Category Archives: geekiness

After What Animal are the Canary Islands Named?


And other useless information about the islands which

may reduce the amount of General Ignorance in the world.

Dogs.The birds are named after the islands (where they are indigenous), not the other way round. The archipelago gets its name from the Latin name for the largest of the islands, which the Romans named ‘Isle of Dogs’ (Insula Canaria) after the large numbers of dogs there, both wild and domesticated.

Canaries are a kind of finch and were originally a mottled greeny-brown, but over 400 years of cross-breeding by human beings produced their familiar yellow colour. No one has ever bred a red canary but it seems a diet of red peppers may turn them orange.

Only the male canaries sing; they can also mimic telephones and other household devices. ‘Tweety ‘ in the Warner cartoons is, of course, a very precocious canary.

For centuries, British mining regulations required the keeping of a small bird for gas detection. They were used in this way until 1986, and the wording wasn’t removed from the regulations until 1995. The idea was that toxic gases like carbon monoxide and methane killed the birds before they injured the miners. Canaries were favoured because they sing a lot, so it’s noticeable when they go quiet and fall over.

Other interesting stuff about the Canary Islands

While there is a possibility that a previous civilisation had existed on the Archipelago, the original inhabitants appear to have arrived sometime between 1000BC and 100BC. Named the Guanche, they have linguistic affinities with the  Berber people.

In ‘Canarian Wrestling’ the participants face each other in a sand circle called a terrero; the aim is to make your opponent touch the sand with any part of his body other than the feet. No hitting is permitted. The sport originated with the Guanches, the islands’ pre-Spanish indigenous people.

The Silbo Comero (Gomeran Whistle’) is a whistled language used in the Canary island of La Gomera to communicate across its deep valleys. Its speakers are called’ silbadors’. Although it was originally a Guanche language, it has been adapted so that modern silbadors are, effectively, whistling in Spanish. It’s a compulsory subject for Gomeran schoolchildren.

The volcano on La Palma in the Canaries is said to have the potential to cause a catastrophic collapse of the western half of the island, creating a tsunami that could cross the Atlantic and hit the eastern seaboard of the United States of America eight hours later with a wave as high as thirty metres. New York is in for an interesting day, some day.

 A Coincidence

London’s Isle of Dogs was first so-called on a map dated 1588: perhaps because it was home to the royal kennels, though it may simply have been a term of abuse. It’s an odd coincidence that Canary Wharf is located there.

Much of the information in this post was discovered in “The Book of General Ignorance”; Lloyd and Mitchinson, 2006. Faber and Faber

For Awesome People


A Bit of Cyoot For Hump Day


It has been a hard and discouraging two days.

So here is something to make you go “Ahhhhh”.

Or to make you go “URRRRK”

Whatever.

FBI Most Wanted


Quotes; Science


“We are each entitled to our own opinion, but no one is entitled to his own facts.”    Patrick Moynihan.

“Facts are stubborn things.”    John Adams (1770).

“Facts are stupid things.”   Ronald Reagan (1988—2004).

“If the facts don’t fit the theory, change the facts.”   Albert Einstein.

“Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored.”   Aldous Huxley (1894—1963).

“Science is facts; just as houses are made of stones, so is science made of facts; but a pile of stones is not a house and a collection of facts is not necessarily science.”   Henri Poincaré.

“The very powerful and the very stupid have one thing in common. Instead of altering their views to fit the facts, they alter the facts to fit their views… which can be very uncomfortable if you happen to be one of the facts that needs altering.”  Dr Who.

“Facts are meaningless. You could use facts to prove anything that’s even remotely true !”    Homer Simpson.

“When it comes to science, thou shalt ban the verb ‘to believe’ out of thy vocabulary.”

“Man will occasionally stumble over the truth, but most of the time he will pick himself up and continue on.”    Winston Churchill.

“The plural of ‘anecdote’ is not ‘evidence’.”

“There are two possible outcomes: if the result confirms the hypothesis, then you’ve made a measurement. If the result is contrary to the hypothesis, then you’ve made a discovery.”    — Enrico Fermi (1901—1954), Italian physicist.

“The great tragedy of Science — the slaying of a beautiful hypothesis by an ugly fact.”  T. H. Huxley (1825-95), British biologist.

“As an adolescent I aspired to lasting fame, I craved factual certainty, and I thirsted for a meaningful vision of human life — so I became a scientist. This is like becoming an archbishop so you can meet girls.”   Matt Cartmill.

“Facts speak louder than statistics.”    — Geoffrey Streatfield (1897—1978), British lawyer.

“That’s not right. That’s not even wrong.”    — Wolfgang Pauli.

“Reason, Observation, and Experience — the Holy Trinity of Science.”  Robert G. Ingersoll (1833-99), US lawyer and agnostic.

“There’s a common myth that evidence speaks for itself. It doesn’t. It just sits there on the lab table, incapable of speaking.”

“Many persons nowadays seem to think that any conclusion must be very scientific if the arguments in favor of it are derived from twitching of frogs’ legs (especially if the frogs are decapitated) and that, on the other hand, any doctrine chiefly vouched for by the feelings of human beings (with heads on their shoulders) must be benighted and superstitious.”    — William James (1842—1910), US psychologist and philosopher.

Interplanetary Thoughts


This may be just may be the Geekiest post I have ever blogged.

It may also be the most important.

The short implication of this article in the Journal of Cosmology is that life arrived on Earth on board some of the carbonaceous meteorites.

I will be watching the regular media for “dumbed down” updates over the next week.

Fossils of Cyanobacteria in CI1 Carbonaceous Meteorites
Richard B. Hoover, Ph.D. NASA/Marshall Space Flight Center

Synopsis

Dr. Hoover has discovered evidence of microfossils similar to Cyanobacteria, in freshly fractured slices of the interior surfaces of the Alais, Ivuna, and Orgueil CI1 carbonaceous meteorites. Based on Field Emission Scanning Electron Microscopy (FESEM) and other measures, Dr. Hoover has concluded they are indigenous to these meteors and are similar to trichomic cyanobacteria and other trichomic prokaryotes such as filamentous sulfur bacteria. He concludes these fossilized bacteria are not Earthly contaminants but are the fossilized remains of living organisms which lived in the parent bodies of these meteors, e.g. comets, moons, and other astral bodies. The implications are that life is everywhere, and that life on Earth may have come from other planets.

Members of the Scientific community were invited to analyze the results and to write critical commentaries or to speculate about the implications. These commentaries will be published on March 7 through March 10, 2011.

______________________________________________________________

Official Statement from Dr. Rudy Schild,  Center for Astrophysics, Harvard-Smithsonian, Editor-in-Chief, Journal of Cosmology.

Dr. Richard Hoover is a highly respected scientist and astrobiologist with a prestigious record of accomplishment at NASA. Given the controversial nature of his discovery, we have invited 100 experts and have issued a general invitation to over 5000 scientists from the scientific community to review the paper and to offer their critical analysis. Our intention is to publish the commentaries, both pro and con, alongside Dr. Hoover’s paper. In this way, the paper will have received a thorough vetting, and all points of view can be presented. No other paper in the history of science has undergone such a thorough analysis, and no other scientific journal in the history of science has made such a profoundly important paper available to the scientific community, for comment, before it is published. We believe the best way to advance science, is to promote debate and discussion.
_____________________________________________________________

The whole article can be read here, on the Journal’s website.

Twitter Stuff


Some of the Twitter stream which has caught my attention over the past few days.

@tom_cowie Hosni Mubarak’s suit pinstripes are actually his name repeated over and over http://bit.ly/gPTNcD

@howespaul I love the NT News http://plixi.com/p/81356199

@jonkudelka Gillard has seven letters and starts with G just like Gaddafi kudelka.com.au/2011/03/gillar…

@Colvinius NOW do you see why I care about spelling? youtube.com/watch?v=NxJMDz… via @zmkc

@eric_afterdark Search begins for giant new planet in our solar system “bigger than Jupiter” – #Science, #News – The Independent http://ind.pn/fRN3aA

@Glebe2037 RT @mactavish: beware of tall chihuahuas: http://flic.kr/p/9kAbtc

@vizcomic RT by FantonEsquire BREAKING NEWS from a North Wales chip shop: http://twitpic.com/45y1it

@RacistWallaby I’d say these birds fell in with the wrong crowd, but there’s no right crowd where they’re concerned: http://ow.ly/48dCT

Some Twitter Links


I have been spending time on Twitter of late.

Yes, I enjoy the 140 character banter. Even more enjoyable is the never-ending supply of links.

Here is a short list of some of the varied information and entertainment I was able to discover yesterday through Twitter.

 

@MarionGroves The Sole Remaining Stupidpower in the World – watching America commit national suicide http://bit.ly/fGUVJg

@wikileaks Over 5000 WikiLeaks cables now online: http://wikileaks.ch/reldate/2011-03-01_0.html

@firstdogonmoon It takes only five months to teach a dog how to be read to? http://arseh.at/4ma Thanks @clembastow

@lustforlanguage A big thank you to @mariongroves for her comment on my blog post. Goes to show that every writer needs a good editor http://wp.me/pNujC-10

@Colvinius Where’s the next upheaval? And can The Index Of Potential Unrest help predict it? http://bit.ly/gj63Mz via @dailydish

@firstdogonmoon Don’t write Jedi Knight any more you idiot! It wasn’t even funny the first time. Well maybe it was. Just once. http://censusnoreligion.org/

@jjprojects Oh dear, Mark. Facebook’s plan to share users’ home addresses, phone numbers: http://t.co/lt7Ebcl

@eric_afterdark Best selling itune of all time! — Lady Gaga – Born This Way http://t.co/1CVIMUp via @youtube

 

 

Socialising, On and Off Line


I use social media on the intertubez.

I blog, I tweet and I have a largely neglected presence on Facebook.

The Accepted Wisdom has been that I, and others like me, are stuck in “Mom’s Basement” and are anti-social in real life.

It seems the accepted wisdom is wrong. Pew Research confirms that there is a connection between being a real life socialiser and an online socialiser.

The internet is now deeply embedded in group and organizational life in America. A new national survey by the Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project has found that 75% of all American adults are active in some kind of voluntary group or organization and internet users are more likely than others to be active: 80% of internet users participate in groups, compared with 56% of non-internet users. Moreover, social media users are even more likely to be active: 82% of social network users and 85% of Twitter users are group participants.

“One of the striking things in these data is how purposeful people are as they become active with groups,” noted Kristen Purcell, the research director at Pew Internet and co-author of the report. “Many enjoy the social dimensions of involvement, but what they really want is to have impact. Most have felt proud of a group they belong to in the past year and just under half say they accomplished something they couldn’t have accomplished on their own.”

“It is important to note that 25% of American adults are not active in any of the groups we addressed,” Aaron Smith, senior research specialist at Pew Internet and co-author of the report. “They often report they are time-stressed or have health or other issues that limit their ability to be involved. And about a fifth of them say that lack of access to the internet is a hindrance. Even in its absence, the internet seems to be a factor in the reality of how groups perform in the digital age.”

The full report is available here, on Pew Internet

Chuffed


I visit the blog of a chap named “Gitwizard” most every day.

He is a bike rider, a tree hugger, a bit of a photographer, a WWOOFer and an all-round nice guy.

He also creates buttons for some members of his blogroll.

I was stunned when I received an email from him yesterday asking if I minded a button he had created being used on his blog.

Mind? – – – MIND? I’m so chuffed I’m rolling down the rails! Whoo hooo!

And I notice I’m in the company of Daddy P and Blond oop Norff. That is exalted company indeed.

Memories


For no reason at all, here is a rabbit named “Oolong” balancing a waffle on its head.

Ahh the memories. A cyber-decade ago, nearly a thousand years in human years. 56K modems, Windows98, 20Meg hard drives, floppy discs.

And a Japanese rabbit.

ACER CEO take note!


I have a number of Acer laptops.

One needs to have its wireless link re-jigged.

So today I set out to find where I could get some service.

What do you mean I have to send it to Sydney?

Acer, suddenly I hate you!

Thought For The Day


Most of my readers will recognise the Fractal series known as the Mandelbrot Set.

The Mandelbrot set is named after Benoît B Mandelbrot, who studied and popularized it. It has become popular outside mathematics both for its aesthetic appeal and for being a complicated structure arising from a simple definition, and is one of the best-known examples of mathematical visualization. Many mathematicians, including Mandelbrot, communicated this area of mathematics to the public.

What has not been communicated to the general public, for reasons of national sanity, is that the “B” in Benoît B Mandelbrot stands for “Benoît B Mandelbrot”.

I Want One!


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Wheeeeeeeee


Burgled from xkcd