Showing posts with label World's. Show all posts
Showing posts with label World's. Show all posts

Monday, December 23, 2013

World"s Snow Cover Seen from Space


NASA’s Aqua satellite acquired this natural-color image of snowfall across the Korean peninsula on Feb. 15, 2011.


South Korea’s east coast struggled to dig out from the heaviest snowfall in more than a century, according to a NASA statement. The South Korean government deployed 12,000 soldiers to assist and rescue residents and stranded motorists.


Agence France-Presse reported that the port city of Samcheok recorded 39 inches (100 centimeters) of snowfall on Feb. 11 and 12 the heaviest snowfall amount since recordkeeping began in 1911.


In the west, Seoul, South Korea’s capital, escaped heavy snow, although the Han River froze over for the first time in years, according to the BBC.


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WHAT REALLY HAPPENED



World"s Snow Cover Seen from Space

World"s Deadliest Jellyfish (Full Documentary)


World

World’s Deadliest Jellyfish (Full Documentary) … … … 2013 This documentary and the rest of the documentaries presented relate to important times and fi…



World"s Deadliest Jellyfish (Full Documentary)

World"s Deadliest Jellyfish (Full Documentary)


World

World’s Deadliest Jellyfish (Full Documentary) … … … 2013 This documentary and the rest of the documentaries presented relate to important times and fi…



World"s Deadliest Jellyfish (Full Documentary)

World"s Deadliest Jellyfish (Full Documentary)


World

World’s Deadliest Jellyfish (Full Documentary) … … … 2013 This documentary and the rest of the documentaries presented relate to important times and fi…



World"s Deadliest Jellyfish (Full Documentary)

Sunday, December 1, 2013

Humans emerged from male pig and female chimp, world’s top geneticist says

Humans emerged from male pig and female chimp, world’s top geneticist says
http://isbigbrotherwatchingyou.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/e0726__national_security_agency__Screen-Shot-2013-12-01-at-11.51.40-AM.png


Kounteya Sinha
Times of India
December 1, 2013


Screen Shot 2013-12-01 at 11.51.40 AM Humans are actually hybrids, who emerged as an offspring of a male pig and a female chimpanzee, according to one of the world’s leading geneticist.


Turning the theory of human ancestry on its head, Dr Eugene McCarthy — one of the world’s leading authorities on hybridization in animals from the University of Georgia has suggested that humans didn’t evolve from just apes but was a backcross hybrid of a chimpanzee and pigs.


His hypothesis is based on the fact that though humans have many features in common with chimps, there are a lot more that don’t correspond to any other primates. He then suggests that there is only one animal in the animal kingdom that has all of the traits which distinguish humans from our primate cousins.


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This article was posted: Sunday, December 1, 2013 at 11:53 am


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Infowars




Read more about Humans emerged from male pig and female chimp, world’s top geneticist says and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

24 hours at the world"s busiest airport


(CNN) — Airports are gateways to journeys, not the final stop. But for 24 hours, we made the world’s busiest airport our destination — and discovered a world with its own culture, marketplace and transit system, people who make it hum, even a taste of the exotic. In other words, much like the places we visit or hope to see.


On August 28, from 12:01 a.m. to midnight, more than three dozen journalists descended on Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport. We found moments of love and loss, hope and suspense, echoes of war — both on the ground and in the sky. It’s a city within a city that’s a second home to 58,000 workers and a fleeting stop for the 95 million passengers whose nearly 1 million annual arrivals and departures earn the airport its “world’s busiest” distinction.


This story is a sampling of the full “ATL24″ project. To check out the entire interactive experience, we invite you to visit CNN.com/ATL24 on a computer, tablet or phone web browser. Here’s some of what we saw that day.


LOVE AND LOSS


Weddings, funerals and celebrations: Airports are passageways to life’s biggest moments. Along with overstuffed bags, laptops and treasured souvenirs, travelers carry joy and heartache.


‘This is our hour’ — 11:08 a.m


Cheri Anne Hummel’s cheeks are rosy and her eyes are red. She’s been awake since 3 a.m. for her early morning flight from Denver.


She pushes a stroller through the arrivals area of Atlanta’s Domestic Terminal and carries her daughter, Ruby, in a BabyBjorn.


The baby was named for her great-grandmother, Ruby Dunn Black, who cradled her for the first time last week.


Now they’re heading back to Cheri Anne’s hometown of Thomaston, Georgia, this time for Black’s funeral. It’s tough to fly with a baby, but Cheri Anne says she wanted her daughter to be there with her.


Her eyes tear up as she remembers her grandmother: “She’s just always been such an influential person in my life.”


It’s a sad time. But Cheri Anne’s cousin, Kathryn Ozley, has been smiling for the past 30 minutes as she waits. As soon as she sees Cheri Anne, she sprints forward and throws her arms around her. They’re more like sisters, she says, and she’s looking forward to the drive from the airport back to Thomaston. It’s a trek they’ve made together at least 10 times before.


“This is our hour,” she says, “of nobody but me and her.”


The bar where anything is possible — 3:56 p.m.


“When I say tomahawk, you say chop! Tomahawk!”


“Chop!”


“Tomahawk!”


“Chop!”


The call-and-response at Atlanta Braves All Star Grill on Concourse D is led by bar manager Saundra Cage, who’s been serving and raising spirits in the airport for 15 years.


Between pours of wine, beer and frozen margaritas, she says she’s played therapist, bonded with regulars and waited on stars. Hulk Hogan, Jane Fonda and the late Whitney Houston are the first to come to mind.


If a traveler arrives who has already had too much to drink, Cage might comp that person an order of fries. If a military service member takes a seat, she knows someone else will inevitably pick up the tab. If a customer is rude, she reminds herself that everyone has a story.


Cage once comforted a woman who was flying to visit her sick mother and comforted her again when the woman returned en route to bury her.


Then there was the traveler who sat nearby at Christmastime, broke up with his girlfriend by phone and told an unsuspecting customer that he’d give her a gift in exchange for a hug. One quick hug later, as the man walked out the door, the customer opened a box to find a pair of $ 5,000 Tiffany diamond earrings.


Cage smiles, remembering another two strangers whose encounter in the bar turned into something more. The man invited the woman to join him on a journey to Los Angeles, rather than catching her flight to New York. When she said yes, he bought her a ticket on the spot.


“Anything is possible here,” Cage says.


Returning to the Isle of Hope — 6:25 p.m.


Shannon Nevin laughs and plays with her two stuffed animals, a pink Peppa Pig and Rory the Tiger. She beats them against an empty chair.


The 4-year-old is the only one in her family full of energy after an overseas flight, and she’s ready for the next leg, to Savannah, Georgia. The family is making a return trip to the Isle of Hope.


Hope is what Shannon’s parents, Craig and Penny, had been holding out for.


In 2010, Penny learned she had a rare gastrointestinal cancer. After three operations and six invasive procedures, the 36-year-old was given the all-clear in spring 2012.


Three months later, she and Craig traveled from their home in the heart of England to the picturesque coastal Georgia community to get married.


This time they’re celebrating their first anniversary and their good fortune.


“My favorite place in the world to be is the Isle of Hope,” says Craig, 38.


Their first choice of wedding venue was a church on Tybee Island featured in the movie “The Last Song,” about a teen romance and a parent’s struggle with cancer. But the church had moved, so Penny’s brother, who lives in the area, suggested a church in nearby Isle of Hope instead.


And “hope” really seemed to fit. Shannon was a flower girl; Penny’s older daughter, Kayley, 20, was a bridesmaid. The whole family, including Penny’s father, Donald, is along for the anniversary trip.


They played a song from the film “The Last Song” at their wedding, and Penny has brought along a copy of the novel.


It’s a story that resonates as they make their way back to a cherished place.


***


IT’S THEIR CITY


They clean the carpets, floors and toilets. They serve you that much-needed drink between flights, and then release you to those who ferry you safely through the air. They make the airport work.


‘I just love doing bathrooms’ — 3:52 a.m.


Anita Daniel slips on a pair of goggles, grapples with the hose of a vacuum machine and wheels it into an empty men’s bathroom on Concourse T. She flips the switch, and the machine rumbles to life, sounding like a tugboat’s foghorn.


Daniel has been cleaning bathrooms at the airport for seven years. It’s 3:52 a.m. and she’s deep into her 10:45 p.m. to 6:45 a.m. shift.


“I just love doing bathrooms, ” she says. ” I really do. It’s peaceful. I’m here by myself.”


Even when she is surrounded by travelers, Daniel can feel alone. Men will often ignore her cleaning signs and barge into the bathroom while she’s there.


“They can be very disrespectful,” she says. “I’m a lady. And I clean men’s bathrooms. I don’t have a choice because that’s my job. They will walk in on me, and see me and go right on in and use the bathroom. No respect. And then they look at you like you’re invading their privacy.”


She has a ritual to channel her anger. She tells the rude men what she thinks of them — after they leave the bathroom.


“I just do it in private,” she says. “I just mumble to myself.”


She doesn’t have those problems with women.


“Some of the nicest people are women,” Daniel says. “They’ll see me working and tell me how nice a job I’m doing and thank me for keeping everything clean. That makes you feel good, for someone to compliment you on your work.”


Daniel’s mother, Louise, also worked for a cleaning service and taught her to do her best. “It can get nasty,” she says, “but I’m used to it. I used to be a weak-stomach person but once I started cleaning bathrooms, that went away.”


The work may not be glamorous, but Daniel says there is dignity in all work.


“I just don’t understand people who don’t work,” she says. “How do you live as a human being and don’t work? I’ve been working since I was 18, and now I’m 52. I’m a hard-working person.”


And a lady.


A place where knives are allowed — 11:30 a.m.


Mixologist Tiffanie Barriere is behind the bar at One Flew South on Concourse E, muddling a sugar cube with angostura bitters for an Old Fashioned cocktail.


These days, she says, flying has an edge. “Everybody needs a drink. It just calms you down.”


One Flew South opened five years ago as the first fine-dining option at the world’s busiest airport. Esquire magazine named it one of the best bars in America, while Food & Wine called it “Airport Food Worth Flying For.”


Barriere says the restaurant has a loyal following. Some customers book a layover in Atlanta so they can dine here; others place carryout orders as soon as they are allowed to make calls after landing.


If travelers order a bottle of wine but aren’t able to finish it, the restaurant will cork and bag it for them to enjoy later. If you can take your soda to go, why not a bottle of wine?


Executive chef Duane Nutter says operating a fine-dining establishment in an airport has its challenges. Kitchen space is limited, and knives must be tethered for security reasons.


Working at One Flew South “was the first time I ever cut myself in the thigh,” Nutter says.


The restaurant became the first in the airport to offer customers metal cutlery. It had to be TSA-approved.


And “knife audits” happen regularly. They’re carefully counted to make sure none goes missing.


He has to be on his game — 12:19 p.m.


Ron Levitz bounds into the hallway outside the AirTran flight lounge. A trim man with the build of a distance runner and a close-cropped haircut, Levitz radiates energy. The AirTran pilot once worked at assorted office jobs.


“I hated it,” he says.


Flying is his first love. When he was a boy, he actually got goose bumps the first time he watched a plane take off. But translating his love into a career took years.


The competition for a pilot’s job at a major airline is fierce. The flying schedule and benefits are good, Levitz says, and a pilot can make up to $ 200,000 a year.


There’s also the sheer fun of flying.


Good pilots can’t live in the moment — they have to anticipate what may happen in five minutes or 10.


“There’s no flight that’s the same,” he says. “Every time I get in the airplane, it makes me think. It makes me evaluate. It keeps me on my toes. You’re never bored. Every time you go to work, you’re challenged.”


Has he ever faced a close call? Been nervous in the cockpit?


“Absolutely,” he says. “There’s not a pilot who would tell you otherwise. There are times when you have a situation in the cockpit when something malfunctions or there’s weather-related delays, like snow or fog. You have to really be on your game.”


Pilots must be fit as well. They must pass rigorous medical exams every six months and take extensive flight simulator tests each year.


Levitz started flying at 19 and has no plans to stop.


“Most of the pilots out there have a passion for their job,” he says. “If you don’t love it, you couldn’t do this job, because you’re away from home a lot and there are so many things you have to put up with.”


He wouldn’t have it any other way.


“There are some days when I’m flying that I just look out of the window and I feel like I’m the luckiest guy in the world.”


A secret shop — 4:45 p.m.


You’ve seen it happen on airport concourses: captains and flight attendants briskly disappearing behind mysterious doors with keypad entries.


Behind one of those doors on Concourse A is a concrete staircase that leads down to the Flight Station.


It looks like any other airport souvenir shop until you take a closer look at the items for sale: captain’s hats and shirts with various numbers of stripes, which can only be purchased by crew members who can show proof of rank; luggage tassels labeled “crew” with different airport codes; and books, jewelry and model airplanes made by airline staff and crew.


Delta flight attendant Jennifer Reason stops in to pick up a pair of stockings and a can opener before she boards a flight to Albuquerque, New Mexico. She needs the stockings because the pair she was wearing caught a run; the can opener is to help her pop open beverages during the flight, because after years of doing it without a tool, her hand hurts.


“Occupational hazard,” she says, smiling, as she digs out her wallet from her bag.


He’s cursed himself — 8:12 p.m.


He tells people to keep their eyes on their luggage. He nags them about the boarding sequence. He orders them to pick up their tired bones and schlep to a different gate.


“All that annoying stuff — well, that’s me,” says Tony Messano, of Alpharetta, Georgia, whose voice can be heard in Delta terminals across the globe.


It’s 8:12 p.m., and travelers to Buenos Aires are being treated to a gate announcement by Messano.


“Flight 101 with service to Buenos Aires,” his recorded voice tells everyone, is “departing concourse E as in echo, gate 8.”


Messano has been doing voice-over work for 25 years. He’s recorded numbers, the names of destinations, and gate letters so that any variation can be pieced together on a computer to make the necessary announcements.


He says he’s cursed himself when his voice told him to move for a gate change. And he’s gotten the stink eye from his own wife. They were in the Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, sitting at their gate having a nice conversation, when his voice kept butting in.


“She gives me a glare like ‘Stop interrupting me,’” he says. “And I’m like ‘Well, it’s me, but it’s not me.’”


These days his voice is being tested for use with similar technology in the New York City subway system.


If he lands that job, he says, “I imagine it’ll involve a lot of cursing and screaming at the top of my lungs instead of the gentle prodding I do for Delta.”


Messano, though, isn’t the only one making announcements in Delta terminals. At alternate gates, a female voice addresses travelers.


It belongs to Susan Bennett of Sandy Springs, Georgia, who used to be the voice of the Plane Train. She got into this work in the 1970s by accident. She was a jingle singer, showed up for a job, and the voice-over talent was a no-show. Bennett, who still sings and is in a band, was asked to fill in.


Now her voice can be heard at Delta gates worldwide. She can also be heard in commercials, on GPS systems and on company phone systems.


Bennett’s biggest claim to fame? In America, she is the original voice of Siri, the Apple iPhone’s virtual personal assistant. CNN revealed Bennett’s alter ego earlier this fall.


“I end up talking to myself quite a lot,” she says.


Does she ever yell at herself?


“No,” she answers. “I don’t want to hurt my feelings.”


***


HOPE AND SUSPENSE


From awkward farewells to heartfelt hellos, departures and arrivals create little bursts of fanfare. And in Atlanta, where 70% of travelers are catching connecting flights to their final destinations, time-killing strategies are many and varied.


For the love of a son — 2:20 a.m.


Denise Sardinha wasn’t supposed to be here, sitting all alone in front of gate F10 in the middle of the night.


She should be asleep in her San Francisco home, getting ready to send her 7-year-old son, David, to his first day of school in the morning. Instead, she is 2,400 miles away, waiting to pick up her boy after a booking mishap sent her scrambling across the country.


“He was visiting his dad in the middle part of Brazil,” says Sardinha, who is also Brazilian. “Because he’s 7, he’s not supposed to have a connecting flight.”


Sardinha thought she had resolved that problem by paying a $ 100 unaccompanied minor fee, but after she booked she found out that Delta won’t allow connecting flights for children under the age of 8 traveling alone.


So she had to take two days off work from her housecleaning business and jump on a four-hour flight to Atlanta to meet her son and accompany him to San Francisco. David, meanwhile, had to miss his previously scheduled flight and wait another day.


“I wasn’t happy at all. He starts school tomorrow,” Sardinha says. “Then I felt better flying with him to San Francisco because that made him feel more secure.”


She’s been sitting at the Atlanta airport for five hours, with another three hours to go until she sees her son. Before this trip, the longest she’d gone without being with him is two days. Now, it’s been two months.


She passes the time watching clips of the recent MTV Video Music Awards on her laptop. And behind the weary look on her face is the excitement of a mother who can’t wait to embrace her little boy.


Heaven must wait — 9:30 p.m.


As passengers pour off the escalators into the arrivals lobby during a busy night-time rush, Nar Lungali leans on an empty luggage cart, picks up his phone and starts dialing.


“She is not coming today,” he says, talking with one family member after another.


The case aide waiting with him from the International Rescue Committee just told him his older sister’s flight from Chicago was canceled.


The hot meal waiting for her in nearby Clarkston, known to some as the Ellis Island of Georgia because of the large number of refugees who land there, will have to wait. Fried chicken and rice. “Delicious, spicy food,” he says — the kind of meal that will make his sister feel at home, even more than 8,000 miles away from their native Bhutan.


It was only two days ago that she called from Kathmandu and told him she was moving from Nepal to America with her husband and two sons.


“She was so excited,” he says. He could hear it in her voice.


He’s excited, too. He hasn’t seen her in more than two years. He can’t wait to talk to her about how old friends left behind in the Beldangi 2 camp in eastern Nepal are doing.


Tens of thousands of Bhutanese refugees live in Nepalese camps. But nearly 80,000 have left in the past six years as part of a resettlement push to move them into better living conditions.


Now — finally — his sister is among them. And he’ll come back to the airport tomorrow to welcome her.


Standing here, watching passengers stream by, he remembers the day he first came to Atlanta more than two years ago on a flight from New York after leaving Nepal. The memory of the airport is still fresh in his mind. “So many people,” he says.


He smiles, thinking of the way his life began to change that day, the way his sister’s life will change now, too. For him, the difference between life in the United States and Nepal is clear.


“It’s just like heaven,” he says, “and hell.”


A sign of love — 11:59 p.m.


John Mann slumps next to a trash can in the back of the roped-off arrivals area, fiddling with his cell phone. Traffic flowed better than expected, and now he’s stuck with time to kill, waiting with a bright orange poster on his lap.


“Welcome Home Susie,” it says, with “I ♥ U!” scribbled in one corner.


John first met Susie when they were 9 years old, performing in a school production of “Alice in Wonderland.”


She was Alice. He was the Cheshire Cat.


Decades later and a continent apart, they reconnected on Facebook. They started talking every night, then visiting each other on weekends. She moved to Seattle, where he lived. He proposed to her on Super Bowl Sunday in 2010, hanging a sign over the fireplace that said “Will You Marry Me?” She said yes.


They’re married now, and they haven’t been apart long. Susie’s been away from their suburban Atlanta home for just a few days, helping her mom move to Houston. But John knows it’s been a tough week, and he wants to make her smile.


This sort of moment plays out at all hours in the world’s busiest airport. Amid the rush, the chaos, the flow of foot traffic, there are anticipated reunions, dreaded farewells and human exchanges — big and small — while people wait.


Susie had always wanted someone to hold up a sign for her at the airport. But John never had the courage. She is a trained singer and actress, the one who really knows how to shine onstage. He is a software developer — more of a behind-the-scenes guy. But yesterday, John decided he’d put himself out there. A kit of glitter and glue sticks and cut-out letters later, here he is.


“Making it was easy,” he says, “but walking through the airport with it wasn’t.”


People stare. He avoids the glances and looks down at his phone.


Around 11:45 p.m., he checks online and sees that Southwest Flight 51 has landed. He springs into position, planting himself at the front of the arrivals waiting area. He props up the sign with one hand and stares intently at the escalators that bring throngs of passengers to baggage claim daily.


It’s nearly midnight, though, and the escalators — earlier packed with people — now roll up mostly empty. There’s a man in a business suit, a couple who look lost, but no sign of Susie.


John looks at his phone again, then gazes off in the distance, toward an empty gift shop.


Suddenly a sea of people surges up the escalators.


Susie steps off and wanders to the right, scanning the scattered clumps of people in front of her. Seeing no familiar faces, she turns to the left, walking a few steps forward.


The bright orange sign catches her eye, and she stops in her tracks. John is looking the other way.


But in a matter of seconds, their eyes meet. John flashes a Cheshire Cat grin. He stands up, looking proud. She walks toward him, beaming.


“I made your sign,” he says. “I love you.”


***


HOW IT WORKS


They’re the invisible part of the airport, rarely seen but making it tick: They clear planes for takeoff, track storms, handle baggage, fuel aircraft and make sure that package you ordered online gets to your doorstep on time. Once you meet them, you’ll never look at an airport the same way again.


The Plane Train takes a nap — 3:36 a.m.


This is one of the few hours when the sweltering tunnel is relatively quiet. Usually it’s a nonstop blur.


As many as 11 trains — each consisting of four 18-ton cars — shuttle about 235,000 passengers a day from terminals to concourses to baggage claim and back in a matter of minutes.


For now, the Plane Train is down for its nightly inspection.


That’s when workers scour 4 miles of track for loose fixtures, faulty doors or the occasional cell phones, Barbie dolls or car keys dropped between platforms and trains.


“One woman left $ 5,000 of camera gear on the train,” says Steve Poerschmann, the city’s director of automated people mover systems. “We have a very close relationship with airport lost and found.”


One crew inspects switches and valves that send the trains in different directions.


“Twenty-seven switches like this are inspected daily,” Poerschmann says, gushing over the system like a proud father. “It’s more than just a horizontal elevator.”


Meanwhile, another worker shoves wooden objects between train doors — first a square stick, then a cylindrical rod. He’s testing various objects to make sure the proper sensors react in case anything — say, an arm — gets stuck in a door.


Still, Poerschmann says, the train has a reliability rate of more than 99%.


Pity the traveler who tries to walk from ticketing to Concourse F. The journey can take more than 30 minutes.


The Plane Train isn’t just a passenger convenience. It means the airlines get their flights out on time, too.


“Airlines schedule their connections based on the transit time between connections,” Poerschmann says. “The airport couldn’t operate without the Plane Train.”


‘Building a brick wall’ — 9:25 a.m.


It’s not even 9:30 in the morning and already the sweat is beading up on Scott Lotti’s shaved head.


Lotti, 40, is a ramp agent for Southwest Airlines, hoisting bags onto a conveyor belt that sends them into the belly of a plane headed for Austin, Texas. Another ramp man in kneepads scrambles inside to stack and secure them.


“It’s a game of Tetris every day,” says Lotti, wearing shorts, a gray T-shirt and an orange reflector vest. “You got to kind of think of it like building a brick wall.”


Once a plane pulls up to a gate, Southwest’s ramp agents have about 30 minutes to unload and reload it before the plane heads off again — forcing them to work with brisk precision.


The best parts of the day are being outdoors and enjoying the easy camaraderie with crew members. The worst parts are the sudden, unexpected dangers. Lotti says one co-worker was killed when he drove a cart into a plane’s propeller. Another was struck down by lightning.


Then there are the superheavy bags, the obese, leaden kind that one man can barely lift without help. Lotti has seen bags tipping the scales at more than 100 pounds — twice the weight most airlines will tolerate before punishing passengers with extra fees.


Southwest ramp agents must be able to lift 70 pounds. During the hiring process, they’re asked to lift a heavy bag; if they can’t, they don’t get the job.


“Sometimes you wonder what people pack in these bags. You really do,” he says.


The worst offenders? College students. “They’ve got all those books in there.”


Lotti, not pictured, is a burly man and played football in high school, but like a lot of ramp agents he wears a back brace at work. He strained a disc in his back earlier this year. Other ramp agents have injured wrists, shoulders, knees.


“It’s an unforgiving job if you do it wrong,” he says.


Ramp agents are acutely aware that they work under the watchful gaze of passengers peering out from windows or gates.


“We live in a fishbowl,” Lotti says. “We’re surrounded by eyes. It keeps you on your task.”


Keeping his eye on the blob — 4:30 p.m.


It’s a warm, sunny afternoon in Atlanta, but there’s a problem on Fred Brennan’s screens: A blob of showers is affecting airports in Boston, New York, Washington and other cities across the Northeast.


For all the sun here, that blob has been giving pilots headaches since early morning.


“It’s really bogged us down,” says Brennan, a meteorologist for Delta. Even though the rain is dissipating, “we’re still trying to recover from it.”


While Brennan keeps an eye on the Northeast, his cubicle neighbor, Bill Thull, watches Atlanta and the Midwest.


The two contribute regularly to Delta’s five-day weather outlook, released every morning. Updates come every six hours and include red flags for flight paths around the world.


Their forecasts are highly detailed, predicting exactly when and where storms will occur, down to the hour.


Just a few feet away, dispatchers use the forecasts to tweak flight schedules, fuel orders and routes to avoid the upcoming weather. Delta says it’s the only U.S. airline that has a meteorology staff to create its own forecasts.


Like a virus, flight delays due to the Northeastern blob spread across airports, including Atlanta.


Passengers miss their connections, and when the weather clears, the resulting traffic surge in the Northeast will create extra work at their destinations later.


***


ECHOES OF WAR


Troops heading to and from battle made the airport a military crossroads. Now, it’s more a spot where recruits meet before going to basic training. Their mission is the same, though: Keep America safe for citizens, immigrants and refugees — like those arriving here daily.


Carrying on a family tradition — 8:45 a.m.


Tina Moore shouts as soon as her son steps off the escalator.


“There he is! Oh, my God!”


She bounds toward him with her daughter and stops herself from blurting out his nickname, Boo Boo.


Weeks ago, Julien left for basic training at Fort Jackson in Columbia, South Carolina, then headed to advanced training at Fort Eustis in Newport News, Virginia. Before that, the family had never been apart for more than three days.


Now her 19-year-old son is U.S. Army Pvt. Julien Keith, a trained helicopter repairman. He stands tall, straight and solemn as they snap photos in baggage claim. It’s the first time he’s worn his uniform in public.


His 17-year-old sister, Aisia, puts her arm around him. She’s wearing a bright pink T-shirt that says “Proud Sister.”


Aisia hears her mom’s voice crack and teases her for getting emotional: “I knew you were going to cry.”


“I was really happy,” Moore says. “Seeing him in his uniform, that really got me.”


The airport has seen tens of thousands of young men like him. This is a place of peace shaped by a time of war. It’s where recruits with noble ideals begin their journeys, newly minted warriors head for first deployments, battle-hardened soldiers search for solace, and refugees seek safety as they start a new life — the sounds of conflict echoing in their minds.


Tina Moore served in the military, too, and she’s proud her son is carrying on the family tradition. She worries about him getting hurt, but she’s pushing that out of her mind.


For now she’s focused on the fun they’ll have for the next two weeks — the barbecues and family visits — before Julien reports to Fort Bliss in El Paso, Texas, and begins his new mission: serving his country.


‘We don’t know where we are’ — 12:40 p.m.


Eman Omar and Rita Sabbagh walk side by side through the airport, talking quietly in Arabic.


Omar’s daughters, 11 and 12, walk a few yards in front of them.


Their names — Farah and Hiba — mean “joy” and “gift.”


Farah has a nickname, too: “Mickey,” given to her years ago by Americans in Iraq.


The girls are children of war, Omar says, and they have suffered greatly.


“I want to change that,” she says. “They’ve had a hard life.”


This Iraqi refugee family just arrived in Atlanta to begin a new life with the help of people like Sabbagh, a case aide with the International Rescue Committee.


Just 30 minutes ago, Sabbagh was rushing across the arrivals lobby to greet them. Omar was crying. One of her daughters was clutching a teddy bear.


“We don’t know where we are,” Omar, 40, said in Arabic. When Sabbagh told her they’re in Atlanta, Omar burst into tears again — this time because she was so relieved to hear someone speaking her language.


“Are you going to stay with us?” she asks. Sabbagh tells her she’s come to take them to their new home.


The three have been traveling for more than a day. First on a 10-hour flight from Istanbul to JFK. Then an overnight stay in a New York hotel. Then a two-hour flight to Atlanta after missing their connection at LaGuardia, where they couldn’t find the security checkpoint.


They got lost again in Atlanta after getting off the plane, taking nearly 45 minutes to make it to the arrivals lobby.


Now, as they pile their six stuffed duffel bags onto a cart, global news blares from nearby TVs. The headlines are grim: World leaders are preparing for a possible military strike against Syria. Tension is bubbling over in Baghdad after a string of bombings killed 50 people.


The broadcasts are in English, a language Omar barely understands. But the stories are all too familiar.


Her husband was killed in war-torn Baghdad nearly a decade ago, when her daughters were just toddlers.


For eight years afterward, they tried to make Damascus their home. But violence from Syria’s growing unrest forced them to flee.


They lived in Sakarya, Turkey, for nearly two years after that.


Omar says she brought her children to America for one reason: aman, the Arabic word for safety.


Seeing the two girls — skinny, shy and quick to smile — makes Sabbagh think back to when she immigrated to the United States from Israel with her own family decades ago. She was 16 at the time. Her brother was 2.


“That just took me back 32 years, when we came to a strange country,” she says. “Now we’re citizens. We never dreamed of that.”


Omar smiles as she talks about how her daughters will go to school and study here, and how she wants to study, too, and learn English.


Walking outside the airport into the hot Atlanta sun, the girls start to giggle and play.


There are many good things about America, Omar says as she watches them. But the best thing, she says, is that they’ve arrived.


The next wave of warriors — 5:42 p.m.


“Would you like a neck pillow?”


It’s the one question Mary Lou Austin asks every recruit who walks inside the USO lounge. This is where they can get sandwiches, snacks and a chance to relax before their bus ride to basic training.


A former teacher, Austin has been helping soldiers for 45 years — ever since she noticed a USO billboard, applied for a job and got assigned to Biloxi, Mississippi, at the height of the Vietnam War.


She spent the last decade dealing with massive groups of soldiers as wars raged in Iraq and Afghanistan. Atlanta was one of two hubs for troops going home for R&R — rest and relaxation.


The last chartered R&R flight landed here in April. It was a bittersweet day for Austin — glad to see the wars coming to an end, but sad not to be able to serve so many men and women who sacrificed so much for their country.


These days, Austin focuses on recruits.


A few dozen young men flip through magazines and kick back in living room loungers once occupied by combat soldiers. Austin will see many of them again after basic training, when they fly through Atlanta to their assigned duty stations.


She knows they will be different then — hardened and ready for battle.


***


SNIFFING AND SEIZING


Fish in a suitcase, a cow’s head and a giraffe bone — oh, and don’t forget the guns, bugs and drugs.


Something’s fishy — 5:54 a.m.


Etieno Etuk has a pocket full of cash, and customs officials think something’s fishy.


Back from a two-week trip visiting family in Nigeria, the Houston man has a connecting flight to make at 7:25. But he has drawn the attention of Customs and Border Protection officers and finds himself in an examination station in the agency’s “hard secondary” inspection area at the International Terminal.


It’s all stainless steel and business, one of many places — some hidden, some in plain sight — where customs officers, Transportation Security Administration officers and airport employees spend their days searching for what’s out of place, what doesn’t seem right, what smells — sometimes literally.


A smartly dressed customs officer who only gives his last name — Gaud — asks Etuk to unlock his bags, two large red ones and a smaller purple bag.


“This is a lot of stuff for two weeks,” Gaud says as he runs his black-gloved hands through the pockets of one bag. He pulls out a bottle and pops the lid.


“Vitamins?” he asks.


Etuk nods.


Gaud slips the bottle back into the bag, zips it closed and reaches for another piece of luggage.


It is a suitcase full of fish.


Dried, wrapped in paper and plastic. It’s for soup, Etuk says.


Nothing you can’t get in the States, he says. Maybe it’s better. Maybe it’s cheaper. He’s not clear.


Etuk has been here nearly half an hour. Gaud is satisfied with Etuk’s explanation for the thousands of dollars of cash in his pocket. It’s less than $ 10,000, so he doesn’t have to declare it. The officer is still searching the bags.


“This is making me late,” Etuk says. “This has never happened before. I told this guy I had to catch a connecting flight. This guy tells me I can miss my flight. They’re rude. They should have more people working.”


But every station is staffed by officers inspecting other passengers’ bags.


Gaud is not to be rushed. He clears Etuk at 6:35 a.m. — plenty of time for the passenger, and his fish, to fly away.


A search goes bust — 6:36 a.m.


A customs officer pulls a pair of white metal bottles from a Texas woman’s luggage. One look at the label tells him this could get interesting.


A naked man is pictured embracing an equally naked woman, her breasts conveniently obscured by his cupped hands. “Macho Potenciador Sexual” the label says.


It’s a Colombian aphrodisiac, but customs officers suspect it might contain something even more stimulating — narcotics.


Traveling back from a trip to Colombia on a ticket purchased recently with cash, the woman has drawn the officers’ attention as a possible drug smuggler.


She’s relatively small, they note, but rather busty. They wonder if she’s hiding drugs in her bra.


The officer, who asks not to be identified, places a few ampules of the aphrodisiac in a plastic pouch, then crushes them. The substance comes back clean. It’s nothing more than the sex aid the label claims, but officers still aren’t satisfied.


“The whole story doesn’t add up,” says Stephen Kremer, director of Customs and Border Protection for the Atlanta port.


A female customs officer is summoned to take the passenger to a private area for a more thorough search.


It turns up nothing. She really is just busty. They clear her on to Texas.


Nigerian Versace — 10:19 a.m.


It’s a heaping pile of luxury. Items with the best brands: Hugo Boss. Kenneth Cole. Versace. Hermes. Suits and coats and jackets and purses collectively valued at many thousands of dollars.


It’s all counterfeit.


A clutch of Customs and Border Protection officers stands around the clothing and accessories, which have been laid out on a crate in the main warehouse of Delta’s expansive cargo facility next to the International Terminal.


The swag came in from Lagos, Nigeria — an automatic tip-off, says one officer.


“They just don’t make these items in Lagos.”


Customs is a regular visitor here. Each day, officers study manifests and follow leads, keeping track of the countless goods coming in to the United States. They maintain a handful of vans with X-ray equipment, not to mention a K-9 unit to sniff out various banned, illegal or unfamiliar substances.


Although drug seizures and terrorist threats get the big headlines, some material simply violates intellectual property laws.


Looking at the counterfeit clothes, it’s easy to joke about it as the sort of thing that ends up being sold on Manhattan street corners. But the damage goes far beyond a company’s trademark — or the humiliation of a fashion victim whose stitching comes unraveled at the first drop of rain.


After all, a Hugo Boss suit or a Hermes bag can fetch hundreds or thousands of dollars. That money ends up in some criminal pipelines, says customs Officer Gladys Summerville.


“It’s one of the ways that terrorists are funding their organizations and their missions,” Summerville says.


CNN’s Moni Basu, John Blake, Greg Botelho, Jen Christensen, Wayne Drash, Brandon Griggs, Emanuella Grinberg, Jamie Gumbrecht, Katia Hetter, Elizabeth Landau, Todd Leopold, Sarah LeTrent, Ann O’Neill, Thom Patterson, Michael Pearson, Jessica Ravitz, Catherine E. Shoichet and Holly Yan contributed to this report




CNN.com Recently Published/Updated



24 hours at the world"s busiest airport

Thursday, October 24, 2013

World"s Top3 Humanoid Robots - Asimo vs HPR-4 vs NAO!



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World"s Top3 Humanoid Robots - Asimo vs HPR-4 vs NAO!

Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Has the US Tired of Being the World"s Policeman?



Half an hour late for the G20 banquet last Thursday evening, Barack Obama strode alone towards the Peterhof Palace, built in the 18th century on the orders of Peter the Great, the tsar of Russia.


The other world leaders had arrived together, admiring the grandeur of their surroundings in St Petersburg and talking animatedly. The American president, struggling to find allies to take action against Syria, cut an isolated figure.


Discussions after the banquet went on into the early hours but Obama was unable to forge a consensus. He left Russia with a statement from just half the G20 nations that there should be “a strong international response” to the alleged use of sarin gas that killed at least 1,400 people, including more than 400 children, in the Damascus suburb of Ghouta on August 21.


Of those countries, only the US was committed to using force after the House of Commons voted against military action and France said it would wait a fortnight or more for United Nations inspectors to report.
If his powers of persuasion failed him at the G20, Obama’s more acute problem was back home. From Air Force One, he telephoned wavering members of Congress, urging them to vote to authorise air strikes against the regime of Bashar al-Assad, Syria’s president.


By the time his plane touched down outside Washington yesterday, however, more than 220 members of the House of Representatives were in the “no” or so-called “lean no” camps. With 217 needed for a majority, Obama was staring defeat in the face.


The president’s closest aides had been taken aback by his announcement a week earlier that he was postponing strikes against Syria and was requesting permission from a Congress that has been opposed to him at every turn, while at the same time arguing he had the presidential powers to act anyway.


As he headed overseas last Tuesday he left John Kerry, his secretary of state, to go to Capitol Hill to be the main advocate for a military response.


While some administration officials believed the president could escape the blame for American inaction if his motion was rejected by the Republican-controlled House, it soon became apparent that Obama faced considerable opposition from his own party.


Left-wing Democrats aligned themselves with libertarian Republicans such as Senator Rand Paul, the 2016 presidential hopeful.


Senator Marco Rubio, another likely Republican contender in 2016, blamed the Syria crisis on Obama’s detachment. He, too, is a “no” to what Obama has described as a “shot across the bow”. “I remain unconvinced that the use of force proposed here will work,” he said.


Republican leaders in the House have urged a “yes” vote but this has cut little ice with the young members swept into Congress with the populist conservative Tea Party movement in 2010.


Most ominous for Obama is the large number of members of Congress who say they have been swamped by emails and calls from constituents opposed to military action. An Ipsos poll conducted last Tuesday for Reuters put backing at just 29%.




RealClearPolitics – Articles



Has the US Tired of Being the World"s Policeman?

Has the US Tired of Being the World"s Policeman?



Half an hour late for the G20 banquet last Thursday evening, Barack Obama strode alone towards the Peterhof Palace, built in the 18th century on the orders of Peter the Great, the tsar of Russia.


The other world leaders had arrived together, admiring the grandeur of their surroundings in St Petersburg and talking animatedly. The American president, struggling to find allies to take action against Syria, cut an isolated figure.


Discussions after the banquet went on into the early hours but Obama was unable to forge a consensus. He left Russia with a statement from just half the G20 nations that there should be “a strong international response” to the alleged use of sarin gas that killed at least 1,400 people, including more than 400 children, in the Damascus suburb of Ghouta on August 21.


Of those countries, only the US was committed to using force after the House of Commons voted against military action and France said it would wait a fortnight or more for United Nations inspectors to report.
If his powers of persuasion failed him at the G20, Obama’s more acute problem was back home. From Air Force One, he telephoned wavering members of Congress, urging them to vote to authorise air strikes against the regime of Bashar al-Assad, Syria’s president.


By the time his plane touched down outside Washington yesterday, however, more than 220 members of the House of Representatives were in the “no” or so-called “lean no” camps. With 217 needed for a majority, Obama was staring defeat in the face.


The president’s closest aides had been taken aback by his announcement a week earlier that he was postponing strikes against Syria and was requesting permission from a Congress that has been opposed to him at every turn, while at the same time arguing he had the presidential powers to act anyway.


As he headed overseas last Tuesday he left John Kerry, his secretary of state, to go to Capitol Hill to be the main advocate for a military response.


While some administration officials believed the president could escape the blame for American inaction if his motion was rejected by the Republican-controlled House, it soon became apparent that Obama faced considerable opposition from his own party.


Left-wing Democrats aligned themselves with libertarian Republicans such as Senator Rand Paul, the 2016 presidential hopeful.


Senator Marco Rubio, another likely Republican contender in 2016, blamed the Syria crisis on Obama’s detachment. He, too, is a “no” to what Obama has described as a “shot across the bow”. “I remain unconvinced that the use of force proposed here will work,” he said.


Republican leaders in the House have urged a “yes” vote but this has cut little ice with the young members swept into Congress with the populist conservative Tea Party movement in 2010.


Most ominous for Obama is the large number of members of Congress who say they have been swamped by emails and calls from constituents opposed to military action. An Ipsos poll conducted last Tuesday for Reuters put backing at just 29%.




RealClearPolitics – Articles



Has the US Tired of Being the World"s Policeman?

Thursday, August 1, 2013

Luanda: visiting world"s priciest city


You can almost smell the money in Luanda ... once again ranked most expensive city in the world for expats.


You can almost smell the money in Luanda … once again ranked most expensive city in the world for expats.





  • Luanda is the priciest city in world for expats, says survey for second time

  • Luxury traffic jams and Hugo Boss stores common

  • Corruption endemic and services appalling

  • Possible to visit without breaking bank — and have a memorable experience



(CNN) — For the second time in three years, the African city of Luanda has been declared the most expensive city in the world for expats by Mercer, a human resources consulting firm.


While it’s true that most of the Angolan capital’s population lives in poverty on the outskirts of the city, in the center, Porsche Cayennes share the road with Cadillac Escalades and the latest Range Rovers.


Hugo Boss makes such a killing here that it opened a second store within walking distance of the first.


For those not familiar with Luanda, however, the ranking may come as a surprise.


Tokyo (which took top spot in Mercer’s survey last year) makes sense as the world’s most expensive expat city.


So might Moscow or New York.


But Luanda?




An oil well off the Angolan coast -- the country is dripping with oil wealth and a lot of it ends up in Luanda.

An oil well off the Angolan coast — the country is dripping with oil wealth and a lot of it ends up in Luanda.



What’s it like to visit?


So, what’s this scandalously expensive place — where a mid-level expat professional might earn $ 10,000 a month — like to visit?


First, some context.


Luanda is the capital of Africa’s second largest oil producer, Angola (Nigeria beats it), a rising political and economic powerhouse.


Yet the country also suffered a destructive and violent 27-year civil war, ending only in 2002, which crippled its infrastructure and decimated its ability to produce its own food.


As a consequence, almost everything in Luanda has to be imported.


Heavy import duties, along with high taxes and monopolized supply chains linked to the powerful political elite further drive up the price of goods and services to astronomical levels.


Then there’s institutional corruption, which creates high prices through price fixing and price collusion.




Most expensive city on the planet? Try living on the Luanda outskirts, like most of the city\

Most expensive city on the planet? Try living on the Luanda outskirts, like most of the city’s population.



Sky-high hotelbills


Hotels are the visitor’s biggest expense.


Despite more opening in recent years, prices have remained stuck at about $ 500 a night for five-star hotels, $ 350-400 for four-stars and $ 300-350 for mid-level lodging.


A meal at Luanda’s smartest restaurants will easily top $ 100 per person, including appetizers and drinks.


Such prices can be supported only by expats working for multinational companies and wealthy Angolans who work for the country’s burgeoning oil and banking sectors.


Most Luandans, by contrast, live on the city’s periphery and make vastly inferior incomes.


While a mid-level banking professional might take home $ 8,000-$ 10,000 a month, a driver or housemaid makes $ 500 a month, if the boss is feeling generous.


Luxury car traffic jams may be a common sight in the capital, but the roads are appalling and public services — from driver’s license renewal to the post — are horrendous.


(Perhaps send your postcards after leaving the country.)


Still keen to go?


Luanda is a dynamic, albeit challenging, place to visit and one you’re unlikely to forget.


But it doesn’t have to be prohibitively expensive — if you know where to look.


A ‘cheap’day and a night




Boats docked in Luanda marina.

Boats docked in Luanda marina.



Say you’re in Luanda for a day and a night.


You’ll need a hotel: Epic Sana Luanda (Rua da Missão, Mutamba; +244 222 642 600; from $ 500 a night) is considered the best in the city, with prices to match, while Executive Hotel Samba (Rua da Samba s/n, Samba, Luanda; +244 915407117; from $ 300), offers rare decent value, all things considered.


As soon as you step out of the hotel door, the only way to avoid a cash hemorrhage is to follow the age-old expat line and start living like a local.


The city doesn’t have much in the way of museums and public parks, but it’s worth walking along the recently refurbished Marginal, the seafood promenade that stretches from the local port to the Ilha, the peninsula jutting into Luanda Bay.


If you do, keep an eye on the imposing, whitewashed Portuguese fort perched on a hill overlooking the city; once you get close, take a left, go up the hill and you’ll find an armed forces museum (+244 222 373 623) located inside the structure.




Beach life ... free in Luanda.

Beach life … free in Luanda.



Beach life


Beaches are a must in Angola in summer.


Near Luanda, Mussulo Island is a spit of land with thatch-roofed restaurants and hotel bungalows on one side and miles of deserted beach, with fantastic waves, on the other.


You can catch water taxis out to Mussulo at the Embarcadouro dock ($ 5) and spend the day there.


Another option is to get out of Luanda altogether and head 40 kilometers south to the Miradouro da Lua, a beautiful landscape of cliffs, pinnacles and valleys stretching toward the horizon.


Dotted with baobab trees, the long, empty savanna will make you question why everyone stays crammed in the city.


At Cabo Ledo, about 150 kilometers south of Luanda, you’ll find some of the country’s finest beaches, excellent for surfing.


Angolan cuisine




Angolan cuisine takes advantage of more than a thousand kilometers of coastline . Presumably these fish don\

Angolan cuisine takes advantage of more than a thousand kilometers of coastline . Presumably these fish don’t know how much they’ll end up costing.



Angola has a culinary tradition influenced by 500 years of Portuguese colonization and seafood from more than a thousand kilometers of coastline.


In the Mutamba, Luanda’s central business district, a good spot for lunch is Tendinha (Rua da Missão 16, Mutamba; +244 923 542 868), a friendly Angolan bistro where the beer is cold and the food is cheap. It’s within walking distance of some of the city’s most popular hotels and the average check is $ 20.


At Ilha, where many of the city’s best restaurants are located, two low-key favorites are Casa do Peixa da Gabela (Rua Massano de Amorim, Chicala) and Restaurante da Dona Bela (Rua Massano de Amorim, after Poupalá on your left side; it has blue walls and white bars on the outside).


At both places you can eat a feast — featuring excellent mufete, a local delicacy of beans stewed in palm oil, grilled tilapia, onion vinaigrette, boiled plantains, sweet potatoes and yucca — for about $ 17.


For dinner, on the fringes of central Luanda in the Bairro Popular you can try the excellent cuisine of Angolan master chef Rui Sá at his Restaurante & Bar 688 (Rua da Janela Aberta, Bairro Popular, Luanda; +244 943 256 193).


Entrees here rarely top the $ 30 mark, and if they do it’s because you’re getting enough food for two.


Splurgetime


And if you want to splurge — this is the world’s most expensive city, after all — Lookal Mar (Rua Murtala Mohamed 15, Ilha do Cabo, Luanda; +244 936 000 018/9) is the king of Luanda restaurants.


Entrees here can cost $ 150 — seafood is flown in from Portugal three times a week.


You’re spoiled for choice if you want to prolong your night in Luanda.


The city’s new nightlife darling is the Switch Supper Club, in the bowels of the Epic Sana Hotel.


But you could skip the $ 40 minimum spend there and experience true Luanda nightlife at the W Club — where there’s all kinds of music, a welcoming crowd and the $ 20 cover includes three drinks.


Claudio Silva runs the Luanda Nightlife website.




CNN.com Recently Published/Updated



Luanda: visiting world"s priciest city

Monday, July 22, 2013

The Week In Numbers: New Dinosaur Discovered, The World"s Largest Virus, And More



Jang Bogo

Jang Bogo Space Group and KOPRI. Ice Lab commissioned by British Council and curated by The Arts Catalyst.



2014: the year this aerodynamic, flying saucer-like research station is set to open in Antarctica


15 feet: the length of a new cow-like dinosaur discovered in Utah


Nasutoceratops

Nasutoceratops:  Lukas Panzarin



1 week: the time it would take Earth’s average global surface temperature to drop below 0 degrees Fahrenheit if the sun went out



$ 1,350: the price of this bio-inspired tarantula robot, which will crawl out of a 3-D printer and into your heart


520 billion: the number of gold nanodots per square inch on the thinnest light absorbers ever built


Thinnest Light Absorbers
Thinnest Light Absorbers: Consisting of billions of gold nanodots, these four squares are the thinnest light absorbers ever built.  Courtesy of Mark Shwartz


$ 495: the price of an “invisibility wetsuit” that hides you from sharks while you swim


Shark-Proof Suit:  Shark Attack Mitigation Systems via Radiator


12 miles: the diameter of a new moon discovered orbiting Neptune


New Moon For Neptune:   NASA, ESA, and A. Feild (STScI)



44 pounds: the weight of the giant life-hunting bullets astronomers want to fire into Jupiter’s moon Europa


$ 150: the price of a pair of 3-D printed custom shoes


Custom-fitted Shoes

Custom-fitted Shoes:  Sam Kaplan



$ 100: the bounty this Colorado town might pay you for shooting down a government drone


Deer Trail Mayor Franks Fields Aims At A Hypothetical Drone

Deer Trail Mayor Franks Fields aims at a hypothetical drone:  Amanda Kost, 7NEWS



1.5 to 1.8 liters: the amount of liquid the average active person sweats in an hour (so… how much can a human body sweat before it runs out?)


$ 130: the price of a new portable head-up display from Garmin


Garmin portable head-up display

Garmin portable head-up display:  Garmin



2,556: the number of genes carried by a newly discovered megavirus, the world’s largest known virus. By volume, it is 200 times bigger than the flu.

Hello, Pandoravirus

Hello, Pandoravirus:  Chantal Abergel and Jean-Michel Claverie





Popular Science – New Technology, Science News, The Future Now



The Week In Numbers: New Dinosaur Discovered, The World"s Largest Virus, And More

Sunday, July 21, 2013

The Week In Numbers: New Dinosaur Discovered, The World"s Largest Virus, And More



Jang Bogo

Jang Bogo Space Group and KOPRI. Ice Lab commissioned by British Council and curated by The Arts Catalyst.



2014: the year this aerodynamic, flying saucer-like research station is set to open in Antarctica


15 feet: the length of a new cow-like dinosaur discovered in Utah


Nasutoceratops

Nasutoceratops:  Lukas Panzarin



1 week: the time it would take Earth’s average global surface temperature to drop below 0 degrees Fahrenheit if the sun went out



$ 1,350: the price of this bio-inspired tarantula robot, which will crawl out of a 3-D printer and into your heart


520 billion: the number of gold nanodots per square inch on the thinnest light absorbers ever built


Thinnest Light Absorbers
Thinnest Light Absorbers: Consisting of billions of gold nanodots, these four squares are the thinnest light absorbers ever built.  Courtesy of Mark Shwartz


$ 495: the price of an “invisibility wetsuit” that hides you from sharks while you swim


Shark-Proof Suit:  Shark Attack Mitigation Systems via Radiator


12 miles: the diameter of a new moon discovered orbiting Neptune


New Moon For Neptune:   NASA, ESA, and A. Feild (STScI)



44 pounds: the weight of the giant life-hunting bullets astronomers want to fire into Jupiter’s moon Europa


$ 150: the price of a pair of 3-D printed custom shoes


Custom-fitted Shoes

Custom-fitted Shoes:  Sam Kaplan



$ 100: the bounty this Colorado town might pay you for shooting down a government drone


Deer Trail Mayor Franks Fields Aims At A Hypothetical Drone

Deer Trail Mayor Franks Fields aims at a hypothetical drone:  Amanda Kost, 7NEWS



1.5 to 1.8 liters: the amount of liquid the average active person sweats in an hour (so… how much can a human body sweat before it runs out?)


$ 130: the price of a new portable head-up display from Garmin


Garmin portable head-up display

Garmin portable head-up display:  Garmin



2,556: the number of genes carried by a newly discovered megavirus, the world’s largest known virus. By volume, it is 200 times bigger than the flu.

Hello, Pandoravirus

Hello, Pandoravirus:  Chantal Abergel and Jean-Michel Claverie





Popular Science – New Technology, Science News, The Future Now



The Week In Numbers: New Dinosaur Discovered, The World"s Largest Virus, And More