throwing this out there, even though the sources didn't:
Via Instapundit, from "View from the Porch"
We reduced
Japan to a pile of radioactive smoking rubble in 1,346 days. It's now
Day 1,355 and, despite promises to do likewise to the healthcare system,
they're still working on it. The FDR administration built almost a
hundred working aircraft carriers faster than the Obama administration
has managed to build one working website.
Posted by: Mauser at Wed Dec 11 07:30:11 2013 (TJ7ih)
ACME Content Substitute
I am still pretty swamped with cramming for exams, papers and working at UPS during December. I've already worked more overtime this week than I worked straight time last week (admittedly a short week).
In lieu of content here's yet more holiday cheesecake.
Given that there was no love for the G.u.P. girls, we'll try Kannagi.
Of course...I suspect that Steven has simply out-bid me in this regard. (Link totally NSFW!)
...It is a testament to my wasted life that I never knew that about Tuesday.
Cobalt 60 (UPDATED)
One of the Brickmuppet's Crack Team of Science Babes takes time to tell us about Cobalt 60:
In 1735 Swedish scientist Eric Brandt determined that the blue tint used in stained glass was a previously unknown element, Cobalt, and not a compound of Bismuth as had been previously supposed. Cobalt is a bluish metal that aside from being quite brittle, has a lot of properties in common with iron. Quite unusually, this includes the fact that it can be magnetized. Cobalt is used for various sensors, and alloys due to its very great temperature stability. Cobalt also has applications in pigments, and lithium ion batteries. However, of primary interest to us today is an unstable isotope of Cobalt, Cobalt 60,
Cobalt 60, is used in food sterilization, radiation therapy and various sensors. It is a powerful gamma emitter with a half life of 5.27 years and is near the top of the IAEA's list of hazardous nuclear wastes. It has been involved in several tragic incidents previously and can be used in a radiological weapon.
Authorities are saying that there is no reason to be alarmed as it is likely that this was a simple theft and the nasty, deadly substance was not intentionally stolen. After all, who in Mexico would want a bunch of materials for a dirty bomb? Indeed, as I typed this news came over the wires that the truck hasd been located abandoned and the container for the cobalt 60 was found nearby so this wouldn't even be a story except for the minor detail that the container for the Co60 was found....empty....yes, empty.
Well then.
UPDATE: The Old Grey Lady is saying that part of the Co60 shipment has been found. Other reports just say the cargo was found. In any event, if the thieves did not have really good radiation suits when they opened the box, they are expected to be dead in 3 days.
1
I wonder how much shielding there is on the part that they kept? If there isn't much, then those guys are going to die real soon now. Given that there was a container they didn't keep, that's my bet.
December at UPS and the Final 2 Weeks of the Semester
....combine to thwart my blogging.
I get up for work at midnight....I work till 9ish then go to school, then work on my term paper and cram. Sleep brings the day planner to 31 hours but there's not enough space on the page for that so there may need to be additional adjustments to my schedule.
There's not much to add...except perhaps this... more...
You see, my father managed cut the end of his finger off (about a centimeter actually) yesterday morning. There was blood spurting EVERYWHERE. Of course we could not get him to go to the emergency room...because...Thanksgiving.
He didn't want to ruin Thanksgiving...
I tried to explain to him that having dinner a couple of hours late would involve less ruination than it being "....that Thanksgiving where Dad bled to death". This admonition did not have the desired effect...so there was stitching, gauze pads, a finger splint, surgical tape, peroxide and duct tape. Ironically, after the blood was cleaned off the ceiling, cooking resumed and the decision made to ummm...not serve ham or potato salad this year...the relatives ended up being three hours late anyway.
Beyond that dinner was uneventful. There were no fanatical partisan cultists in attendance to ruin the get-together for which I am quite thankful. The only further unexpected incidents involved my 18 month old niece demonstrating that she can count to 13 and the comet exploding.
Dad has had to change his dressing twice but still refuses to go to the ER. OTOH there is no longer any spurting so hopefully he is on the mend
Although it's good to know that Brickmuppet's dad is so feisty, I recommend that his nearest and dearest kick his butt and get him to the doctor or emergency room.
My dad pulled a similar trick when he stepped on a nail, got the doctor's reassurance that his tetanus shot was current, and then didn't take care to make sure that his foot stayed uninfected (and ignored the pain when it did get infected, until it got really unbearable). Dad finally went to emergency and the doctors didn't let him go home at that point. (That immensely swollen infected foot point.) My mom was stuck at emergency with nobody to drive her home at 11 PM. (She called my little brother who came and got her, but sheesh.) My dad was in the hospital for almost two weeks, and not having any fun whatsoever.
Posted by: Suburbanbanshee at Fri Nov 29 21:18:52 2013 (cvXSV)
3
Hm... it looks like someone attempted to sneak brussel sprouts onto your table. I do hope you managed to remove them before dinner began.
Posted by: Wonderduck at Fri Nov 29 21:27:50 2013 (Izt1u)
Posted by: The Brickmuppet at Fri Nov 29 22:40:28 2013 (DnAJl)
5
@Suburbanbanshee:
1:Yes, they are napkins.
2: We've just had that conversation again. The dressing is getting changed regularly and there's no discoloration or odor so I'm optimistic. I'm sleeping on the floor so I sleep light. He may go to the mini-hospital tomorrow (I hope).
Posted by: The Brickmuppet at Fri Nov 29 22:46:20 2013 (DnAJl)
The Best of Social Justice
A friend who desires NO credit for this due to fear of passive aggressive trolling and other markers of 'tolerance' sends me this link...
The Best of Social Justice is a Tumbler blog compiled by a brave or self flagellating soul who compiles posts, tweets, and chats of various "social justice" crusaders.
It's hours of fun...or horror. But it can be useful too. For instance the fact that a prominent poster is named Lickingmuppets is one reason for me to carry a gun.
Yes actually and at ~01:00AM "Non-Ironic" meant something completely different to me than what it would to anyone with a passing familiarity with the English language. I thought about his post a few hours after posting this and thought "That'd be a good tie in" . And updated it.
Now 12 hours later I don't know what the HELL I was thinking with the "non"... andI can't for the life of me figure out any good way to tie it in to the real deal....so I've deleted the update.
(I must confess, when I read Don's post it did NOT strike me as satire...because these people often defy it. Only later when I saw the illustration at Diversity Chronicle did alarm bells go off)
Posted by: The Brickmuppet at Thu Nov 28 12:56:55 2013 (DnAJl)
Mobys, Hustlers and their ConsequencesThe Anchoress has thoughts on the despicable scam that was perpetrated recently in New Jersey by a waitress who used a receipt with a faked anti-gay slur to bilk facebook users of money and the "Racist Red Lobster" scandal which involved a waitress who pulled a similar scam involving a racial slur...and posted the customers name on Facebook.
Shorter version: don't leave cash tips.
I do it a lot, because, well, I used to bus and wait tables so I know this works better for a variety of reasons, not the least of which is paying the bussers, but it's probably not a good idea any more.
1
You can leave a cash tip if you write -0- in the tip line and re-write the pre-tip subtotal in the total line. That's what I always did before I got too lazy to carry cash. (although I did it to avoid having a large tip fraudulently added, not to avoid being pilloried as racist or whatever.)
Posted by: RickC at Thu Nov 28 03:33:09 2013 (swpgw)
Hobby Space News of the commercial space industry A Babe In The Universe Rather Eclectic Cosmology Encyclopedia Astronautica Superb spacecraft resource The Unwanted Blog Scott Lowther blogs about forgotten aerospace projects and sells amazingly informative articles on the same. Also, there are cats. Transterrestrial Musings Commentary on Infinity...and beyond! Colony WorldsSpace colonization news! The Alternate Energy Blog It's a blog about alternate energy (DUH!) Next Big Future Brian Wang: Tracking our progress to the FUTURE. Nuclear Green Charles Barton, who seems to be either a cool curmudgeon, or a rational hippy, talks about energy policy and the terrible environmental consequences of not going nuclear Energy From Thorium Focuses on the merits of thorium cycle nuclear reactors WizBang Current events commentary...with a wiz and a bang The Gates of Vienna Tenaciously studying a very old war The Anchoress insightful blogging, presumably from the catacombs Murdoc Online"Howling Mad Murdoc" has a millblog...golly! EaglespeakMaritime security matters Commander Salamander Fullbore blackshoe blogging! Belmont Club Richard Fernandez blogs on current events BaldilocksUnderstated and interesting blog on current events The Dissident Frogman French bi-lingual current events blog The "Moderate" VoiceI don't think that word means what they think it does....but this lefty blog is a worthy read nonetheless. Meryl Yourish News, Jews and Meryls' Views Classical Values Eric Scheie blogs about the culture war and its incompatibility with our republic. Jerry Pournell: Chaos ManorOne of Science fictions greats blogs on futurism, current events, technology and wisdom A Distant Soil The website of Colleen Dorans' superb fantasy comic, includes a blog focused on the comic industry, creator issues and human rights. John C. Wright The Sci-Fi/ Fantasy writer muses on a wide range of topics. Now Read This! The founder of the UK Comics Creators Guild blogs on comics past and present. The Rambling Rebuilder Charity, relief work, roleplaying games Rats NestThe Art and rantings of Vince Riley Gorilla Daze Allan Harvey, UK based cartoonist and comics historian has a comicophillic blog! Pulpjunkie Tim Driscoll reviews old movies, silents and talkies, classics and clunkers. Suburban Banshee Just like a suburban Leprechaun....but taller, more dangerous and a certified genius. Satharn's Musings Through TimeThe Crazy Catlady of The Barony of Tir Ysgithr アニ・ノート(Ani-Nouto) Thoughtful, curmudgeonly, otakuism that pulls no punches and suffers no fools. Chizumatic Stephen Den Beste analyzes anime...with a microscope, a slide rule and a tricorder. Wonderduck Anime, Formula One Racing, Sad Girls in Snow...Duck Triumphalism Beta Waffle What will likely be the most thoroughly tested waffle evah! Zoopraxiscope Too In this thrilling sequel to Zoopraxiscope, Don, Middle American Man of Mystery, keeps tabs on anime, orchids, and absurdities. Mahou Meido MeganekkoUbu blogs on Anime, computer games and other non-vital interests Twentysided More geekery than you can shake a stick at Shoplifting in the Marketplace of Ideas Sounds like Plaigarism...but isn't Ambient IronyAll Meenuvians Praise the lathe of the maker! Hail Pixy!!