Weekend of Gluttony


Rustic Bread, originally uploaded by loumcf

This weekend was all about FOOD. After Natalie went to sleep on Friday night, we watched the France episode of No Reservations. It got me very excited about eating and activated my long-dormant baking gland. After Jenna went to bed, I stayed up to prepare a sponge starter so I could make bread in the morning.

On Saturday I made two loaves of Rustic French bread and tried a new restaurant for lunch: Ruam Mit Thai in downtown St. Paul (egg rolls and curry fried rice). That was a good start, but I was hungry for more! When we found the KitchenAid Ice Cream Maker attachment on sale at Target, well, it was an easy decision.

On Sunday I made our first batch of homemade French Vanilla ice cream. I scrambled up the leftover egg whites for lunch and made a white sauce to go with our gnocchi for dinner. And for dessert, half a dozen lemon poppyseed muffins. Mmmm... I wish this weekend would never end!

Hillary's Indian Counterpart

Between the earthquake in Chile and the intractable health care summit in Washington this week, the diplomatic negotiations between archrivals India and Pakistan received little coverage.
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This is unfortunate. India, the home of the largest democracy in the world with more than 1.1 billion people, deserves far more attention in the Western media. Even in the 21st century, where the world has been pronounced 'flat' due to the presence of hypercommunication (i.e. Twitter, Facebook etc.) and a global economy based on international capital flows and the mass migration of both production and labor, Central and South Asia are still widely perceived by the West as 'over there'. As India and Pakistan both have nuclear capability and emerging markets, it is only a matter of time before these countries figure into the daily politics of Europe and the United States as China now does today.
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In the high level talks between India and Pakistan concluded a few days ago, a new face on the international stage represented India. Nirupama Rao, who became India's second female Foreign Secretary last August, cast a hopeful image for a nation still divided over the role of women in society.
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While several similarities exist between Ms. Rao and her American counterpart, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton (i.e. Both are female. Both are baby boomers.), one notable difference exists in their educational background.
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To succeed in American politics, Clinton (then Hillary Rodham) took the usual path to the corridors of power. At Wellesley College, an elite private institution for young women, Hillary majored in political science in preparation for law school. After excelling in her studies, she earned admission to Yale Law School. At Yale, her studies were complemented by an indefatigable commitment to extracurricular legal research and activism on behalf of women and minorities. In 1971, she met Bill Clinton on campus, and the two would become one of the most defining political couples of the later 20th century.
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As the Indian education system and the halls of power have a dissimilar relationship to the American one, Nirupama Rao was able to chart a far different educational course. Rather than majoring in history, political science or getting on a 'pre-law' track, she studied English. In India, students taking the 'All India Civil Service Exam', a pathway to governmental posts, receive equal consideration regardless of major. As long as candidates for governmental positions have a strong liberal-arts background and a high degree of potential, they can be competitive for civil service positions.
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Ms. Rao was not just competitive. In 1973, she received the highest score on the Exam -and she did it with an honors degree and a MA in English literature. From there, she went on to an impressive career in the Indian diplomatic service that included stints in Vienna, Washington, Moscow, Lima, La Paz and Beijing.
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Six months ago, Ms. Rao became Foreign Secretary and began preparations for talks with Pakistan over a range of outstanding issues. While little headway was made, it was at least a hopeful prelude to another round of more substantive talks in the future.
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How will an English major fare in a world of cutthroat politics? According to former President John F. Kennedy, she will do as well as any trained lawyer or better. In remarks made at Harvard University in 1956, a young Kennedy stated, 'If more politicians knew poetry, and more poets knew politics, I am convinced the world would be a better place in which to live.'
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Despite her devotion to a career in the foreign service, Ms. Rao has neither allowed her educational roots nor her passion for literature to fade over time. In past years, she published a book of poetry entitled 'Rain Rising', which has been translated into Russian and Chinese.
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Hopefully, an English version is on the way soon. While waiting, Kleostoday would like to applaud the poetically-minded Rao for her efforts at achieving peace around the world.
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(Photo: Nirupama Rao)
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J Roquen

Beeeeeeees


BEES LOVE YELLOW, originally uploaded by Betsy J...

Natalie came down with a cold last week and so we all got sick and had a miserable time together. My head is filled with a giant block of snot. Our little petri dish seems to be on the mend now, so hopefully we'll all get better soon.

Sickness aside, her cuteness has continued unabated. One of Natalie's new things to do is ask, "please" when she wants us to give her something. From nowhere that we can tell, she decided to lengthen the word so it comes out "peeeeeeas," or now with her stuffy nose, "beeeeees."

Adorable. But dangerous. She gets doubly mad if we don't do what she asks after saying "please." Natalie knows how the system is supposed to work, and we are DOING IT WRONG.

Ocean Robot 'Plans Experiments'

From The BBC:

Scientists in the US are using an underwater vehicle that can "plan its own experiments" on the seafloor.


The "Gulper AUV" is programmed to look for the information that scientists want and plan its own route, avoiding hazardous currents and obstacles.

The research team described this advance at the Ocean Sciences meeting in Portland.

The group explained how it could "train" the robot to bring the best science back to the surface.

Read more ....

Autonomous Submarine 'Bot Plans Experiments, Navigates Without Human Help

One of MBARIs Automatic Underwater Vehicles Gulper is a high-tech update to this earlier-generation sister research vessel, which was used for seafloor mapping. Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute

From Popular Science:

Researchers at the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute are done spending valuable time heading out to sea on routine monitoring missions, and they have the autonomous underwater robot to prove it. A team of marine researchers there has developed what they are calling the Gulper automatic underwater vehicle (AUV) that operates autonomously far out to sea, planning its own experiments and negotiating ocean depths without human input.

Read more ....

NSF Puts Up $25 Million To Research Biological Machines

The Crossroads of Biology and Engineering MIT

From Popular Science:

What would you do with $25 million? If you answered "create a center to research the development of programmable, highly sophisticated biological machines," we regret to inform you the National Science Foundation and MIT have beaten you to the punch. The Emergent Behaviors of Integrated Cellular Systems Center (EBICS), will not only advance research in the emerging experimental discipline of engineered biological systems, but will lay an extensive educational groundwork for research in the field going forward.

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GAGA WEARS GLOVES BY MARKO MITANOVSKI

Q MAGAZINE, FEB/MARCH. 2010.
STYLIST// NICOLA FORMICHETTI
PHOTOGRAPHER// JOHN WRIGHT







DARPA Orders Smart Robotic Terminator Hands For A Better Tomorrow

Terminator's Arm My CPU is a neural net processor; a learning computer.

From Popular Science:

Pentagon mad scientists at DARPA have continued on their quest to create killer robots by announcing a new plan for "robotic autonomous manipulators" that can emulate human hands. And by killer, we of course mean awesome. National Defense reports that the DARPA program aims to create inexpensive robotic hands that can perhaps also replace existing prosthetics for amputees.

Read more ....

Beyond King Tut

After more than 3,000 years, he is not only still beautiful but also continues to make appearances and headlines around the world. Earlier this week, the boy-king of the 18th Dynasty of ancient Egypt, King Tutankhamen, surfaced again in the worldwide media due to the findings of a new study on the possible causes of his untimely death at age 19.
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Since the 'discovery' of Tutankhamen in 1922, scholars and archaeologists have fielded various theories on his demise - ranging from an array of physical ailments to murder. The latest research, which uses DNA evidence, suggests 'King Tut' (his more common nickname) died of cerebral malaria and complications from a severely broken leg. News outlets all over the world are buzzing with excitement on the latest analysis of his tragic end, and their massive coverage has created a stir among the peoples of nations all over the world. Why?
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A large part of the reason lies in the monumental image of ancient Egypt. Giant and mysterious pyramids, fascinating and unorthodox religious practices, a beautifully symbolic writing system, all along with generous amounts of gold and power in a vast kingdom ruled by god-men (Pharaohs), make for a engaging story.
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The ruling class, including Tutankhamen, was but a small fraction of Egyptian society, however. More than 95% of the population consisted either of highly exploited workers or slaves by various degrees. Why do we fail to see the larger picture of ancient Egypt? First, history books still tend to chart time by the reigns of kings and queens or the terms of presidents and prime ministers. Even when a great economic crisis is identified to an era (i.e. The year 1929 and the 1930s is associated with 'The Great Depression'), the historical analysis tends to revolve around what the leaders did to solve the crisis rather than the struggles of the middle and lower classes in a time of scarcity. Secondly, history (along with other subjects in the humanities) is often used a means to escape our everyday reality. After a day of cleaning the kitchen, taking out the garbage, doing laundry and taking your kids for a haircut, reading a book or watching a TV show about the best way to remove dust from a ceiling fan would not appeal to many people. It is time to escape.
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Some listen to music, others watch TV, and still others have academic pursuits of one kind or another. Members of the three great religions of Jerusalem, Christianity, Islam and Judaism, might find a lecture or a reading on King Solomon an interesting departure from the routine trivialities of their lives. Of course, tales of Solomon's wisdom and signal accomplishment of building the great 'First Temple' (960BCE) would be retold with verve, and the King would likely be presented as a 'great man'.
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Solomon's status as a 'great man' should be qualified at the very least. As the Old Testament book of Kings claims he had 700 wives and 300 concubines, could this man have truly been as wise as depicted? If he were able to remember all of their names and birthdays, he might better be characterized as a 'genius'. More importantly, one crucial element is nearly always omitted from any biographical summation of Solomon: he was generally despised by much of the working population. In order to ensure the construction of the Temple in his lifetime, Solomon conscripted and ruthlessly exploited the copper and gold miners. Long hours of backbreaking hard labor without any respite was the order of the day for any man unfortunate enough to be a miner during his reign. Phoenician craftsmen, who had been hired to design the Temple, were gainfully employed by comparison. This fact must have caused quite a bit of resentment between the overworked Israelites and the 'foreign' labor being used on the project.
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Hence, history and news is a matter of priority and perspective. While focusing on the latest discoveries of King Tut, the media marginalized a larger and more pressing issue. On the same week of the 'Tut report', another report, compiled by the US office of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), was released on the state of homelessness in the United States. A statement by Greg Blass, the Social Services Commissioner of Suffolk County (Long Island, New York) humanizes the latest gloomy statistics, 'We are seeing many families that never before sought government help. We see a spiral in food stamps, heating assistance applications; Medicaid is skyrocketing...It is truly reaching a stage of being alarming.'
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The HUD report cited a 32% increase in 'rural or suburban homelessness' and the addition of 44,000 families to homeless shelters across the country over the previous year.
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On the surface, the US government, King Tut and King Solomon seem glorious and virtually all-powerful in their respective ages. However, a deeper and more thoughtful analysis yields an unacceptable price and/or burden of 'glory'. In order to be truly 'great', massive contradictions in a person's character or a government cannot exist. If King Solomon had truly been wise, he would not have inflicted misery on his people to build a material object (which was destroyed by the Babylonians less than two centuries later). If the US government were the light of the world - as it often claims to be - espousing 'life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness' for all, it would not allow tens of millions of its own people suffer another day of soul-crushing indigence.
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If the media were wise, it would focus on the crisis of poverty, unemployment and underemployment in America and around the world rather than on a 19 year-old Egyptian king from 3,000 years ago. For the legacy of Tut and Solomon can no longer be altered, but the US government and the American people still have the potential to live up to their democratic ideals.
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(Picture: King Tutankhamen)
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J Roquen

New Role For Robot Warriors

Airmen roll out a Predator unmanned aircraft in Indian Springs, Nev. Such aircraft are tightly controlled by remote human operators. Some artificial-intelligence proponents believe next-generation robots could function more autonomously. Tony Avelar/The Christian Science Monitor/File

From The Christian Science Monitor:

Drones are just part of a bid to automate combat. Can virtual ethics make machines decisionmakers?

Science fiction sometimes depicts robot soldiers as killing machines without conscience or remorse. But at least one robotics expert today says that someday machines may make the best and most humane decisions on the battlefield.

Guided by virtual emotions, robots could not only make better decisions about their own actions but also act as ethical advisers to human soldiers or even as observers who report back on the battlefield conduct of humans and whether they followed international law.

Read more ....

Robots To Clear Baltic Seabed Of WWII Mines

Retro Sea Mine via Bactec

From Popular Science:

In a dangerous legacy of the world's deadliest conflict, 150,000 World War Two-era sea mines litter the Baltic Sea. The danger these bombs pose to a proposed gas pipeline has prompted Russia to hire the British firm Bactec International to clear the sea of unexploded ordnance. And for Bactec, that means it's time to bring out the robots.

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Year of the Beard

(c) 2010 R. Stevens ::: dieselsweeties.com

I grew a beard over my Christmas vacation to surprise my coworkers with. It was a fine beard, a manly beard. I said I would grow it until Brett Favre led the Vikings to a Superbowl victory, half-jokingly, although it didn't last long after their playoff loss to the Saints.

Jenna seemed to like the beard at first. After a while though, she grew weary of it, so I cut it off. I left some sideburns behind for a few days but she hated those even more. I guess she just isn't the kind of woman who appreciates the perks of a built-in kitten.

p.s. Here's a photo of that beard, for those who asked.

DARPA Wants To Build The Ultimate Language Traslator

Darpa Looks to Build Real-Life C3P0 -- The Danger Room

Right now, troops trying to listen in on enemy chatter rely on a convoluted process. They tune into insurgency radio frequencies, then hand the radio over to local interpreters, who translate the dialogues. It’s a sloppy process, prone to garbled words and missed phrases.

What troops really need is a machine that can pick out voices from the noise, understand and translate all kinds of different languages, and then identify the voice from a hit list of “wanted speakers.” In other words, a real-life version of Star Wars protocol droid C3PO, fluent “in over 6 million forms of communication.”

Read more ....

A Ping-Pong-Playing Terminator

Match Point: Kim Kyung-Hoon / Reuters

From Popular Science:

Meet TOPIO 3.0, the ping-pong-playing robot. Made by Vietnam’s first-ever robotics firm, TOSY, the bipedal humanoid uses two 200-fps cameras to detect the ball as it leaves the opponent’s paddle.

TOPIO’s brain—processors and an artificial neural network—analyzes the ball’s path to choose the best return. Last fall, TOPIO 3.0 debuted at the International Robot Exhibition in Tokyo.

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Ash Wednesday


Ash of Pokemon, originally uploaded by Vanman McDez

I am observing Lent again this year. After my epic vegan fail the last time around, I don't see the point in giving that another shot. My diet is restricted enough as it is.

Today's Ash Wednesday reflection from St. John's Abbey quotes Jesus saying, in Luke 9:23, "If you wish to be my disciple, you must take up your cross each day, and follow in my steps." The author comments:

Some of the stuff we hear about Lent suggests that we look for what I would call luxury crosses or substitute crosses. Instead of handling well the cross that is right before us, we decide on something more satisfying to our egos...the only genuine crosses are those we have not chosen ourselves.

He suggests closely looking at your own life to see what good needs to be done.

So for Lent this year, after sober reflection, it became clear what I have to do. I hereby resolve to stop farting in front of my wife. That is my cross to bear.

New Supercomputer Uses Water-Cooled Technology To Save Energy


From Science Daily:

Science Daily (Feb. 16, 2010) — Nanyang Technological University (NTU) February 11 opens its much-anticipated High Performance Computing (HPC) Centre to support the university's growing international research profile and capacity, especially in the area of sustainability.

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