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Sunday, October 18, 2009
Saturday, October 17, 2009
Attention, audiophiles!
Did you know that Aldous Huxley's dystopian classic "Brave New World" is available on LP, narrated by the author? Neither did I. Better yet, you can download it for free.
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Tube twins
Michael Garrett sighted this example of the "tube-girl" meme at this amazing gallery*.
While a purist might argue that the structure encapsulating the twins is too wide to qualify as a genuine tube, I would argue that the presence of two women justifies the unusual proportions.
*Be sure not to miss the weaponized lobster.
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Friday, October 16, 2009
Tube-girl sighting!
For more, click here, here and here.
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"The Lady Who Fell to Earth"
Kinga Rajzak stars as a fetching ufonaut in this amusing "Vogue" editorial.
Discerning ufophiles will no doubt note that Rajzak appears to be a garden-variety "Nordic," while fellow models Masha Telna and Lily Cole show every indication of being hybridized "Grays."
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The entomological art of Cornelia Hesse-Honegger
Cornelia Hesse-Honegger, scientific illustrator and science artist, was born in 1944 in Zurich, Switzerland. For 25 years she worked as a scientific illustrator for the scientific department of the Natural History Museum at the University of Zurich. Since the catastrophe of Chernobyl in 1986, she has collected, studied and painted morphologically disturbed insects, which she finds in the fallout areas of Chernobyl as well as near nuclear installations.
See more of Hesse-Honegger's painstaking illustrations here.
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Thursday, October 15, 2009
Skeletons in the planetary closet
As the world's glaciers melt, they've begun to release an archive of banned industrial substances back into the environment, chemicals that have been locked, frozen, inside the glacial ice for up to thirty years.
[. . .]
The idea of a poisonous atmospheric archive being unintentionally released -- on a global scale -- makes me wonder what sorts of news reports we might read in several thousand years' time, when carbon tombs start to leak their quarantined contents back into the atmosphere. The buried skies of an industrial era, put to pharaonic rest beneath the earth's surface, will make their operatic reappearance in future human history.
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Wednesday, October 14, 2009
That strange feeling is your head spinning.
The quest to observe the Higgs boson has certainly been plagued by its share of troubles, from the cancellation of the Superconducting Supercollider in 1993 to the Large Hadron Collider's streak of technical troubles. In fact, the projects have suffered such bad luck that Holger Bech Nielsen of the Niels Bohr Institute in Copenhagen and Masao Ninomiya of the Yukawa Institute for Theoretical Physics in Kyoto wonder if it isn't bad luck at all, but future influences rippling back to sabotage them. In papers like "Test of Effect From Future in Large Hadron Collider: a Proposal" and "Search for Future Influence From LHC," they put forth the notion that observing the Higgs boson would be such an abhorrent event that the future is actually trying to prevent it from happening.
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Rise of the tumorbots
I like it when bots take on organic traits, and the blob above is as good an example as any I've seen lately -- with the possible exception of this Cronenbergian mass . . .
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Monday, October 12, 2009
Link-dump #21
New fears for species extinctions
Are you asleep? Exploring the mind's twilight zone
Ice confirmed on an asteroid
Exquisite Bodies at the Wellcome Collection
Russia plots return to Venus
Can Life Survive Deep Space? Let's Send It There!
Robots & Starships: Unique Playgrounds From The 70's
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Sunday, October 11, 2009
Behind the scenes at the Singularity Summit
You should have seen Kurzweil. That dude can 'bot with the best of them.
(Tip of the hat to Dangerous Minds.)
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Saturday, October 10, 2009
Wednesday, October 07, 2009
The existential implications of ufology
Ostensibly, the UFO question is whether a non-human source is causing sightings, abductions, radar returns and flying saucer religions, but the intricacies of the problem impinge on so many other areas that we redefine them as well. Examples include reported physics of UFO movement, the question of cultural antecedents and perhaps how our society decides what is acceptable as serious study. That last one may be the most deconstructive effect of all. Changes in our mindset, and not any so-called "answers" may be the real reason behind the whole thing, or at least the most meaningful. There may indeed be "knowledge gained without awareness."
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This is more like it.
Using traditional chemical rockets, a trip to Mars -- at quickest -- lasts 6 months. But a new rocket tested successfully last week could potentially cut down travel time to the Red Planet to just 39 days. The Ad Astra Rocket Company tested a plasma rocket called the VASIMR VX-200 engine, which ran at 201 kilowatts in a vacuum chamber, passing the 200-kilowatt mark for the first time. "It's the most powerful plasma rocket in the world right now," says Franklin Chang-Diaz, former NASA astronaut and CEO of Ad Astra.
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The art of Xia Xiaowan
This isn't a hologram; it's a succession of glass frames meticulously tinted with colored pencil by multimedia artist Xia Xiaowan. I'd love to see this stuff firsthand.
(Hat tip to Beautiful/Decay.)
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Tuesday, October 06, 2009
Deja vu
Mobilizy, the company from Salzburg, that brought us one of the world's first Augmented Reality browsers, Wikitude, just released a major upgrade which crosses that significant line between technology and its effects in the 'real' world. Their idea was to build a virtual memorial in remembrance of the 9/11 attacks in the U.S. and the destruction of the World Trade Center in New York City. The result will be the ability to point their Android and iPhone application at the place where the World Trade Center once stood and witness a 3D rendering of the Twin Towers, once more.
(Via Beyond the Beyond.)
How long until someone develops an app that populates the New York City sky with phantom airliners and billowing CGI smoke?
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The bold new look of The Future!
Now there's absolutely no excuse for missing an episode of "Leave It To Beaver." (Incidentally, the man wearing the headset is none other than science fiction editor extraordinaire Hugo Gernsback.)
More endearingly ill-conceived inventions here.
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No bachelor pad's complete without one!
In the future, single men will take the sting out of alienation by tending to the needs of giant robotic maggots. Or something like that.
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Sunday, October 04, 2009
Thursday, October 01, 2009
Well, that didn't take long.
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Sunday, September 27, 2009
Saturday, September 26, 2009
Ernst Haeckel remixed
More here.
(Thanks to Reality Carnival.)
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This one really got my attention.
In the study, scientists observed the behavior of fluorescently tagged DNA strands placed in water that contained no proteins or other material that could interfere with the experiment. Strands with identical nucleotide sequences were about twice as likely to gather together as DNA strands with different sequences. No one knows how individual DNA strands could possibly be communicating in this way, yet somehow they do. The "telepathic" effect is a source of wonder and amazement for scientists.
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Friday, September 25, 2009
A breakthrough to warm one's posthuman heart
The awesome part is that this implant only steers the insect, and only when necessary. Once the bug is pointing in the right direction, the steering signal cuts out, and the bug self-stabilizes and gets back to the tricky business of flying, which it was just fine at before some roboticist stuck a bunch of wires into its optic lobe, thank you very much. As you can see from the video, the insect has no trouble landing itself on a vertical surface, a maneuver which would be, uh, a little bit difficult to code.
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Coast to Coast AM
I will be a guest on Coast to Coast AM with George Noory this Monday on Sep. 28. Here's a preview.
(It's a four-hour spot, so you better believe I'll be drinking coffee.)
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Thursday, September 24, 2009
Some recent (and semi-recent) UFO posts
While I think the UFO enigma indicates some form of intelligence, I'm not sure where that intelligence originates. Certainly it could come from the interstellar neighborhood -- but the evidence, taken in its entirety, suggests we're dealing with something substantially stranger. (Of course, we could be confronted with myriad overlapping phenomena.) In any case, we'll likely never know until the rigid definitional framework that has come to dominate discussion of all things "paranormal" is relaxed to accommodate a genuinely agnostic approach.
Sagan and the Hill encounter
UFOs: Why no "open contact"?
UFOs, aliens and consciousness
The Roswell controversy
The persistent myth of UFO "disclosure"
The "Grays" as posthumans
Do aliens smoke cigarettes?
Talking flowers and other denizens of the imaginal realm
Strange "helpers"
Little green men
Asemic texts and "alien" writing
"Proof"?
(To view all posts tagged with "UFOs," click here.)
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Drink up!
It's Official: Water Found on the Moon
Since man first touched the moon and brought pieces of it back to Earth, scientists have thought that the lunar surface was bone dry. But new observations from three different spacecraft have put this notion to rest with what has been called "unambiguous evidence" of water across the surface of the moon.
The new findings, detailed in the Sept. 25 issue of the journal Science, come in the wake of further evidence of lunar polar water ice by NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter and just weeks before the planned lunar impact of NASA's LCROSS satellite, which will hit one of the permanently shadowed craters at the moon's south pole in hope of churning up evidence of water ice deposits in the debris field.
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Wednesday, September 23, 2009
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Further evidence that we inhabit a cosmic fractal
"Natural selection has passively guided the evolution of mammalian brains throughout time, just as politicians and entrepreneurs have indirectly shaped the organization of cities large and small," said Mark Changizi, a neurobiology expert and assistant professor in the Department of Cognitive Science at Rensselaer, who led the study. "It seems both of these invisible hands have arrived at a similar conclusion: brains and cities, as they grow larger, have to be similarly densely interconnected to function optimally."
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Link-dump #19
The Visible Human Project: Full Body MRI GIF
Scary alien hand in real estate listing photo?
Debunking roundup
The sexbots are coming
Roasted Crab Candy (Something the prawns from "District 9" might enjoy snacking on?)
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Transcendent machines
"Someone once said plants invented animals to carry them around. Well, I think the Earth invented human beings to build machines; and those machines will be the consciousness of the Earth. Have you not noticed that these machines are made of the Earth? They are made of gold and silver and arsenic and copper and iridium. They are the stuff of the Earth, organised by primate fingers into more complex arrangements than the Earth could achieve through geological folding, glaciation, volcanism, what have you. We do the fine-tuning; but the Earth is beginning to think."
--Terence McKenna
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More Roswell "insider" testimony
Former U.S. Atomic Energy Commission Supervisor Says the Roswell Object was an Alien Spacecraft
Click here to read Greg Bishop's thoughtful synopsis.
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Monday, September 21, 2009
Friday, September 18, 2009
Welcome to the official blog of Mac Tonnies.
I'm a Kansas City, Missouri-based author, blogger, Fortean researcher, and occasional speaker. For biographical detail, visit my other website.
Please address all email to macbot [at] yahoo dot com. And yes, I'm on Twitter.
(Masthead by Araqinta.)
My Books
"A stunning survey of the latest evidence for intelligent life on Mars. Mac Tonnies brings a thoughtful, balanced and highly accessible approach to one of the most fascinating enigmas of our time."
--Herbie Brennan, author of Martian Genesis and The Atlantis Enigma
"Tonnies drops all predetermined opinions about Mars, and asks us to do the same."
--Greg Bishop, author of Project Beta
"I highly recommend the book for anyone interested in the search for extra-terrestrial artifacts, and the political intrigues that invariably accompany it."
--David Jinks, author of The Monkey and the Tetrahredron
"Mac Tonnies goes where NASA fears to tread and he goes first class."
--Peter Gersten, former Director of Citizens Against UFO Secrecy
And don't miss...
(Includes my essay "The Ancients Are Watching.")
Blurbage
--John Shirley, author of Crawlers and Eclipse
"Mind-stretching."
--Clifford Pickover, author of Sex, Drugs, Einstein, and Elves
". . . a grabbag of links and pithy blurbs, each a little more curious than the last."
--Feral Intelligence
"Frankly, there's nothing worse (aside from death, global famine, nuclear disaster and all-round armageddon) than seeing players in the UFO field fawning all over their peers at conferences as they seek acceptance into the ufological sand-pit by saying the 'right thing' to the 'right people.' Thankfully, there's none of that in Mac's world."
--Nick Redfern, author of Three Men Seeking Monsters
"Mac Tonnies is undeniably a bit of a weirdo. Perhaps that's why I like him so much, though I agree with nearly nothing that he writes."
--John Brownlee
Featured Interviews
Twitter Updates
Follow this blog...
My photos...
Tears in Rain
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▼
2009
(789)
-
▼
October
(28)
- Triptych #15
- "As One" by Makoto Yabuki
- Attention, audiophiles!
- Link-dump #22 (space edition)
- Tube twins
- Tube-girl sighting!
- "The Lady Who Fell to Earth"
- The entomological art of Cornelia Hesse-Honegger
- Skeletons in the planetary closet
- The Knife
- That strange feeling is your head spinning.
- Rise of the tumorbots
- Link-dump #21
- I'm snot making this up.
- Behind the scenes at the Singularity Summit
- I don't have an iPhone . . .
- I think it's about time for another dubious UFO vi...
- You want one, don't you?
- The existential implications of ufology
- This is more like it.
- The art of Xia Xiaowan
- Deja vu
- The bold new look of The Future!
- No bachelor pad's complete without one!
- You can't win.
- Link-dump #20
- Well, that didn't take long.
- You've probably already seen it, but . . .
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▼
October
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