1. Only a millimetre in diameter and 14 millimetre long, this bio-compatible robot can get into the smallest part of your body and can remain there as long as it wants to- it can be powered from a magnetic source outside, or 'on-board'
via KurzweilAI.net Accelerating Intelligence News
2. Worried about robots getting too bright? More reasons to worry: WATCH OUT!- "High Speed Robotic Hands"-
via [Geeks Are Sexy] Technology News
3. Beach ringed-in with crime-scene tape and patrolled by gun-wielding sailors- Mexico shuts Cancun beach because sand was stolen- Yahoo! News
4. Indian rugby team asked to put on some muscles: suggested diet- eat seven meals a day with at least 15 eggs - Yahoo! News
5. Multitasking: Trucker juggles with two cellphones- texting with one while talking through another- all the while driving- no wonder he slammed into a car and crashed into a swimming pool.- Yahoo! News
6. Catch me if you can: teenager draws smileys all over his school even as police try to catch him.Yahoo! News
7. A 44-year-old man in West Palm Beach tries to get money from his roommate by hitting him with a coconut, porcelain bowl and a wooden carving- gets arrested and is charged with robbery with a weapon and false imprisonment- Yahoo! News
8. 82-year-old woman gave her Audi for repairs, and writes it off as stolen when it does not come back- and finds it parked in her neighbour's garage two years later- Yahoo! News
9. A new and exciting way to commemorate the dead- company makes urns that look like the head of your late lamented loved one - www.metro.co.uk
10. A baby crocodile escapes hand luggage and causes panic as it wriggles underneath seats during the EgyptAir flight from Abu Dhabi to Cairo- metro.co.uk
Friday, July 31, 2009
We Are What We Are
There is some critical stuff here:
1.
Buddhism gets it first. via theworsthorse.com
2. Turn of Hindu Gurus: "Stripping the Gurus: Sex, Violence, Abuse and Enlightenment* by Geoffrey D. Falk:
You can download the pdf version of this book here and read it for entertainment or enlightenment, whatever.
3. Still. This could be a good source if you want to read ebooks (Buddhism)- e-library: Buddhanet
4. Okay, ever heard of the Uncarved Block? Key 'concept' in Tao- in what is a wonderful blog- The Rambling Taoist- that reads Tao Te Ching verse by verse, I found this lucid expression of Uncarved Block:
5. The only desire we have is for the state of desirelessness- how's that? Desire analysed from the perspective of Advaita- Advaita Talk
6. Do we need someone up there sitting and looking at what we do and making value-judgments of our actions? Richard Wright does not believe there is anyone doing it, but still..., it would help.- Happy Days
7.
8. For your information :)
Should you be interested, I am sharing interesting stuff I found from among blog posts that mention Sri Ramana Maharshi through tweets at http://twitter.com/ramanaalert. Longer versions of the same are blogged at http://ramanaalert.posterous.com/
Be happy.
1.
Buddhism gets it first. via theworsthorse.com
2. Turn of Hindu Gurus: "Stripping the Gurus: Sex, Violence, Abuse and Enlightenment* by Geoffrey D. Falk:
Ramakrishna was a homoerotic pedophile.
His chief disciple, Vivekananda, visited brothels in India.
Krishnamurti carried on an affair for over twenty years with the wife of a good friend. Chögyam Trungpa drank himself into an early grave. One of Adi Da's nine "wives" was a former Playboy centerfold. Bhagwan Rajneesh sniffed laughing gas to get high. Andrew Cohen, guru and publisher of What Is Enlightenment? magazine, by his own reported admission sometimes feels "like a god."
You can download the pdf version of this book here and read it for entertainment or enlightenment, whatever.
3. Still. This could be a good source if you want to read ebooks (Buddhism)- e-library: Buddhanet
4. Okay, ever heard of the Uncarved Block? Key 'concept' in Tao- in what is a wonderful blog- The Rambling Taoist- that reads Tao Te Ching verse by verse, I found this lucid expression of Uncarved Block:
The essence of the principle of the Uncarved Block is that things in their original simplicity contain their own natural power, power that is easily spoiled and lost when that simplicity is changed. For the written character P'u, the typical Chinese dictionary will give a definition of "natural, simple, plain, honest." P'u is composed of two separate characters combined: the first, the "radical" or root-meaning one, is that for tree or wood; the second, the "phonetic" or sound-giving one, is the character for dense growth or thicket. So from "tree in a thicket" or "wood not cut" comes the meaning of "things in their natural state" -- what is generally represented in English versions of Taoist writing as the "uncarved block."
5. The only desire we have is for the state of desirelessness- how's that? Desire analysed from the perspective of Advaita- Advaita Talk
6. Do we need someone up there sitting and looking at what we do and making value-judgments of our actions? Richard Wright does not believe there is anyone doing it, but still..., it would help.- Happy Days
7.
The Pearl Fisher finds nothing on the floor
Of his deep interior ocean bed, no more.
Then one splendid day, mind drops into heart,
He touches ego, and it falls apart.
Crash, crash, it topples, shakes, and then drops down.
The spirit of Upadesa Saram informs these sonnets at Alan Jacobs.8. For your information :)
Should you be interested, I am sharing interesting stuff I found from among blog posts that mention Sri Ramana Maharshi through tweets at http://twitter.com/ramanaalert. Longer versions of the same are blogged at http://ramanaalert.posterous.com/
Be happy.
Clever Stuff
The inventiveness of human mind!
1. Is it possible to reassemble a shredded document? Seems it is possible. Slate discusses how it is done.
2. This is clever: "Doing something unusual, like knocking on wood or patting yourself on the head, while taking a daily dose of medicine may be an effective strategy to help seniors remember whether they've already taken their daily medications, suggests new research," reports Science Daily, but still, you have to remember the unusual thing you did to remember something you ought not to have forgotten...
3. Ever harbored thoughts of murder or rape? Well, who hasn't! Jon Chambers argues that we are all insane- it is just that we rationalise our urges and desist from acting on them at the conscious level (we decide that 'insane' acts are not done)- http://chambersthepoet.blogspot.com/ (Warning: the last paragraph alone is what we can underastand- all the preceding words are heavy philosophic stuff)
4. Spoilt for choice: the chimera of the best buy- Wood’s World discusses that more options do not necessarily make for a happy choice.
5. Not the usual stuff you read here- "Ten Basic Articles for The Philosophy of Mind"- Daniel Dennett, Jerry Fodor and more, ending with John Searle and Alan Turing- ANDERSON BROWN'S PHILOSOPHY BLOG. Do we need this?
6. But this, I can take: "Spectacular Dams Around the World"- Nature, travel and vacation
7. K. Suresh:- Locked-in:
And the lesson?
9. The head shape and overall size of rodents has something to do with human population density and climate change- EurekAlert!
10. The Vacuum Cleaner Museum:
via Atlas Obscura
1. Is it possible to reassemble a shredded document? Seems it is possible. Slate discusses how it is done.
2. This is clever: "Doing something unusual, like knocking on wood or patting yourself on the head, while taking a daily dose of medicine may be an effective strategy to help seniors remember whether they've already taken their daily medications, suggests new research," reports Science Daily, but still, you have to remember the unusual thing you did to remember something you ought not to have forgotten...
3. Ever harbored thoughts of murder or rape? Well, who hasn't! Jon Chambers argues that we are all insane- it is just that we rationalise our urges and desist from acting on them at the conscious level (we decide that 'insane' acts are not done)- http://chambersthepoet.blogspot.com/ (Warning: the last paragraph alone is what we can underastand- all the preceding words are heavy philosophic stuff)
4. Spoilt for choice: the chimera of the best buy- Wood’s World discusses that more options do not necessarily make for a happy choice.
5. Not the usual stuff you read here- "Ten Basic Articles for The Philosophy of Mind"- Daniel Dennett, Jerry Fodor and more, ending with John Searle and Alan Turing- ANDERSON BROWN'S PHILOSOPHY BLOG. Do we need this?
6. But this, I can take: "Spectacular Dams Around the World"- Nature, travel and vacation
7. K. Suresh:- Locked-in:
"After several such incidents, I thought it prudent to rein in my 'loquaciousness' and decided to maintain the eye equivalent of the stiff upper lip in front of visitors who may not be familiar with my communication codes."
And the lesson?
"There is a lot of truth in the old saying that "it is better to keep your mouth closed and have people think you are a fool than to open it and remove all doubt."
8. "A UK hospital that combined its bereavement and donation services saw a forty-fold increase in tissue donations, such as corneas, in just five years, according to research just published in Anaesthesia"- EurekAlert
9. The head shape and overall size of rodents has something to do with human population density and climate change- EurekAlert!
10. The Vacuum Cleaner Museum:
"Stark's is home to a small but very comprehensive Vacuum Cleaner Museum. The walls of their rear showroom are lined with over 300 different models of vacuums, from their oldest, a two person hand pumped wood and steel number, to "futuristic" dustbusters from the 1960's and even a few upright wands that look like they were meant to smoke out bees, not suck up dirt."
via Atlas Obscura
Intelligent Life
Intelligence is not merely survival, but the incessant necessity to explore the dead ends, improvise on the go- sometimes it succeeds, sometimes not- but it amazing, the diversity of nature...
1. What can be more intelligent than Wolbachia? This bacteria infects twenty percent of all insects. That's okay, but shockingly, in some hosts, it inserts its entire genome inside the infected host's developing egg cell, so that it passes on to the next generation- Not Exactly Rocket Science
2. Less than five hundred alive worldwide, the white-shouldered ibis survives with some help from small-scale farmers in Cambodia- Science Daily
3. Dolphins like to keep it short, same as we prefer the smaller words- EurekAlert
4. Life could have come from the stars- thanks to the water in comets- EurekAlert!
5. Zebrafish is immune to the temptations of drugs- may be, it could help us understand the secrets of addiction- EurekAlert
6. Chimpanzees love music- an experiment reveals (they pulled a cord to listen to consonant music): BBC
7. Sockeye, a species of the Pacific Salmon, travels the farthest to spawn- they migrate from the west coast of North America as far as northern Russia and southern Japan!
(via Environmental Graffiti)
8. The Singing Sands: Dunes on deserts make a deep roar, thanks to the grains of sand as they jostle for space-
Marco Polo, in his journeys through the dunes of china, said he was struck by “the sounds of all kinds of musical instruments”, and also “of drums and the clash of arms."
- Atlas Obscura
A recording of the singing sands is here: http://www.nymoon.com/pubs/desert/singingsand/
9. Ten Worst Designs in Wired Top Stories, one of which is
10. Baby born with two heads- "The heads have separate brains and spines, but share most other vital organs, including lungs and kidneys."- 5 Things - Salon.com
1. What can be more intelligent than Wolbachia? This bacteria infects twenty percent of all insects. That's okay, but shockingly, in some hosts, it inserts its entire genome inside the infected host's developing egg cell, so that it passes on to the next generation- Not Exactly Rocket Science
2. Less than five hundred alive worldwide, the white-shouldered ibis survives with some help from small-scale farmers in Cambodia- Science Daily
3. Dolphins like to keep it short, same as we prefer the smaller words- EurekAlert
"Patterns of dolphin behaviour at the surface obey the same law of brevity as human language, with both seeking out the simplest and most efficient codes", Ramón Ferrer i Cancho, co-author of the study published in the journal Complexity and a researcher in the Department of Languages and IT Systems at the UPC, tells SINC.
4. Life could have come from the stars- thanks to the water in comets- EurekAlert!
5. Zebrafish is immune to the temptations of drugs- may be, it could help us understand the secrets of addiction- EurekAlert
6. Chimpanzees love music- an experiment reveals (they pulled a cord to listen to consonant music): BBC
7. Sockeye, a species of the Pacific Salmon, travels the farthest to spawn- they migrate from the west coast of North America as far as northern Russia and southern Japan!
(via Environmental Graffiti)
8. The Singing Sands: Dunes on deserts make a deep roar, thanks to the grains of sand as they jostle for space-
Marco Polo, in his journeys through the dunes of china, said he was struck by “the sounds of all kinds of musical instruments”, and also “of drums and the clash of arms."
- Atlas Obscura
A recording of the singing sands is here: http://www.nymoon.com/pubs/desert/singingsand/
9. Ten Worst Designs in Wired Top Stories, one of which is
6 Shark-fetus teeth. A few shark species have live births (instead of laying eggs). The Jaws juniors grow teeth in the womb. The first sibling or two to mature sometimes eat their siblings in utero. Mmm ... siblings.
10. Baby born with two heads- "The heads have separate brains and spines, but share most other vital organs, including lungs and kidneys."- 5 Things - Salon.com
The Brights!
1. Probably the first detected case of homicide: Neandarthal stabbed to death 50,000 years ago- Scientific American
2. Man marries woman sixty years after engagement, and then disappears 48 hours before reunion with his newly-wed wife- ktla.com
3. Man dumps two children into a trashcan- they were rescued only after 13 hours- whiotv.com
4. John Montagu, the 11th earl of Sandwich, owner of a chain in the United States named the Earl of Sandwich, demands 3,500 pounds in legal costs and damages from Neil Corall, Aberdeen, owner of a Scottish eatery known as the Earl of Sandwich (now renamed E.A.R.L. on the Green)- UPI
5. Crebit Card business: "Please explain to me why a company needs $75 of my money to insure they receive $10 (or $3 as it happened 2 months ago)."- The Rambling Taoist
6. "A music teacher faces up to ten years in prison after he admitted giving his father, who was terminally ill, a gun so that he could shoot himself dead in a busy hospital ward."- Timesonline.
7. Man inhales 28 cans of whipped cream ( which contains nitrous oxide, or laughing gas) at Destin Wal-Mart,; when inhaled it will "induce a condition of intoxication"- is arrested for inhalation of harmful substance.- www.newsherald.com
8. Swedish Embassy invites some 60 young people with coeliac disease to a lunch and serves them a pasta containing a gluten that they could not tolerate. What is worse, the Swedish Ambassador himself is a allergic to the gluten- Yahoo! News
9.. A gentleman who robbed a bank is caught several blocks away counting his loot as he walked- Yahoo! News
10. Man with his face covered with white underpants, and armed with a carving knife robs petrol station- www.eveningstar.co.uk
2. Man marries woman sixty years after engagement, and then disappears 48 hours before reunion with his newly-wed wife- ktla.com
3. Man dumps two children into a trashcan- they were rescued only after 13 hours- whiotv.com
4. John Montagu, the 11th earl of Sandwich, owner of a chain in the United States named the Earl of Sandwich, demands 3,500 pounds in legal costs and damages from Neil Corall, Aberdeen, owner of a Scottish eatery known as the Earl of Sandwich (now renamed E.A.R.L. on the Green)- UPI
"Personally, I feel the legal costs they were asking for were unnecessary, because they could have just picked up the phone and brought this to my attention," he (Corall) said.
5. Crebit Card business: "Please explain to me why a company needs $75 of my money to insure they receive $10 (or $3 as it happened 2 months ago)."- The Rambling Taoist
6. "A music teacher faces up to ten years in prison after he admitted giving his father, who was terminally ill, a gun so that he could shoot himself dead in a busy hospital ward."- Timesonline.
"The gun was given to me in the 1980s. I thought I would hand it in to you as soon as possible, along with the ammunition. I do not see any quality of life and I cannot get any answers. I love my family and I am sorry for what I have done.", wrote the father in his suicide note, no matter, the son faces a prison sentence of five to ten years.
7. Man inhales 28 cans of whipped cream ( which contains nitrous oxide, or laughing gas) at Destin Wal-Mart,; when inhaled it will "induce a condition of intoxication"- is arrested for inhalation of harmful substance.- www.newsherald.com
8. Swedish Embassy invites some 60 young people with coeliac disease to a lunch and serves them a pasta containing a gluten that they could not tolerate. What is worse, the Swedish Ambassador himself is a allergic to the gluten- Yahoo! News
9.. A gentleman who robbed a bank is caught several blocks away counting his loot as he walked- Yahoo! News
10. Man with his face covered with white underpants, and armed with a carving knife robs petrol station- www.eveningstar.co.uk
Thursday, July 30, 2009
Clever Stuff
1. Reading about something is as good as doing it- "Because reading about something turns on the same brain regions that control doing that thing.: Scientific American
2. Synchronicity? Or whatever. I finished a book about Antikythera Mechanism and was about to set a Google Alert for it, and what happens? For the first time in memory, this turns up:
3. Counterintuitive: Extreme stress and utter physical exhaustion sharpen the ability to act on information stored in the unconscious- The Frontal Cortex (Trivia: Running a marathon is as stressful and releases as much cortisol as found in 'military training and interrogation , rape victims being treated acutely, severe burn injury patients, and first-time parachute jumpers')
Accidentally tripped on time, I mean, short of time- so this has to be all. :)
Be happy.
2. Synchronicity? Or whatever. I finished a book about Antikythera Mechanism and was about to set a Google Alert for it, and what happens? For the first time in memory, this turns up:
"Antikythera mechanism: World's first computer may be even older than thought. See an impressive 3D reconstruction of its inner workings."- TDG - Science, Magick, Myth and History
3. Counterintuitive: Extreme stress and utter physical exhaustion sharpen the ability to act on information stored in the unconscious- The Frontal Cortex (Trivia: Running a marathon is as stressful and releases as much cortisol as found in 'military training and interrogation , rape victims being treated acutely, severe burn injury patients, and first-time parachute jumpers')
Accidentally tripped on time, I mean, short of time- so this has to be all. :)
Be happy.
Intelligent Life
1. Hundred times too weak for our eyes to see, all living things glow with visible light- Xenophilia (True Strange Stuff)
(via Boing Boing)
2. "The origin of the Amazon river is a defining moment: a new ecosystem came into being at the same time as the uplifting Andes formed a geographic divide": Amazon river is 11 million years old- EurekAlert
3. A small secretive creature with velvety fur, the lesser short-tailed bat in New Zealand, unlike other bats, walks on its four legs, hunts insects and searches for fruit, nectar and pollen- it has evolved a special relationship with a parasitic plant and indulges in a singing contest for the choice of mates- Science Daily
4. Boy, 5, cannot stomach any food, gets diarrhoea and severe stomach pain- lives on ice cubes- Small Bits & Pieces via Timesonline
5. Underwater spider spins a cocoon that works as an aqualung, filled with tiny bubbles of air trapped in the hairs on its legs- Neatorama via Environmental Graffiti
6. Gathered for Kew Gardens during Captain Cook's second voyage around the world in the early 1770s, the world's oldest potted plant is repotted in a pot about 4 feet tall, that holds a ton of soil- UPI
7. Nong Youhui in southern China can see through darkness with his blue eyes that actually glow in the dark- Weird Asia News
8. Auroras (47 of them)
-
WebEcoist
9. Jellyfish, a global powerhouse with trillions of watts of energy, has as much say on the ocean currents as tides and wind- they decide who lives and where: the nutritional content of sea, and the climate of Earth are all controlled by Jellyfish.
Take a look at this video (via Live Science)
10. Bar-headed geese have developed more aerobic muscle fibres and capillaries and have mitochondria nearby- they can fly level with an aeroplane: we would have to run a marathon on the Himalayas to match them- EurekAlert
(via Boing Boing)
2. "The origin of the Amazon river is a defining moment: a new ecosystem came into being at the same time as the uplifting Andes formed a geographic divide": Amazon river is 11 million years old- EurekAlert
3. A small secretive creature with velvety fur, the lesser short-tailed bat in New Zealand, unlike other bats, walks on its four legs, hunts insects and searches for fruit, nectar and pollen- it has evolved a special relationship with a parasitic plant and indulges in a singing contest for the choice of mates- Science Daily
4. Boy, 5, cannot stomach any food, gets diarrhoea and severe stomach pain- lives on ice cubes- Small Bits & Pieces via Timesonline
5. Underwater spider spins a cocoon that works as an aqualung, filled with tiny bubbles of air trapped in the hairs on its legs- Neatorama via Environmental Graffiti
6. Gathered for Kew Gardens during Captain Cook's second voyage around the world in the early 1770s, the world's oldest potted plant is repotted in a pot about 4 feet tall, that holds a ton of soil- UPI
7. Nong Youhui in southern China can see through darkness with his blue eyes that actually glow in the dark- Weird Asia News
8. Auroras (47 of them)
-
WebEcoist
9. Jellyfish, a global powerhouse with trillions of watts of energy, has as much say on the ocean currents as tides and wind- they decide who lives and where: the nutritional content of sea, and the climate of Earth are all controlled by Jellyfish.
Take a look at this video (via Live Science)
10. Bar-headed geese have developed more aerobic muscle fibres and capillaries and have mitochondria nearby- they can fly level with an aeroplane: we would have to run a marathon on the Himalayas to match them- EurekAlert
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
Intelligent Life
1. Can you run a marathon at the height at which airplanes fly? Well, bar-headed geese can- they have designed a muscular structure that is more aerobic than others, and more capillaries around, plus more mitochondria round there- EurekAlert
2. An untrained monkey on a farm in India herds 75 goats out to and back from the fields every day- Neatorama
3. The Oldest Profession-
4. Rosy Mapie needs no make-up:
via Environmental Graffiti
5. A dolphin in New Zealand regularly seeks out swimmers and people in boats to play with- but this time he could not have enough: an exhausted woman was clinging to a buoy as the playful dolphin swam around her and prevented her returning to shore- she had to be rescued- Discovery
6. Victims of Global Warming- Pearl Mussels that chose to live in Russia live for nearly 200 years, whereas those who stick to Spain are dead by the age of 30: and this is set to change- the secret of the longevity of the Mussels in Russia is the coolness of water there, and as we turn up the heat, they are likely doomed- Scientific American. Not just those unfortunate Mussels, but 87 percent of the more than 90 cold-blooded species studied!
7. Did you think a baby Hedgehog could be pettably cute?
This and nine more adorable baby animals are at Web Ecoist
8.Suminia getmanovi clambered up trees long before monkeys did, or Dinosaurs arrived- Live Science
10. E.coli in your stomach, when exposed to lactose, activate the genes to digest maltose: they know what follows what- even bacterias predict their future, is a write-up at SEED
2. An untrained monkey on a farm in India herds 75 goats out to and back from the fields every day- Neatorama
3. The Oldest Profession-
"Chimps selectively spend food to keep friends, but they also go much further. They spend food to mate. As well as eating fruits, leaves, and termites, chimps also occasionally eat small monkeys when fortunate enough to get their hands on them. After one hunt, a chimp tore a piece of meat and gave it to a fellow male hunter. Researchers Wrangham and Peterson wrote what happened next: "Encouraged by these signs of generosity, a female supplicant (beggar) turns and invites the meat owner to mate. He does so, at the same time holding his valued property high to prevent a greedy hand from taking any. Then, after settling back, he rewards the willing female with a chew."
- A discussion on food for sex, or prostitution in man and monkeys is at The Essential Read
4. Rosy Mapie needs no make-up:
via Environmental Graffiti
5. A dolphin in New Zealand regularly seeks out swimmers and people in boats to play with- but this time he could not have enough: an exhausted woman was clinging to a buoy as the playful dolphin swam around her and prevented her returning to shore- she had to be rescued- Discovery
6. Victims of Global Warming- Pearl Mussels that chose to live in Russia live for nearly 200 years, whereas those who stick to Spain are dead by the age of 30: and this is set to change- the secret of the longevity of the Mussels in Russia is the coolness of water there, and as we turn up the heat, they are likely doomed- Scientific American. Not just those unfortunate Mussels, but 87 percent of the more than 90 cold-blooded species studied!
7. Did you think a baby Hedgehog could be pettably cute?
This and nine more adorable baby animals are at Web Ecoist
8.Suminia getmanovi clambered up trees long before monkeys did, or Dinosaurs arrived- Live Science
10. E.coli in your stomach, when exposed to lactose, activate the genes to digest maltose: they know what follows what- even bacterias predict their future, is a write-up at SEED
Tuesday, July 28, 2009
Dumb People
1. Mind what you say, a tweet may look puny in your eyes, but not so- "Woman Sued for $50,000 Over a Tweet"- Mashable!
2. And, mind what you blog about- "Small Town Rebels Against Blogger"- WordPress Tavern: the said woman lost her job, a local bar refused to serve her food, and she was once pushed into a ditch- all for blogging about a small town where she found herself living in. Safe to blog about the rich and the famous.
3. There is a dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico, created by the runoff of fertilizers, which feed a kind of algae which feed in turn oxygen-eating bacteria, which means nothing lives there- hence dead zone. Update of it at Wired: Wired Science
4. This is not really dumb, but then what is it? Definitely not clever- a man who robbed a bank confessed about it and handed over $12000 and walked away- www.metro.co.uk. Nay be this should come under We are what we are: you know, repentance, moral values etc.
5. The case of a man who inserted a salami into his anal canal for sexual stimulation- NCBI ROFL
6. Not dumb, but an unfortunate accident- a woman got herself wedged between the toilet and bathroom door and couldn't free herself- for seven days: www.metro.co.uk
7. And this is horrible: A man in Moldova was digging his garden and found a pile of bones: the neighbours suspected that it was somebody he had killed: police came in, and then archeologists!- "Moldovan accused of murdering 1800-year-old"- Russia Times
8. Caught in undress- cricketer walks out to bat in his underwear and is timed out- www.metro.co.uk
9. Cute headline- some would say it is a dumb pun- "Flight grounded by coffee maker aroma"- Reuters: Oddly Enough. I don't know whether it is Deepa Seetharaman or Gerald E. McCormick that wrote the headline, but it is better than the news- actually the headline is what makes the news interesting. Clap-clap!
10."A Moscow firefighter has lost his job after police discovered he had been growing marijuana at his firestation for 4 months." This news, it has to be MosNews:. One gets the idea that a Tolstoy or Dostoevsky is possible only in Russia- hard work and thankless suffering ending in frustration, anguish, thanks to a merciless State machinery- Russia is written all over this: "“It takes six months. I never got my harvest,” Marichev said bitterly."
Be happy- and don't assemble any Marijuana plant, you don't need no highs, just be happy through suffering, okay?
2. And, mind what you blog about- "Small Town Rebels Against Blogger"- WordPress Tavern: the said woman lost her job, a local bar refused to serve her food, and she was once pushed into a ditch- all for blogging about a small town where she found herself living in. Safe to blog about the rich and the famous.
3. There is a dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico, created by the runoff of fertilizers, which feed a kind of algae which feed in turn oxygen-eating bacteria, which means nothing lives there- hence dead zone. Update of it at Wired: Wired Science
4. This is not really dumb, but then what is it? Definitely not clever- a man who robbed a bank confessed about it and handed over $12000 and walked away- www.metro.co.uk. Nay be this should come under We are what we are: you know, repentance, moral values etc.
5. The case of a man who inserted a salami into his anal canal for sexual stimulation- NCBI ROFL
6. Not dumb, but an unfortunate accident- a woman got herself wedged between the toilet and bathroom door and couldn't free herself- for seven days: www.metro.co.uk
7. And this is horrible: A man in Moldova was digging his garden and found a pile of bones: the neighbours suspected that it was somebody he had killed: police came in, and then archeologists!- "Moldovan accused of murdering 1800-year-old"- Russia Times
8. Caught in undress- cricketer walks out to bat in his underwear and is timed out- www.metro.co.uk
9. Cute headline- some would say it is a dumb pun- "Flight grounded by coffee maker aroma"- Reuters: Oddly Enough. I don't know whether it is Deepa Seetharaman or Gerald E. McCormick that wrote the headline, but it is better than the news- actually the headline is what makes the news interesting. Clap-clap!
10."A Moscow firefighter has lost his job after police discovered he had been growing marijuana at his firestation for 4 months." This news, it has to be MosNews:. One gets the idea that a Tolstoy or Dostoevsky is possible only in Russia- hard work and thankless suffering ending in frustration, anguish, thanks to a merciless State machinery- Russia is written all over this: "“It takes six months. I never got my harvest,” Marichev said bitterly."
Be happy- and don't assemble any Marijuana plant, you don't need no highs, just be happy through suffering, okay?
We Are What We Are
Broadband was down for about 24 hours; and I had to take a friend of mine to a psychiatrist- severely distressed with Obsessive Compulsive Disorder, his thoughts had taken a sudden turn towards suicide. I was naturally alarmed, and spent a good part of the day with him at the clinic. So, now, having publicised my virtuous deed and gained that extra shimmer you need to shine as a holy man, let me direct you to noble thoughts.
1. Belief can be so trivialised when read superficially- but it could hold within it an inner meaning: This is a common idol found in many temples-
But in the temple of Tyagaraja at Tiruvarur, this is associated with Ajapa-
2. Hope you listen to this: Upadesa Saram as recited at Sri Ramansramam at the early morning has its own resonance- I can never forget the mood it evoked: and here is a recording of Martin Wolff- it has its own magnificence, but different from the metre of the Vedic chants- Upadesha Saram (5:29) by Martin Wolff
3. And this is from Tricycle Daily Dharma- I am running all over the place with this post, but so what? We are what we are!-
4. And then let's move over to this beautiful poem by Shih Te:
Via Poetry Chaikhana Blog
5. The links today are a heavy stuff- something to do with what happened today, but that's alright. Let me finish this day with a link to this great post where Michael James explains why it is alright to say that self-attentivness is in itself nirvikalpa samadhi (whatever that be)- Happiness of Being
Be Happy.
1. Belief can be so trivialised when read superficially- but it could hold within it an inner meaning: This is a common idol found in many temples-
But in the temple of Tyagaraja at Tiruvarur, this is associated with Ajapa-
It is believed that Vishnu fashioned an image of Somaskanda and wore the image on his chest and meditated upon it in silence.
The meditative silence of the un-uttered prayer (A - Japaa), accompanied by the graceful movement in both the vertical and the horizontal planes of the Somaskanda image, in synchronization with Vishnu's meditative breath is considered to be the root of the mystical Ajapaa Natanam.
- Templenet
2. Hope you listen to this: Upadesa Saram as recited at Sri Ramansramam at the early morning has its own resonance- I can never forget the mood it evoked: and here is a recording of Martin Wolff- it has its own magnificence, but different from the metre of the Vedic chants- Upadesha Saram (5:29) by Martin Wolff
3. And this is from Tricycle Daily Dharma- I am running all over the place with this post, but so what? We are what we are!-
"If work becomes part of your spiritual practice, then your regular, daily problems cease to be only problems and become a source of inspiration."-
-Chogyam Trungpa
4. And then let's move over to this beautiful poem by Shih Te:
Behold the glow of the moon
illumine the world’s four quarters
perfect light in perfect space
a radiance that purifies
people say it waxes and wanes
but I don’t see it fade
just like a magic pearl
it shines both night and day
Via Poetry Chaikhana Blog
5. The links today are a heavy stuff- something to do with what happened today, but that's alright. Let me finish this day with a link to this great post where Michael James explains why it is alright to say that self-attentivness is in itself nirvikalpa samadhi (whatever that be)- Happiness of Being
Be Happy.
Monday, July 27, 2009
Intelligent Life
Life wants to perpetuate itself, and keeps its eggs in every basket:
1. This might seem dumb to you and me- but this is what life is about- survival
2. Troy:
via Telegraph
3. Stegosaurus carving in the temple of Angkor Wat:
- via atlas obscura
How could the 12th century sculptors have known of the existence of this dinosaur?
4. Lucy is the largest known diamond in the world- '2,500 miles across, approximately 10 billion trillion trillion carats, or a one followed by 34 zeros.'
via Nonoscience
-A chunk of crystallized carbon 50 light-years from the Earth in the constellation Centaurus.
5. Wisdom of the crowd: Ants are more intelligent than humans- because they don't have choices- Science Daily
6. Eye-shaped galaxy with a black hole for Iris:
via Wired Science
7. "Willow plays dead when she sees the word 'bang', stretches a paw in the air when she sees 'wave' and gets up on her back feet to beg when she sees the words 'sit up'."- Woman teaches dog to read- Ananova
8. "Most victims never feel a thing and the bite itself is superficial"- Vampire Bats turn to
humans- National Geographic
9. Unlike people, Apes struggle to innovate: "...chimps focus on the outcome of a demonstration – a cracked nut – rather than the bodily actions that produce the treat. Yet humans imitate the sequence of body movements: raising a stone or hammer above their shoulder before slamming it down. This difference, Tennie argues, helps humans learn feats they never would have come up with, left to their own devices"- New Scientist
10. And finally, ejaculating every day for seven days a week improves sperm quality by reducing the amount of DNA damage- www.eshre.com
What did I say? Life wants to get around and perpetuate itself.
1. This might seem dumb to you and me- but this is what life is about- survival
"Dutch biologists tracking a lion found him and a collared female lion both feeding on a newly killed Western hartebeest antelope. As Schoe's vehicle approached, both lions fled into nearby thicket where they remained hidden until the researchers left... Around 5pm that afternoon, the researchers returned to the site of the kill. As they arrived, they encountered several local villagers, who also ran away and hid in the bush."
-Daily Rotten
2. Troy:
via Telegraph
3. Stegosaurus carving in the temple of Angkor Wat:
- via atlas obscura
How could the 12th century sculptors have known of the existence of this dinosaur?
4. Lucy is the largest known diamond in the world- '2,500 miles across, approximately 10 billion trillion trillion carats, or a one followed by 34 zeros.'
via Nonoscience
-A chunk of crystallized carbon 50 light-years from the Earth in the constellation Centaurus.
5. Wisdom of the crowd: Ants are more intelligent than humans- because they don't have choices- Science Daily
6. Eye-shaped galaxy with a black hole for Iris:
via Wired Science
7. "Willow plays dead when she sees the word 'bang', stretches a paw in the air when she sees 'wave' and gets up on her back feet to beg when she sees the words 'sit up'."- Woman teaches dog to read- Ananova
8. "Most victims never feel a thing and the bite itself is superficial"- Vampire Bats turn to
humans- National Geographic
9. Unlike people, Apes struggle to innovate: "...chimps focus on the outcome of a demonstration – a cracked nut – rather than the bodily actions that produce the treat. Yet humans imitate the sequence of body movements: raising a stone or hammer above their shoulder before slamming it down. This difference, Tennie argues, helps humans learn feats they never would have come up with, left to their own devices"- New Scientist
10. And finally, ejaculating every day for seven days a week improves sperm quality by reducing the amount of DNA damage- www.eshre.com
What did I say? Life wants to get around and perpetuate itself.
Sunday, July 26, 2009
Dumb People
1. Pets: Trained biologist Leyla Schimmel says the two donkeys that they have in their backyard would only bray on the rare occasion her 12-year-old daughter is late in getting them their food, but her neighbours disagree they want the donkeys out-- UPI
2. You take a green laser pointer, shine it at something= the robot picks it up. You points it elsewhere, the robot delivers it there- "Turn The World Into A Clickable Interface And Robots Will Obey Your Commands"- Gizmodo- but what's the point?
3. More than 30,000 steelworkers clash in China- when workers learnt that Jianlong Steel would buy a majority share. Workers didn't want that, and so in the clashes Janlong general manager Chen Guojun was beaten to death- China Digital Times (CDT)
4. Who will buy this?- Used Condoms for Best Buy- Best Week Ever
5. If you have been reading this blog, you would definitely be aware of the threats that machines have for man (corpse eating robotic soldiers, flesh eating alarm clocks and so on)- scientists get wise - "Scientists Worry Machines May Outsmart Man" - New York Times
6. Jerry Gray was arrested for criminal child neglect because her son, 14-year-old Alexander Draper, was obese (555 pounds, to be exact): even if it is some genetic malfunction, she is to blame, yes- www.nj.com
7. This is messy: Labs patent results and sue universities that test for them- how clever is that? "There are even allegations that certain labs have gone so far as to send blood samples to a university lab, order testing for patented indicators, then sue that university for infringement."- Slashdot. Can get worse than that.
8. About 250,000 bees removed from home- UPI
9. This is not actually dumb, but cute- a Chinese couple married clothed in thousands of living bees.
"Li Wenhua and Yan Hongxia are both enthusiastic beekeepers"- Ananova. It shows.
10. Man takes a homeless and hungry man inside a restaurant and feeds him- man gets thanked by the homeless man when the homeless man mugs him and runs away with his cash- www.kmph.com
2. You take a green laser pointer, shine it at something= the robot picks it up. You points it elsewhere, the robot delivers it there- "Turn The World Into A Clickable Interface And Robots Will Obey Your Commands"- Gizmodo- but what's the point?
3. More than 30,000 steelworkers clash in China- when workers learnt that Jianlong Steel would buy a majority share. Workers didn't want that, and so in the clashes Janlong general manager Chen Guojun was beaten to death- China Digital Times (CDT)
4. Who will buy this?- Used Condoms for Best Buy- Best Week Ever
5. If you have been reading this blog, you would definitely be aware of the threats that machines have for man (corpse eating robotic soldiers, flesh eating alarm clocks and so on)- scientists get wise - "Scientists Worry Machines May Outsmart Man" - New York Times
6. Jerry Gray was arrested for criminal child neglect because her son, 14-year-old Alexander Draper, was obese (555 pounds, to be exact): even if it is some genetic malfunction, she is to blame, yes- www.nj.com
7. This is messy: Labs patent results and sue universities that test for them- how clever is that? "There are even allegations that certain labs have gone so far as to send blood samples to a university lab, order testing for patented indicators, then sue that university for infringement."- Slashdot. Can get worse than that.
8. About 250,000 bees removed from home- UPI
9. This is not actually dumb, but cute- a Chinese couple married clothed in thousands of living bees.
"Li Wenhua and Yan Hongxia are both enthusiastic beekeepers"- Ananova. It shows.
10. Man takes a homeless and hungry man inside a restaurant and feeds him- man gets thanked by the homeless man when the homeless man mugs him and runs away with his cash- www.kmph.com
We Are What We Are
We can keep the windows open, but the wind comes in on its own- we need to be aware of what is possible for us, we have to keep an open mind and heart- but it happens when it will. Before and After, and always now, we are what we are.
1. Happiness is not something that happens- you need to work twenty-four hours at it:
2. Faith moves mountains, and sees God in walls- "Jesus’ image seen at factory wall in Ukraine"- Russia Today
3. The rule of law, even that of dictatorship gibes more freedom than lawless freedom, even that of a community based on love- George Orwell has an insightful, and indeed, liberating take on liberty:
- via The Barefoot Bum
4. Siris is for me, a window to a different world. In this post, Brandon, the author, discusses Piers Plowman, where I found this-
'Do Well is to dread God, Do Better is to suffer,
And Do Best springs from both..."
Apparently, "We are to learn, teach, love our enemies. To learn is to Do Well; to teach is to Do Better; and to love is to Do Best." Please read the blog, I found this an illuminating post.
5. Your mind is the infinite space on which you meditate- Craig Bialick's TwitWall has a great quote from Shabkar:
Be Happy.
1. Happiness is not something that happens- you need to work twenty-four hours at it:
"Not long ago, I was traveling with the Dalai Lama across Japan and another journalist came into our bullet-train compartment for an interview. “Your Holiness,” he said, “you have seen so much sorrow and loss in your life. Your people have been killed and your country has been occupied. You have had to worry about the welfare of Tibet every day since you were four years old. How can you always remain so happy and smiling?”
”My profession,” said the Dalai Lama instantly, as if he hardly had to think about it."
- Pico Iyer, Happy Days Blog.
2. Faith moves mountains, and sees God in walls- "Jesus’ image seen at factory wall in Ukraine"- Russia Today
3. The rule of law, even that of dictatorship gibes more freedom than lawless freedom, even that of a community based on love- George Orwell has an insightful, and indeed, liberating take on liberty:
This [passage] illustrates very well the totalitarian tendency which is implicit in the anarchist or pacifist vision of Society. In a Society in which there is no law, and in theory no compulsion, the only arbiter of behavior is public opinion. But public opinion, because of the tremendous urge to conformity in gregarious animals, is less tolerant than any system of law. When human beings are governed by 'thou shalt not', the individual can practise a certain amount of eccentricity: when they are supposedly governed by 'love' or 'reason', he is under continuous pressure to make him behave and think in exactly the same way as everyone else.
— George Orwell, Politics vs. Literature: An Examination of Gulliver's Travels, October 1946
- via The Barefoot Bum
4. Siris is for me, a window to a different world. In this post, Brandon, the author, discusses Piers Plowman, where I found this-
'Do Well is to dread God, Do Better is to suffer,
And Do Best springs from both..."
Apparently, "We are to learn, teach, love our enemies. To learn is to Do Well; to teach is to Do Better; and to love is to Do Best." Please read the blog, I found this an illuminating post.
5. Your mind is the infinite space on which you meditate- Craig Bialick's TwitWall has a great quote from Shabkar:
Kunzang Shenpen went on, "That being the case, when one is remaining in the nonmeditation samadhi that is like a continuous stream, what should it be like?"
I replied:
One must remain in a vivid, lucid openness,
Like looking out
Into the reaches of the boundless sky
From the peak of a mountain open to every direction.
The lord of siddhas, Jetsun Tilopa,
Directing his gaze toward the sky,
Said to the great pandita Naropa:
What supports the sky? On what does sky rest?
The Mahamudra of one's mind has nothing to rest on.
If you loosen the bonds, liberation is certain.
Remain at ease in primordial simplicity.
The nature of mind is the sky beyond the contents of thoughts.
Remain thus at ease,
Not holding on to some thoughts,
Or pushing other thoughts away:
In true Mahamudra mind is undirected.
The unsurpassable fruition
Is simply to preserve this state.
Thus, through Marpa Lotsawa,
There will come many sky-like yogins,
Sons of the lineage of the great panditas Naro and Maitri.
The great awareness-holder, Shri Singha,
Pointing his finger toward the heart of a cloudless sky,
Told the Lotus-born Guru:
Ever empty, ever empty; ever void, all void;
This crucial absolute truth is a treasure
Which shines everywhere- above, below, between, in all directions-
Shri Singha made it spring from the perfect vessel:
Action inseparable from view.
And with this he dissolved into vajra space.
In the same way the omniscient Longchen Rabjam said:
In the infinite sky, there is neither meditation or non-meditation.
This is the vast expanse that is Samantabhadra's wisdom.
It is also said in the Miscellaneous Sayings of the Kadampas:
The place for practice must be open and spacious;
One's view must be vast and open, too;
Even if the whole of samsara and nirvana were placed within it,
It would remain as unfilled as ever-
Such should be the immensity of the view.
-Shabkar
(1781-1851)
Be Happy.
Clever Stuff
Like nature, man is infinitely inventive, and sometimes, ludicrously so.
1. Carrie Kenner has a recipe for Placenta Pills, yes, Placenta Pills- they are good for 'milk supply, fending off postpartum depression, increased energy, and support during times of separation from baby or major changes'- Improbable Research
2. Rhonda is a brilliant software that helps you draw 3D pictures. It is devilishly clever, watch this video at Robert Paterson's Weblog
3. Man constructs skyscrapers with stapler pins!- www.peterroot.com
4. You can stay healthy on potato and milk- Chris Blattman quotes a report which blames potato for '12% of the increase in population, 22% of the increase in population growth, 47% of the increase in urbanization, and 50% of the increase in urbanization growth.'
5. Latest study finds that people who are afraid of infidelity keep a gimlet eye on what the highly attractive and high-threat members of their own sex are up to.- BPS Research Digest
6. May be you should subscribe to this site- Atlas Obscura- 'a crowd-sourced, yet curated collection of the worlds most wondrous treasures'. Because I found this picture from North-East India: a bridge of living tree roots:
via The Long Now Blog
7. Environmental Graffiti shows off the seven most disgustiest insect delicacies on Earth, and one of which is- yes, spider:
8. Engineering students at Virginia Tech have built a car that can be driven by the blind- Neatorama.
9. I feel hedonometer will find that I am a happy person (playing it safe- scientists can read sentences that begin with "I feel..." and measure the level of your happiness/ unhappiness- Science Daily
10. Yu Wan Mei has bought Onion, the satire/spoof humour magazine- and the aftermath of the purchase is well, Onionish-
I couldn't stop laughing- Yu Wan Mei is very clever.
Be happy.
1. Carrie Kenner has a recipe for Placenta Pills, yes, Placenta Pills- they are good for 'milk supply, fending off postpartum depression, increased energy, and support during times of separation from baby or major changes'- Improbable Research
2. Rhonda is a brilliant software that helps you draw 3D pictures. It is devilishly clever, watch this video at Robert Paterson's Weblog
3. Man constructs skyscrapers with stapler pins!- www.peterroot.com
4. You can stay healthy on potato and milk- Chris Blattman quotes a report which blames potato for '12% of the increase in population, 22% of the increase in population growth, 47% of the increase in urbanization, and 50% of the increase in urbanization growth.'
5. Latest study finds that people who are afraid of infidelity keep a gimlet eye on what the highly attractive and high-threat members of their own sex are up to.- BPS Research Digest
6. May be you should subscribe to this site- Atlas Obscura- 'a crowd-sourced, yet curated collection of the worlds most wondrous treasures'. Because I found this picture from North-East India: a bridge of living tree roots:
via The Long Now Blog
7. Environmental Graffiti shows off the seven most disgustiest insect delicacies on Earth, and one of which is- yes, spider:
8. Engineering students at Virginia Tech have built a car that can be driven by the blind- Neatorama.
9. I feel hedonometer will find that I am a happy person (playing it safe- scientists can read sentences that begin with "I feel..." and measure the level of your happiness/ unhappiness- Science Daily
10. Yu Wan Mei has bought Onion, the satire/spoof humour magazine- and the aftermath of the purchase is well, Onionish-
"Honorable men—trusting titans of Chinese industry who valued their advisers as their own sons—were told of the high price one could charge for the free press, of the brand loyalty and reader subservience such a venture would bring. These were deceptions. Those who misled us shall never take their place in the exalted Celestial Bureaucracy. Fortunately, with the fast actions of our subsidiary Duo-Ling Leadibles, Ltd., we may be rid of their presence much sooner.
May their spines keel the Dragon Boat of the Underworld’s Sewage Minister!"
I couldn't stop laughing- Yu Wan Mei is very clever.
Be happy.
Intelligent Life
1. Man uses no tools to go up 300-feet-high walls without a safety harness: Jyothi Rai of Chitradurga Fort is the Real Spiderman: Oddity Central

2. Boy, 3, leans over a screen and falls down 3 floors: hedge cushions the screen, screen cushions the child, who survives- UPI
3. Scientists look at what Ants do and declare they are more rational than people (is that because they don't pray?)- PhysOrg
4. The toucan is amazing- it uses its bill to warm and cool itself- Wired Science

5. And people are amazing: watch this wedding video:
6. Why is life intelligent? Because it keeps on throwing up oddities, and some of the oddities work: Take this- "Brothers reunite after seven decades"- UPI
7. And a 93-year-old man marries his third-grade sweetheart after 85 years apart.- UPI
8. And fish get smaller as the Earth gets warmer: to give themselves a better chance of survival- Scientific American
9. It is never too late- Lonesome George, the last of the Galapagos Pinta Tortoise is soon to be a father- at the age well past hundred- Neatorama
10. Cool Cats- "Female Cats Are Right-Pawed, Males Are Lefties"- Discovery. Cats know best.
Be happy.

2. Boy, 3, leans over a screen and falls down 3 floors: hedge cushions the screen, screen cushions the child, who survives- UPI
3. Scientists look at what Ants do and declare they are more rational than people (is that because they don't pray?)- PhysOrg
4. The toucan is amazing- it uses its bill to warm and cool itself- Wired Science

5. And people are amazing: watch this wedding video:
6. Why is life intelligent? Because it keeps on throwing up oddities, and some of the oddities work: Take this- "Brothers reunite after seven decades"- UPI
7. And a 93-year-old man marries his third-grade sweetheart after 85 years apart.- UPI
8. And fish get smaller as the Earth gets warmer: to give themselves a better chance of survival- Scientific American
9. It is never too late- Lonesome George, the last of the Galapagos Pinta Tortoise is soon to be a father- at the age well past hundred- Neatorama
10. Cool Cats- "Female Cats Are Right-Pawed, Males Are Lefties"- Discovery. Cats know best.
Be happy.
Saturday, July 25, 2009
Dumb People
I like odd news, they show up how dumb people are- it is the norm I think of being human, nothing wrong with it: as nature beats out a random course, exploring all possibilities, she throws up these oddities: they are the lost strands of evolution, graffiti of the selfish gene, but they reveal the creative spirit of life, indeed.
1. Man dresses up as policeman, and armed with a Ford Crown Victoria outfitted with flashing lights, a microphone and speakers. pulls up an undercover police offier- with predictable results: USA Today
2. Wildlife officers in Punjab train monkey to behave- "Indian School for Rogue Monkeys"- BBC
3. Man eats Pound cake served in a can- he saved it in 1973 for his retirement day: 36 years later, he does- CNN
4. Musharraf declares Pakistan won the Kargil war- Times of India
5. Man steals car, and is found sleeping in it six miles away (with a woman)- Yahoo! News
6. Man and woman visit a historic jail and get locked up to become the first prisoners since 100 years when the staff close shop for the day- Ananaova
7. Man in China burgles house, and is overwhelmed by a Sexagenarian who hands him over to police- UPI
8. Scientists grow a mouse from what they call 'induced pluripotent stem cells'--cells from an adult that act in many ways like embryonic stem cells: which means those scientists took cells from a rat and made a mouse of it- Scientific American
9. North Korea takes away mentally ill and physically handicapped children and test biological weapons on them- Al Jazeera English
10. Man kept 150 dead dogs in his freezer- and 112 live dogs outside, but why?- USA Today
1. Man dresses up as policeman, and armed with a Ford Crown Victoria outfitted with flashing lights, a microphone and speakers. pulls up an undercover police offier- with predictable results: USA Today
2. Wildlife officers in Punjab train monkey to behave- "Indian School for Rogue Monkeys"- BBC
3. Man eats Pound cake served in a can- he saved it in 1973 for his retirement day: 36 years later, he does- CNN
4. Musharraf declares Pakistan won the Kargil war- Times of India
5. Man steals car, and is found sleeping in it six miles away (with a woman)- Yahoo! News
6. Man and woman visit a historic jail and get locked up to become the first prisoners since 100 years when the staff close shop for the day- Ananaova
7. Man in China burgles house, and is overwhelmed by a Sexagenarian who hands him over to police- UPI
8. Scientists grow a mouse from what they call 'induced pluripotent stem cells'--cells from an adult that act in many ways like embryonic stem cells: which means those scientists took cells from a rat and made a mouse of it- Scientific American
9. North Korea takes away mentally ill and physically handicapped children and test biological weapons on them- Al Jazeera English
10. Man kept 150 dead dogs in his freezer- and 112 live dogs outside, but why?- USA Today
We Are What We Are
It sounds pretentious, speaking of religion and spirituality, but I think this is a way of looking around and inward, and taking stock of where we are and what we are: and accepting that we are what we are, of course, and getting on with our life- perhaps something will change from what we have seen...
1. How does it feel to go offline for a whole month?- no more: "... a todo list that goes for pages, a thousand emails to respond to, hundreds of blog posts to read, twenty open tabs, a dozen IM windows, a text message to answer, a Twitter stream to catch up on"; Aaron Swartz loves his one month life offline:- "... don’t know how I’m going to carve a life away from the world’s constant demands and distractions. I don’t know how I’m going to balance all the things I want to do with the pressures and responsibilities they bring. But after my month off, I do know one thing: I can’t go on like this. So I’m damn well going to try."- www.aaronsw.com.
Let's give it a thought- what is online for us? Can we get offline from the distractions and demands of the world?
Aaron Swartz writes, "...simply inwardly thinking I could do more than was expected of me — is the only thing that’s gotten me anywhere in life. I see no reason to stop now." Now, where do we begin?
2. Remember Suelo- the man who lives without money? He has a website: Living Without Money. His FAQs are interesting:
Why Do You Live Without Money? (A Biographical Intro)
Do You Think Money Is Evil?
What Do You Do For Food?
What do you do for shelter?
What do you do for transportation?
Interestingly, he has a quote of Gandhiji in his website: "Possession implies provision for the future. A seeker after Truth, a follower of the law of Love, cannot hold anything against tomorrow"
That is what I call courage.
3. Right livelihood does not mean you need to disengage from life- some of us are so totally engaged with what goes around us, we are almost selfless. Like Malalai Joya, TIME has a video on her (runs for five minutes plus)
4. Here's a bracing thought for the day: Do understand that what you think to be the world isyour own mind:
5. Love is healing- people with Alzheimer's disease that are loved and cared for show as good results as people on medication- Science Daily
6. Speaking of illness and medicine, here is someone that says it is all in the mind- even madness.
Do we will madness in that giving it away is what makes it mad? Interesting thought. So sanity would be engagement with what is in and around us, is that so?
7. I don't know whether you want to hear Buckminster Fuller talk about love: anyway, here it is-
I heard him say love is all-embracing and makes no exceptions: would love to get hold of a transcription of the talk.
8. Living in India, should we not speak of Temples? Here is a blog on temples:
Thiruppurambiyam is the temple you need to go to if you are in litigation.
Be happy, no matter what.
1. How does it feel to go offline for a whole month?- no more: "... a todo list that goes for pages, a thousand emails to respond to, hundreds of blog posts to read, twenty open tabs, a dozen IM windows, a text message to answer, a Twitter stream to catch up on"; Aaron Swartz loves his one month life offline:- "... don’t know how I’m going to carve a life away from the world’s constant demands and distractions. I don’t know how I’m going to balance all the things I want to do with the pressures and responsibilities they bring. But after my month off, I do know one thing: I can’t go on like this. So I’m damn well going to try."- www.aaronsw.com.
Let's give it a thought- what is online for us? Can we get offline from the distractions and demands of the world?
Aaron Swartz writes, "...simply inwardly thinking I could do more than was expected of me — is the only thing that’s gotten me anywhere in life. I see no reason to stop now." Now, where do we begin?
2. Remember Suelo- the man who lives without money? He has a website: Living Without Money. His FAQs are interesting:
Why Do You Live Without Money? (A Biographical Intro)
Do You Think Money Is Evil?
What Do You Do For Food?
What do you do for shelter?
What do you do for transportation?
Interestingly, he has a quote of Gandhiji in his website: "Possession implies provision for the future. A seeker after Truth, a follower of the law of Love, cannot hold anything against tomorrow"
That is what I call courage.
3. Right livelihood does not mean you need to disengage from life- some of us are so totally engaged with what goes around us, we are almost selfless. Like Malalai Joya, TIME has a video on her (runs for five minutes plus)
4. Here's a bracing thought for the day: Do understand that what you think to be the world isyour own mind:
‘I am’ is an ever-present fact, while ‘I am created’ is an idea. Neither God nor the universe have come to tell you that they have created you. The mind obsessed by the idea of causality invents creation and then wonders ‘who is the creator?’ The mind itself is the creator. Even this is not quite true, for the created and its creator are one. The mind and the world are not separate. Do understand that what you think to be the world is your own mind.
- Nisargadatta Maharaj.
5. Love is healing- people with Alzheimer's disease that are loved and cared for show as good results as people on medication- Science Daily
6. Speaking of illness and medicine, here is someone that says it is all in the mind- even madness.
'Madness is a disease of the will, of judgment. That is what is impaired. And so, in there, along with so much else, your will was taken away, like a pen, because you could not be trusted with it. Yet your will is the thing that makes you feel human. Without it you cannot be well, which is why no one in there really got well, or even, perhaps, significantly better.'
-Norah Vincent quoted in Philosophy and Life
Do we will madness in that giving it away is what makes it mad? Interesting thought. So sanity would be engagement with what is in and around us, is that so?
7. I don't know whether you want to hear Buckminster Fuller talk about love: anyway, here it is-
I heard him say love is all-embracing and makes no exceptions: would love to get hold of a transcription of the talk.
8. Living in India, should we not speak of Temples? Here is a blog on temples:
Thiruppurambiyam is the temple you need to go to if you are in litigation.
Be happy, no matter what.
Clever Stuff
1. Your cell phone is your handy microscope- it takes picture of your blood, an installed software does the blood count and/or sends the picture to lab- futuristic?- Slashdot
2. "'Nano violin string' made of vibrating carbon nanotube (w/ Video)", reads the headline at Physorg.com, and it hooked me to look in- there is no word of music, may be I misread it- but what it is about is, scientists have made a nanotube out of carbon and passed electricity through it and made it vibrate- did it make music? Who knows! But the point is, that nanotube is 800 millionths of a millimeter- if you don't believe me, take the link and check the video.
3.This comes from Neatorama- Arthur Jones is a cartoonist who writes stories. But what is different is that he retells the stories with his cartoons doodled on a post-it note scrolling in the background. Cute idea- he calls them Post-it Note Stories. There is a video of one of the stories -> here.
4. A British inventor climbs walls with vacuum gloves- BBC via Neatorama
5. If you want to know about Fourth Dimension, here is Carl Sagan explaining it (via TDG - Science, Magick, Myth and History where you will find quite an in-depth discussion of this)
6. Environmental Graffiti has tribal facial tattoos from around the world:
7. Paul Gowder bemoans the fact that you cannot have parenthesis in speech: "Some guy was trying to give directions involving an intersection at which there are two left-turn lanes, and was completely unable to communicate the fact that his interlocutor should use the rightmost of those lanes, so as to be able to make an immediate right turn after the left turn." If you want to know how parenthesis would help here, Uncommon Priors is the place to look.
Hmmm... Be happy.
2. "'Nano violin string' made of vibrating carbon nanotube (w/ Video)", reads the headline at Physorg.com, and it hooked me to look in- there is no word of music, may be I misread it- but what it is about is, scientists have made a nanotube out of carbon and passed electricity through it and made it vibrate- did it make music? Who knows! But the point is, that nanotube is 800 millionths of a millimeter- if you don't believe me, take the link and check the video.
3.This comes from Neatorama- Arthur Jones is a cartoonist who writes stories. But what is different is that he retells the stories with his cartoons doodled on a post-it note scrolling in the background. Cute idea- he calls them Post-it Note Stories. There is a video of one of the stories -> here.
4. A British inventor climbs walls with vacuum gloves- BBC via Neatorama
5. If you want to know about Fourth Dimension, here is Carl Sagan explaining it (via TDG - Science, Magick, Myth and History where you will find quite an in-depth discussion of this)
6. Environmental Graffiti has tribal facial tattoos from around the world:
7. Paul Gowder bemoans the fact that you cannot have parenthesis in speech: "Some guy was trying to give directions involving an intersection at which there are two left-turn lanes, and was completely unable to communicate the fact that his interlocutor should use the rightmost of those lanes, so as to be able to make an immediate right turn after the left turn." If you want to know how parenthesis would help here, Uncommon Priors is the place to look.
Hmmm... Be happy.
Intelligent Animals
1. You never worried about it, but speech could have its origin in cheating (Hmmm, politicians are the most evolved species, then- vocalisationwise)- "“It may have started as cheating,” says Fernando Nottebohm, head of the Laboratory of Animal Behavior at The Rockefeller University. “By generating a diversity of calls, young birds may trick their parents into losing track of whom they last fed, in effect creating the impression of several individuals.”- Science Daily
2. Larry Greenemeier thinks that Man as an animal, is several rungs below the Dolphin in the evolutionary ladder. He writes about his encounter with dolphins on a magical night of bioluminescence- "It was like watching an animated movie with special effects—surreal!"- Scientific American
3. Make me come home by a new route, and I am almost certain to lose my way. But when asked to solve The Hamiltonian Path Problem- whether there is a route in a network from a beginning node to an ending node, visiting each node exactly once- Bacteria solved it ((the very ordinary E.Coli at that!)) and bragged about their success by fluorescing both red and green. Scientists hope to enlist Bacteria and try to solve tough maths problems- Science Daily
4. In article of BioMed Central , we read that scientists have identified the genes that help clever Arctic springtails (Megaphorura arctica) to dehydrate themselves just before the coldest winter sets in, and having survived the freezing temperature, hydrate when the weather gets warm- EurekAlert.
5. We are all aliens- "Life on Earth came from other planets" reports EurekAlert (The link is broken: All I could salvage through what was stored in Reader is this- "The Earth too, is an island, orbiting in a sea of space, and living creatures and their DNA have been washing to shore and falling from the sky since our planet's creation; and this is how life on Earth began.")
6. You think anyone would party with manioc, potato, chili pepper, arrowroot and algarrobo on the menu? Scientists are sure people did- 4000 years ago, and they have the leftovers to prove that- Science Daily
7. Evolution without Brains: like everything on Earth, some trees (Araliaceae tree (P crassifolius) in particular, that has its home in New Zealand) used Camouflage to defend themselves against predators (predators now happily extinct, thanks to Man): they made changes in the colour of their leaves as they grew, and escaped the Moa's attention- Science Daily
8. Perhaps we are more closely related to Symonds than you think: Science Daily reports that the Australians Aborigines are settlers from South-Asia, to be more particular India, and I suspect, Tamil Nadu, and to be more exact, I have seen people who could well be their cousins.
9. This is controversial: remember how guilty Gandhiji felt for having had sex while his mother or father was in her/his death-bed and had, in fact, died even as the Father of our Nation 'died', to put it Shakespearically...? Freshwater snails would have spared him from life-long pain of guilt. Apparently, these snails can reproduce sexually or asexually, but are more likely to indulge in sex if they live in the shallows, where they could well die sooner from trematode parasites than others who live in deeper waters. Sex helps us fight parasites, and in the long run, death (or something like that)- EurekAlert
10. If evolution and survival is all about adjustment, some people make a better job of it than others- you and I can't live with noise-generating compressors in gas wells, but EurekAlert reports than the house finch and black-chinned humming bird love to nest where the noise is- beats me, probably they know better than me..
2. Larry Greenemeier thinks that Man as an animal, is several rungs below the Dolphin in the evolutionary ladder. He writes about his encounter with dolphins on a magical night of bioluminescence- "It was like watching an animated movie with special effects—surreal!"- Scientific American
3. Make me come home by a new route, and I am almost certain to lose my way. But when asked to solve The Hamiltonian Path Problem- whether there is a route in a network from a beginning node to an ending node, visiting each node exactly once- Bacteria solved it ((the very ordinary E.Coli at that!)) and bragged about their success by fluorescing both red and green. Scientists hope to enlist Bacteria and try to solve tough maths problems- Science Daily
4. In article of BioMed Central , we read that scientists have identified the genes that help clever Arctic springtails (Megaphorura arctica) to dehydrate themselves just before the coldest winter sets in, and having survived the freezing temperature, hydrate when the weather gets warm- EurekAlert.
5. We are all aliens- "Life on Earth came from other planets" reports EurekAlert (The link is broken: All I could salvage through what was stored in Reader is this- "The Earth too, is an island, orbiting in a sea of space, and living creatures and their DNA have been washing to shore and falling from the sky since our planet's creation; and this is how life on Earth began.")
6. You think anyone would party with manioc, potato, chili pepper, arrowroot and algarrobo on the menu? Scientists are sure people did- 4000 years ago, and they have the leftovers to prove that- Science Daily
7. Evolution without Brains: like everything on Earth, some trees (Araliaceae tree (P crassifolius) in particular, that has its home in New Zealand) used Camouflage to defend themselves against predators (predators now happily extinct, thanks to Man): they made changes in the colour of their leaves as they grew, and escaped the Moa's attention- Science Daily
8. Perhaps we are more closely related to Symonds than you think: Science Daily reports that the Australians Aborigines are settlers from South-Asia, to be more particular India, and I suspect, Tamil Nadu, and to be more exact, I have seen people who could well be their cousins.
9. This is controversial: remember how guilty Gandhiji felt for having had sex while his mother or father was in her/his death-bed and had, in fact, died even as the Father of our Nation 'died', to put it Shakespearically...? Freshwater snails would have spared him from life-long pain of guilt. Apparently, these snails can reproduce sexually or asexually, but are more likely to indulge in sex if they live in the shallows, where they could well die sooner from trematode parasites than others who live in deeper waters. Sex helps us fight parasites, and in the long run, death (or something like that)- EurekAlert
10. If evolution and survival is all about adjustment, some people make a better job of it than others- you and I can't live with noise-generating compressors in gas wells, but EurekAlert reports than the house finch and black-chinned humming bird love to nest where the noise is- beats me, probably they know better than me..
Friday, July 24, 2009
Dumb
Dumb- not anyone in particular, just people: and not in everything, but nearly so except for some odd un-dumbness:
1. Roger Federer's twin children are not two days old, and people are placing bets on their chances of winning a grandslam (100-1 for a grasscourt title; 25-1 to claim one of the four slams...)- Yahoo! News
3. People are so clever: someone called Tyler Cowen wants to economise on his scarce resource- time: so he finishes one book for every five to ten that he starts. Please check Siris to know why this is awful, and what it is to read a book.
4. On Feb. 23, 1885, they tried thrice to hang a convicted murderer and failed because the trapdoor got stuck- and then they let him live- Futility Closet
5. Consumerist: It seems Facebook takes the photos of your friends and puts them in the ads that sell things to you- nice idea? But what happens when...
"Hey Dan!" The ad said. "Hot singles are waiting for you!"
And on the left hand side was a picture of my wife!
6. I suppose the worst man to enter public life is Berlusconi- our Indian politicos are angels compared to him: here is a controversy about his brag of his home to a woman 'escort': ""Here we found 30 Phoenician tombs from (around) 300 BC," the voice is heard to say." Apparently, that is against the law (not bragging- failing to disclose archaeological discoveries made on private property)- Washington Post
9. Woman complains that neighbours are harassing her for having a relationship with a 13-year old boy- and the police arrest her for child-sex : KPTV
10. And then, a teacher squeezed the toes of her students as punishment: Odd? She faced an enquiry and comes out unscathed- UPI
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