Legalize It.

30 04 2006

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Presidente Fox, what have you been somking?

Mexico ready to give drug addicts a break CBC News

Mexico is set to legalize the possession of small amounts of marijuana, ecstasy, cocaine and heroin. The Senate approved a bill setting out the new rules in a 53-26 vote with one abstention. President Vicente Fox still needs to sign the bill into law, but he is expected to do so.

Proponents of the bill say it’s meant to free up resources to battle major drug dealers. Hundreds of people, including police officers, have been killed in a continuing drug war between authorities and competing drug cartels.

“The presidency congratulates the Congress for approving the reforms,” presidential spokesman Ruben Aguilar said. “This law gives police and prosecutors better legal tools to combat drug crimes that do so much damage to our youth and children.”

The will also decriminalize the possession of small quantities of other drugs, including amphetamines, LSD and hallucinogenic mushrooms.

“No charges will be brought against … addicts or consumers who are found in possession of any narcotic for personal use,” the bill reads. However, those caught with larger amounts of narcotics will be treated as drug dealers and face increased jail terms.

SayWah? X? Cocaine? HEROIN? Dubya is gonna be very unhappy with Mr. Fox.

Update: Fox was not re-elected President. Go figure.





How to Exercise your Eyes

20 04 2006

eyeball2.jpg Eye fatigue is the new carpal tunnel.

Suffering from this myself from time to time, WikiHow has some good eye exercise advice that can help reduce stress on the peepers that will guaranteed stop you from wanting to poke your eyes out with a pointed stick after staring at a computer screen all day.

We all know how important it is to keep our bodies fit. Going to the gym, jogging, and swimming are all on the “good for you”list of activities. But did you know that you can exercise your eyes as well? While eye exercising won’t improve your vision,
it will keep your eyes healthy and take away eyestrain.

Do your eyes a favor and squintat this for a bit.





Wanna Get High?

19 04 2006

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Having yellow teeth in Siberia may have nothing to do with not brushing one’s teeth…

A type of mushroom called Amanita muscaria grows in some parts of Siberia, and it contains a cocktail of hallucinogenic chemicals. One who consumes the sun-dried mushrooms will usually experience euphoria and hallucinations, but one will also experience a host of unpleasant side-effects, such as nausea, twitching, and an increase sweat and saliva output.

Most of the unwanted side effects can be avoided by putting the mushrooms through a special filter: a human. In the Koryak tribe in Siberia it is customary for an individual who consumes the mushrooms to save his or her urine in a pot for others to drink

The mushrooms’ active ingredients are not metabolized by the body so they are excreted into the urine, but the chemicals which cause the unwanted side effects are filtered out by the kidneys. It is said that the potency of the mushroom does not decrease significantly until about the seventh time through.

But not everybody who imbibes urine is doing so for psychoactive pleasure-seeking. Many people drink it because they believe it makes them look and feel healthier, or sometimes because it’s their last resort for survival.

Found on “Damn Interesting” a great site about, uh, Interesting stuff.





Paint-on laser could rescue computer chip industry

18 04 2006

Who says Canucks can only come up with Maple Syrup and Celine Dion and back bacon?

Laser that could save computer industry from ‘interconnect bottleneck’ uses quantum paint — and a hairdryer

Researchers at the University of Toronto have created a laser that could help save the $200-billion dollar computer chip industry from a looming crisis dubbed the “interconnect bottleneck.”

But this isn’t a laser in the stereotypical sense — no corded, clunky boxes projecting different coloured lights. In fact, Professor Ted Sargent, of the Edward S. Rogers Sr. Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, carries a small vial of the paint used to make this laser in his briefcase — it looks like diluted ink.

Lasers that can produce coherent infrared light in the one to two nanometre wavelength range are essential in telecommunications, biomedical diagnosis and optical sensing. The speed and density of computer chips has risen exponentially over the years, and within 15 to 20 years the industry is expected to reach a point where components can’t get any faster. But the interconnect bottleneck — the point where microchips reach their capacity — is expected sometime around 2010.

To tackle this problem, Sargent, a Canada Research Chair in Nanotechnology, created the new laser using colloidal quantum dots — nanometre-sized particles of semiconductor that are suspended in a solvent like the particles in paint. “We’ve made a laser that can be smeared onto another material,” says Sargent.

“This is the first paint-on semiconductor laser to produce the invisible colours of light needed to carry information through fiber-optics. The infrared light could, in the future, be used to connect microprocessors on a silicon computer chip.” A study describing the laser was published in the April 17 issue of the journal Optics Express.

According to Sjoerd Hoogland, a post-doctoral fellow and the first author of the paper, “this laser could help us to keep feeding the information-hungry Internet generation.” The laser’s most remarkable feature was its simplicity. “I made the laser by dipping a miniature glass tube in the paint and then drying it with a hairdryer,” he said.

“Once the right nanoparticles are made, the procedure takes about five minutes.”

The microchip industry is looking for components that exist on the scale of transistors and are made of semiconductors, which would produce light when exposed to electrical current. With this development, it could be possible to use the electronics already found on microchips to power a laser that communicates within the chip itself.

“We crystallized precisely the size of the nanoparticles that would tune the colour of light coming from the laser. We chose nanoparticle size, and thus colour, the way a guitarist chooses frets to select the pitch of the instrument,” Hoogland said.

“Optical data transfer relies on light in the infrared–beams of light 1.5 micrometers in wavelength travel farthest in glass. We made our particles just the right size to generate laser light at exactly this wavelength.”

Lionel C. Kimerling, Thomas Lord Professor of Materials Science and director of the Microphotonics Center at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, reviewed the work. “The wavelength and the thermal budget of the Toronto laser are very appealing for applications in optical interconnects,” Kimerling says. “The performance is excellent, particularly the temperature insensitivity of the output wavelength.”





EEQUALSMCSQUARED

18 04 2006

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On this day back in 1955 Albert Einstein died in hospital in Princeton, New Jersey, aged 76.

The eminent scientist and originator of the theory of relativity was admitted to hospital three days ago with an internal complaint. In recent years Dr Einstein had lived a secluded life although he was still a member of staff at the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton University. In a statement issued following the scientist’s death, US President Dwight Eisenhower said: “No other man contributed so much to the vast expansion of the 20th century knowledge.

“Yet no other man was more modest in the possession of the power that is knowledge, more sure that power without wisdom is deadly.

“To all who live in the nuclear age, Albert Einstein exemplified the mighty creative ability of the individual in a free society.”

After his death, Einstein’s brain was removed and preserved for scientific research by Canadian scientists. It was found that the part of Einstein’s brain responsible for mathematical thought and the ability to think in terms of space and movement was 15% wider than average. It also lacked a groove which normally runs through this region suggesting that the neurons were able to communicate.

Thanks Einie, you gave us the general theory of relativity and you were a true geek rock star.





Hybrid Smugness

8 04 2006

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Green and lean, we are now officially smug hybrid owners.

This week we traded in our 2005 Honda Element for a 2006 Honda Civic Hybrid (HCH), at just over $1 a liter for regular gas the decision to go hybrid made sense.

Our old car used on average 11.5 liters per 100km versus 4.1 liters for the HCH. Some argue that the higher cost of a hybrid negates any fuel savings but they won’t mention that the real winner is the environment, a second generation hybrid emits far less green house gases then a comparable non hybrid and consumes less than half the amount of fuel.

The Ontario government also provides $2000 sales tax credit and with oil prices set to hit $75 to $90 a barrel this summer we are glad we switched.