Installing WordPress Locally Under Windows XP

Wordpress

Modifying a working blog is always a pain in the arse, one mistake to a style sheet and everything is screwed up. Plus figuring out themes and plug ins can be a royal mess. What you need is a staging area so you can test things out. I usually use my old Mac G3 running PHP and MySQL to see how things work. If you don’t have a second computer you can follow these instructions and go to town with the mods and never have to worry about screwing up the production site.

[via reltechnews

[Geeks are Sexy] technology news: Installing WordPress Locally Under Windows XP

The Banana Jr. 6000

Flickr - Banana Jr. 6000 

 

 

 

This is so darn cool. The computer made famous by the 80’s comic stripBloom County‘ has been re-born as a file server! I’ve wanted to build one of these for years, it’s nice to see that someone has finished one up. This one looks as if it started out life as a Mac SE/30, the original was based on a Mac 128 if memory serves me right. The floppy is in the right place on that model. Still, it looks real cool. Anyone have any cartoon inspired case mods out there that they would like to share? I need to pick up some yellow paint on the way home tomorrow don’t I…

whoa02 on Flickr – Photo Sharing!

A great collection of Bloom County strips featuring the amazing Banana Jr. 6000 

Alpha Radiation Visualizer

Alpha detector

Have a webcam and a smoke detector? If you do you can make a clever alpha particle visualizer. An alpha particle is an ionizing form of radiation that is made up of two protons and two neutrons. It’s powerful but doesn’t penetrate very far, paper or your skin is enough to stop them. Inside smoke detectors is a tiny chunk of americium that produces alpha particles when it decays. If you place some of this near the CCD of a web cam you can see flashes of white light as the particle strikes the capacitors and over charges them. Over time this could destroy the device, as radiation can do to space craft or robots that work near harsh radioactive sources, but in this case it makes for a good practical visualization of radiation. This would make for a fine science fair project.

[via hack-a-day

Alpha Radiation Visualizer – Overview

An Appreciation of the Camera Obscura

Camera ObscuraI had a friend that was living in England for a while tell me about these remarkable buildings there that housed camera obscuras. If you didn’t know, a camera obscura is the primitive forerunner of the modern camera. When rays of light pass through an aperture they will tend not to scatter but cross over themselves and form an image on the back wall. This effect can often be seen in nature under trees as the leaves can create thousands of tiny opening that will project sun circles on the ground. This effect is even more pronounced when there is a solar eclipse. In the 19th century camera obscuras became a form of entertainment for many people. The effect of standing in a darkened room and seeing the surrounding landscape projected before you can be breath taking. Realizing that your standing in a giant camera can feel amazing, I know that the first time I encountered one at a science museum when I was young I was mesmerized by the entire thing. Anyway, I was quite pleased to discover a web page devoted to the camera obscura. On this site you will find all sorts of stuff about these fascinating devices. Who knows, you might be living next to one of the old attractions.

The Magic Mirror of Life: An Appreciation of the Camera Obscura

New HDTV Satellite Reaches Orbit

 

It’s not just the fact that a new HDTV satellits was launched, it’s the fact that it was done from a floating platform. Now that’s cool. 

A new broadcasting satellite for high definition television across the United States roared into space Sunday from a floating platform in the Pacific Ocean.
The commercial Sea Launch Zenit 3SL booster began the successful 60-minute ascent carrying the Galaxy 16 spacecraft at 3:50 a.m. EDT (0750 GMT) from a converted oil-drilling platform positioned in equatorial waters of the Pacific about 1,400 miles (2,253 kilometers) south of Hawaii.

 

SPACE.com — New HDTV Satellite Reaches Orbit