Blimp Crash

Blimp crash

I love blimps. I think that lighter than air vehicles will come around again as a popular mode of transportation. I have long thought that trips between say San Francisco and New York would be very popular. Imagine what a trip up the west coast to Alaska would be like. Now thats a cruse I’d like to be on.
Yes I know, I writing all this while posting a story about a blimp crash. I’m doing to because it proves that the blimps, while not impervious, are very safe. there were no deaths on the ground and the crew was able to walk away under their own power. How many commercial and private air crashes have a happy ending like this?
I’m not going to count military crashes, many of those are fatal but in most the air crew can bail out – everyone else have to ride the tin can to the ground.
One of my dreams in life is to take a blimp tour of the Grand Canyon. To silently drift down the canyon at the break of dawn would be bliss.

The Goodyear blimp Stars & Stripes crashed Thursday night, amidst a spectacular summer lightning storm, into a Coral Springs storage building. The two pilots walked away from the blimp after the crash unharmed, and no injuries were reported on the ground

Goodyear blimp crashes in north Broward
Photo gallery: Blimp crash

If you want to learn more about blimps try these: Goodyear Blimp Homepage, How Blimps Work, Airships After WWII , and The Lighter-Than-Air Society

blimp, aircraft, crash, accident, Goodyear

Holographic Movies?

Holo-Chopper

I see video games in the future being a whole lot cooler than anyone can imagine.

The system is based on regular digital light processing (DLP) micro-mirror chips, but there is a twist. Instead of using regular lights, the researchers are using laser lights, which are using a unique wavelength. And they feed the chip with interferograms coming from regular 3-D imaging applications. This unique combination leads the micro-mirrors to project a 3-D moving image that appears suspended in air, like a 3-D hologram.

Holographic Movies For Your TV
There is a web version of the PDF here.
(Thank you agent Greg for this. I’ll return your anaglyph glasses soon)
3D, holographic, Texas, optics, science

Fish Lightbulb Sculpture Causes Waves

Fish lightbulb sculpture

I have no problem with the sculpture, in fact I think it’s brilliant! (Yes, there is a pun in there.)
Come to think of it, I’ve been thinking of getting some more fish and I know how to hollow out lights bulbs… Humm…
This was on a local radio station this morning (controversy sells soap!) and it was fun to hear the few bleading heart animal lovers out there getting all pissed off because the fish are in cramped inhumane spaces. Get a life! Betta fish live in puddles and can breath through their skin so they will tolerate still water just fine. A bunch of betta owners called in to attest to this fact too. The artist feeds and changes their water with great frequency so I’d suspect that they are being treated far better than most beta fish that are on peoples desks in the bottom of a plant vase. The PETA people should go have a heavy lunch at Fuddruckers and slip into a nice meat induced food coma for a while. Were talking about fish, not children, not midgets, not prisoners of war. It’s a foodstock that is being used in a work of art. Anyway, here is an excerpt from the story:

The fish — with long, flowing tail fins — stretch from one end of their miniature containers to the other. Tiny LED fixtures illuminate each bulb from above with a blue glow that does not heat the water inside.
“The first thing that I get from most people is that it’s cruel,” said the artist, Darrell Tousley, who teaches five classes a week in the welding and sculpture studio next to the display.
But Tousley said the perception of cruelty advances the message of the sculpture.
“Sometimes,” he said, “the world we live in is cruel.”
Tousley said the light bulbs in his sculpture, titled “Pent Epiphany,” symbolize human ideas. He said ideas are alive and beautiful — like the fish — and sometimes people get trapped within their ideas.

Darrel Tousley has a webpage with photos of what was at the College of Fine Arts at Arizona State University in March of this year.
So far I can’t locate his personal home page, too bad because I’d like to see some of his other works that were mentioned in the news story.

All of Tousley’s sculptures incorporate motion in some format and usually include materials salvaged from common household items. He has built elaborate bowling ball tracks two stories high, a clay pot that flings out pingpong balls put inside and an industrial-strength kaleidoscope.

An industrial strength kalidascope? Cool! I wonder if you climb inside of it, maybe you become part of the ‘scope.
I did locate a few images of his bowling ball track.

Arizona East Valley Tribune: Sculpture lights up controversy
(Just text)

art, fish, Arizona, PETA, sculpture, betta

Kodak to Discontinue Black-And-White Paper

Kodak paper

Well, it had to happen sooner of later. Kodak, the once king of the film world, is going to stop producing their line of black and white photographic papers. Not too long ago they announced that they were going to halt production of some of their Super 8 films.
Now that Kodak is no longer going to be making B&W paper, what is the student or lover of traditional photography to do? Use Agfa paper? Nope, filed for bankruptcy last month. Illford? Filed for bankruptcy last year. What the heck are you going to do, its not like there are any more papers out there, is there?
Wrong!
You can still buy Mitsubishi Gekko, Porter’s brand, and the classic Oriental Seagull paper – great stuff by the way, I remember using some when I was in school and loved the contrast on that stuff.
I have a few links below if you want to stock up your paper safe.

Kodak to Discontinue Black-And-White Paper – Yahoo! News
(A click of the shutter to Kevin for this one)

Kodak, photography, B&W, digital

Mechanical Scanning Video Game

Mechanical Scanning Video GameMechanical Scanning Video Game

I saw this on Hackaday tonight.
This guy devised a way to build a video game using persistence of vision, LEDs, some PICs, and a motor to build a game system. He based his creation on the scanning clock built by Bob Blick – Blick is a great guy, I’ve built a few of his speed controllers and they work very well.
Anyway, he mounted the motor and all the hardware on the spinning arm to balance it all out and used ball bearings as communicators for the ground, power and hand held controller.
So far he can play Pong and a Tetris like game as well as display an analog clock and input from an RS-232 port. Best of all, he has schematics and code is you want to build your own. Any bets that we will be seeing this in an up coming issue of MAKE?

Rickard’s electronic projects page – Virtual Game System

DIY, MAKE, video game, electronics, PIC, project

GBA Robotics

Nintendo-bot

More and more little computers come on the market in the guise of video games, address books, and video players. With each device comes people that take it upon themselves to push them to the limit of how then can be used. In many cases it takes a little hardware to make it all come together. This is one such case.
The Xport plugs into a Gameboy Advanced and gives you the following:

* Fully programmable FPGA with 50,000 or 150,000 logic gates
* 64 user-programmable I/O signals
* 4 Mbytes (32 Mbits) of flash memory
* 16 Mbytes of SDRAM (optional)
* Built-in high-speed communications and debug port
* Free FPGA synthesis software
* Several pre-tested logic configurations
* In system programmability
* Open source software
* Source level debugging
* Comprehensive software distribution
* eCos 2.0, RedBoot, and Insight included

Amazing no?

There is also an ebook (not going to be published in a dead tree sortof way due to the lawyers) that shows how you can program you GBA.
Time to trade in some old PS1 hardware and get a GBA!

Xport 2.0
Programming The Nintendo Game Boy Advance

cool, DIY, Nintendo, robotics