From a friend

November 4th, 2007 Steven Rutledge Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

“It is a serious thing to live in a society of possible gods and goddesses to remember that the dullest and most uninteresting person you may talk to may one day be a creature which, if you saw it now, you would be strongly tempted to worship, or else a horror and corruption such as you now meet if at all only in a nightmare.

All day long we are in some degree helping each other to one or the other of these destinations. It is in light of these overwhelming possibilities it is with awe and the circumspection proper to them, that we should conduct all our dealings with one another, all friendships, all loves, all play, all politics.

There are no ordinary people. You have never talked to a mere mortal. Nations, cultures, arts, civilizations – these are mortal, and their life is to ours as the life of a gnat. But it is immortals whom we joke with, work with, marry, snub, and exploit – immortal horrors or everlasting splendours. This does not mean that we are to be perpetually solemn. We must play. But our merriment must be of the kind (and it is, in fact, the merriest kind) which exists between people who have, from the outset, taken each other seriously – no flippancy, no superiority, no presumption.

And our charity must be real and costly love, with deep feeling for the sins in spite of which we love the sinners – no mere tolerance, or indulgence which parodies love as flippancy parodies merriment.

C.S. Lewis

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Hempleman-Adams sets world record for helium balloon flight

November 3rd, 2007 Steven Rutledge Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Thair Shaikh

The prolific British adventurer David Hempleman-Adams added another daring world record to his long list of achievements yesterday by crossing the Atlantic Ocean in a tiny hot air balloon.

Hempleman-Adams, who has conquered both geographic and magnetic poles and climbed Everest, described the latest record as his toughest challenge yet.

Having set off from the Newfoundland coast in Canada on Monday, he spent the last four days enduring temperatures of minus 20C and little sleep in a small open wicker basket in which he could only sit down by sticking his legs out of a “cat-flap”.

Unable to steer his helium balloon, he was at the mercy of the winds, and without a burner he had to release helium to descend and drop sand bags to gain height.

He cruised between 12,000ft and 15,000ft, as above 16,000ft you need breathing apparatus, and he ate mostly pork scratch-ings and ginger biscuits.

No one had ever crossed the Atlantic in such a basic craft - his was less than a 20th of the size used by Sir Richard Branson to tra- verse the same ocean.

And yesterday, after an epic 2,100 miles, Hempleman-Adams, 50, flew over Brittany in northern France and into the record books, having flown the greatest distance for the size of balloon he was travelling in.

Hempleman-Adams, from Bath, wrote in his online internet diary, or blog, “The French countryside is gorgeous. Thank God I’m over land! We’ve done it! I’ve just passed the distance I needed to get the world record for the class of balloon I’m flying. I can’t believe it. We’ve done it. I’m so pleased, thank you everyone.”

He also described the dramatic last few hours: “I had already seen land [the northern coast of France] and then the next thing I knew I thought I was heading back to sea … I had a bit of a panic attack.

“It was the scariest part of the trip. In my fog of tiredness I got confused. But I didn’t sleep a wink all night so that probably explains it.”

During the flight he had written about the exhaustion he was suffering because of the lack of sleep.

“I dropped from 11,000ft to 9,000ft when I nodded off. At one point I saw lights coming out of the darkness towards me. I thought it was a plane with its landing lights on and I got hold of my strobe light to warn it away, but the lights were still there. Very bright. Then I realised it was a planet.” he wrote.

Last night he landed safely in a field on the outskirts of Nolay, a village 30 miles south of Dijon, in eastern France. He travelled 2,625 miles and been in the air for 89 hours and 27 minutes.

Hempleman-Adams, a businessman, already held 29 ballooning records before his latest attempt. In January he broke the 26-year- old world hot air balloon altitude record by ascending to 32,500ft over Alberta, Canada. And in 2003 he became the first person to cross the Atlantic solo in an open wicker basket.

He took up ballooning at the age of 46 because he felt too old to ski or climb. He has led 29 expeditions. In 1992 he led the first team to walk unsupported to the North Geomagnetic Pole. In April 1998 he reached the North Geographic Pole and in so doing completed the “Adventurers’ Grand Slam”, meaning he had climbed the highest mountain on each continent and reached the North and South Geographic and Magnetic Poles.

Copyright 2007 Independent Newspapers UK Limited. All rights owned or operated by The Independent.
Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning Company. All rights Reserved.

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Happy Halloween!

October 31st, 2007 Steven Rutledge Posted in From the treo | No Comments »

This is just an early preview of course, more details to follow.

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Make your own flash paper DIY

October 25th, 2007 Steven Rutledge Posted in ideas | No Comments »


MAKE Magic Burning FLASH PAPER ! - Watch a funny movie here

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This is the sound of Revolution

October 23rd, 2007 Steven Rutledge Posted in tin foil hat | No Comments »

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Balloon.

October 15th, 2007 Steven Rutledge Posted in art, ideas | No Comments »

I have been thinking again. I know I shouldn’t but I have been. I have been thinking about helium balloon flights. Wouldn’t it be fun to fly only powered by helium?

20071015 - initial sketch
20071015 - initial sketch

Some online references:

http://www.acastronovo.com/LiftThumbs.html
http://www.clusterballoon.org/
http://www.clusterballoon.org/learning/learning.htm
http://www.clusterballoon.org/intro/intro.html
http://www.eballoon.org/pictures/misc.html

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Time-Lapse Panorama Example

October 9th, 2007 Steven Rutledge Posted in ideas, images, photos | No Comments »

Time-Lapse Panorama Example

Originally found here. This is an interesting application of an idea I spoke of recently.

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Another beautiful sunrise

October 6th, 2007 Steven Rutledge Posted in From the treo | No Comments »

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Pretty cute (thirsty doggy)

October 4th, 2007 Steven Rutledge Posted in From the treo | No Comments »

Mom is with Aunt bee getting their hair cut so I have no witnesses, but Evan just tried to give his orange juice to his doggy. He lined it up perfectly, the straw with the mouth of his lovie, held it there for a bit then pulled it away. Next he said ‘gah?’ and gave him another drink. Pretty cute. .

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It is not every day you see a huge white elephant

October 4th, 2007 Steven Rutledge Posted in From the treo | No Comments »

But I saw one today, parked outside of our Cheyenne offices.

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Mommas don’t let you children grow up to be orthotists…

October 2nd, 2007 Steven Rutledge Posted in From the treo | No Comments »

I admit it. A spray bottle full of thinner and a propane torch is a really bad combination.

Video

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Interesting use of light

October 2nd, 2007 Steven Rutledge Posted in From the treo | No Comments »

I couldn’t find a reference of the original artist, merely a post with these pictures: http://www.bored-night.com/?p=416

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Design your own playground set

September 29th, 2007 Steven Rutledge Posted in From the treo | No Comments »

I stumbled upon this site (http://cedarworks.com/index.php) which allows you to design your own custom playground equipment for your backyard. It is a really interesting website. It basically allows you to combine pre-existing units in unique ways, but it is an excellent showcase for web interfaces, and really quite fun.
As a side note, this is my first post from my Treo700w; using the wp-postie plugin (http://www.economysizegeek.com/?page_id=395), which I have found really exciting in an of itself. .

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Mechanics of Murder

September 27th, 2007 Steven Rutledge Posted in Uncategorized, art, ideas | No Comments »

RaeAnne HadleyRaeAnne HadleyRaeAnne Hadley

 

When one of my patients canceled a couple of days ago I found myself with half an hour of free time. I decided to give myself an assignment to create a cover for a book one of Lindsay’s friends had written, just for giggles… What do you think?

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How to use any laser printer for transfers…

September 23rd, 2007 Steven Rutledge Posted in art, ideas | No Comments »

I was trying to remember an old transfer technique that uses ‘oil of wintergreen’ to transfer laser printer toner from the page to any other substrate when I stumbled across this technique. It uses wax paper to print on initially, which the toner only loosely adheres too. You apply this to the surface you wish to transfer too and simply iron it. The toner remelts under the heat and adheres to the new target. I was thinking of using this for a painting idea…

Complete instructions: http://www.instructables.com/id/instant-t-shirt-design-with-laser-printer/?ALLSTEPS

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Recommended Read : Complete Works of the Literate Dead

September 23rd, 2007 Steven Rutledge Posted in art | No Comments »

Complete Works of the Literate Dead

I read this book when I was high school. I had no idea that it was fictional, and knowing that does take some of the power from it, but it is an interesting commentary on modern civilization from the perspective of someone who no longer has the restrictions that otherwise edit us. The story is compiled as the longest suicide note in history, left beside the dead bodies of four young people who commit suicide. It is a convincing replica of real life.

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The death of the Individual (Network)

September 23rd, 2007 Steven Rutledge Posted in culture | No Comments »

Watched Network? I think I watched it when I was five. For some reason it came back to me a few days ago:

But, I think that was it, fellas. That sort of thing is not likely to happen again, because at the bottom of all our terrified souls we know that democracy is a dying giant, a sick, sick dying, decaying political concept writhing in its final pain.

I don’t mean that the United States is finished as a world power. The United States is the richest, the most powerful, the most advanced country in the world — light years ahead of any other country.

And I don’t mean the communists are going to take over the world, because the communists are deader than we are.

What is finished is the idea that this great country is dedicated to the freedom and flourishing of every individual in it.

It’s the individual that’s finished.

It’s the single, solitary human being that’s finished.

It’s every single one of you out there that’s finished.

Because this is no longer a nation of independent individuals. It’s a nation of some two-hundred-odd million transistorized, deodorized, whiter-than-white, steel-belted bodies, totally unnecessary as human beings and as replaceable as piston rods.

Well, the time has come to say, “Is ‘de-humanization’ such a bad word?” Because good or bad, that’s what is so.

The whole world is becoming humanoid — creatures that look human, but aren’t. The whole world, not just us. We’re just the most advanced country, so we’re getting there first.

The whole world’s people are becoming mass-produced, programmed, numbered, insensate things….

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Highway checkpoint asks drivers for blood, saliva

September 23rd, 2007 Steven Rutledge Posted in Police State, tin foil hat | No Comments »

Highway checkpoint asks drivers for blood, saliva

Travelers outraged by private research group’s request

September 20, 2007

Motorists in Colorado are expressing outrage over a weekend stunt in Gilpin County, about an hour’s drive west of Denver, where highway checkpoints were set up so a private organization could ask for samples of blood and saliva.

“I don’t think they’re authorized to do what they’re doing, and I view it as a gross violation of law-enforcement protocol,” Roberto Sequeira, 51, told reporters for the Denver Post.

He said he and his wife were “detained” for about 15 minutes even after they protested they wanted to get home because of a sleepy child in their car.

Sheriff’s officials were apologizing after they helped set up and run five separate checkpoints over the weekend.

They said workers for the Institute for Research and Evaluation were overly persistent in their demands of innocent travelers.

“It was like a telemarketer that you couldn’t hang up on,” Undersheriff John Bayne told the newspaper.

Sgt. Bob Enney said the deputies’ assistance to the organization involved stopping motorists at the sites along Colorado Highway 119 for “surveys” on any drug or alcohol use. Surveyors also requested that motorists submit to breath, blood and saliva tests.

Enney said several hundred motorists were tested, and some later complained.

Sequeira said he repeatedly asked if the questioners were law enforcement officials and said he was not interested in participating in the study, but still was not given clearance to leave.

He told the newspaper that he and his family were approached by two researchers, and even after his repeated refusals, officials offered his wife, who was driving, $100 to get the couple to take part in a breath test.

“I think it’s very dangerous,” he told the newspaper. “Sometimes at checkpoints, unfortunate things happen.”

PIRE spokeswoman Michelle Blackston told WND the deputies “did not stop” any drivers. “It was a voluntary survey. … Nobody approached them. There were signs saying that a survey was taking place. Nobody waved them down.”

She said she was unaware whether the private organization reimbursed the county for the expense of having the deputies at the traffic sites. The organization’s own researchers get the results of the work, she said.

Also to the newspaper, PIRE officials defended their actions. They said such statistics are important to gauge the impact of laws and enforcement policy. Their questions began over the summer and will continue at other locations around the nation through November, they said.

“We’ve been literally surveying thousands of people,” John Lacey, of the Alcohol, Policy and Safety Research Center, said. It’s through that organization PIRE is doing its research.

He said researchers push a few of those who initially refuse to participate to reconsider – even offering incentives.

“If we don’t do that, the criticism will come out that we had so many who were refusers,” Lacey told the newspaper.

Bayne said a similar study was done in the county several years ago, with no complaints, but he admitted last weekend’s effort was aggressive.

“The people were too persistent,” he told the Post. “Some people didn’t feel it was voluntary.”

Officials with the Colorado chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union said the fact that sheriff’s deputies were on the scene, and surveyors wore blue jumpsuits, could have confused drivers.

Sequeira said his family was directed by sheriff’s officials to pull over and he and his wife were greeted by “youthful, college” surveyors.

“We had a 10-year-old in the back who’s tired, we tell them thanks but no thanks, we have to get this child back home to bed,” he told the paper. But the workers persisted, telling them they would be provided help driving home if needed. Then they offered the $100.

“We say, ‘No thank you, we have to get our child home,’” he recalled. “At this point, both clones start chortling at us and ridiculing us.”

On a newspaper forum, the opinion was running fairly close to unison:

“The very act of pulling a motorist over subjects him/her and their vehicle (at very least) to a visual search. This means if the motorist was pulled over without suspicion of violating a law, than (sic) they have been subjected to an unlawful search…,” wrote Warren Gregory.

“For the record the proper response to ANY such incursion into privacy is to ask the question, Am I under Arrest? If the answer is no ask if you are free to go. If you are told no demand to be arrested or you will leave and then leave,” added Frank Vicek.

WorldNetDaily.com

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Interesting Artist : Self Surveillance : Hasan Elahi

September 23rd, 2007 Steven Rutledge Posted in Design, art, culture, ideas | No Comments »

Hasan Elahi was once flagged as a terrorist as he was returning to the US. He has since published every aspect of his life online, including tons of daily photos, his location (GPS) and all his bills, in order to avoid being mistaken for a terrorist again. Like Sun CEO once said, “privacy is dead, get over it.” Although oxymoronic, public is the new private.

http://trackingtransience.net/

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Fyre : Computational Art Work Application

September 22nd, 2007 Steven Rutledge Posted in ideas, software | No Comments »

Frye : Sample

Fyre is a tool for producing computational artwork based on histograms of iterated chaotic functions. At the moment, it implements the Peter de Jong map in a fixed-function pipeline with an interactive GTK+ frontend and a command line interface for easy and efficient rendering of high-resolution, high quality images.

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Lulu.com Self Publish

September 20th, 2007 Steven Rutledge Posted in ideas, web | No Comments »

Just upload your manuscript, photos or digital files, use our formatting tools to get everything set up just the way you want, from size to binding to cover art, and… well, that’s it. You’re the proud parent of a brand new digital creation, ready to publish and cherish. The publishing process couldn’t be easier.

Then your book is, if you choose, automatically listed for sale on the Lulu Marketplace - a booming ecommerce destination that attracts more than 900,000 unique visitors every week. Even better, Lulu’s #1 ranking among self-publishing websites ensures that your work will show up at the top of the search results in places like Google and Yahoo.

Lulu gives you all sorts of ways to sell your fabulous new creation to the whole wide world - you set your own price, we print and ship each item as it’s ordered, and you collect 80% of the creator revenue on every sale.

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Why I am so ***** pissed off

September 16th, 2007 Steven Rutledge Posted in editorials | No Comments »

An alternative title might have been… Lets all celebrate the 6th anniversary of 9/11 by just throwing open the southern border completely…
Let’s forget for a second that no steel constructed building has ever fallen as the result of fire before 9/11, or that the buildings were actually designed to withstand multiple plane impacts (video)… let’s assume for a second that pilots that couldn’t land a single engine commuter plane could perfectly execute a five hundred mile death spiral into the pentagon… let’s assume that building 7 fell even though it was farther away and suffered much less damage than other buildings that remained… let’s assume that an airplane crash landing in a field leaves a 20 foot by 50 foot whole in the groundlet’s assume that cell phones really do work at 30,000 feet and at 500 miles per hour… Let’s assume that everything the 9/11 commission report found is factually accurate, and that there story is percisely accurate….WHY DIDN’T SOMEONE GET FIRED?

Why didn’t architects get dismissed for building a 100 story high raise that could only stand for an hour, when it was designed to survive an airplane impact?

Why wasn’t the head of the CIA found at fault for not preventing the attack?

Why wasn’t the Underwriter Laboratoies, who certified the steel to withstand near melting temperatures for 18 hours, condemned for certifying that the steel would withstand multiple hours of much higher heat?

Why wasn’t the military and NORAD held accountable for not intercepting these planes?

AND WHY WAS THE SOUTHERN BORDER NEVER CLOSED? If you can get 700,000 illegal immigrants across the border a year, then why couldn’t you get one dirty bomb? If you can smuggle 30,000 tons of cocaine across that border why couldn’t you get some anthrax? How would you sneak into this country if you had too?

On the anniversary of 9/11 we celebrate by removing barriers to Mexican Truckers? We pat down women, children, grandmothers, and amputees but we don’t inspect trucks crossing our borders? and that is why I am mad as hell…

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what do you think of my new haircut

September 16th, 2007 Steven Rutledge Posted in photos | No Comments »

Shaved my freakin head

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Speed Racer Refresher Course: The Mach 5

September 12th, 2007 Steven Rutledge Posted in culture | No Comments »

From the Official Website of the Upcoming Live Action movie: http://www.speedracer.com/cars-mach5.htm
The Supercharged Mach 5 is an automotive machine incompar-able to any other on the racing circuit. Its unique aerodynamic design, coupled with its special devices, makes this car the leader of a pack of little more than second-rate contenders.
In episode 2, “The Great Plan,” and again in episode 26, “The Car Hater,” an overview of the Mach 5’s control panel both enlightens and reminds us of the beauty of this truly remarkable machine. The hub of the Mach 5’s steering
wheel features seven lettered buttons, each of which activates a customized accessory designed by Pops Racer.

Control A: “Releases powerful jacks to boost the car so that Sparky, our mechanic, can quickly make any necessary repairs or adjustments.” Although designed for this practical function, the auto jacks have also been used to “leap” the car short distances at high speeds, as a wedge to prevent the car
from toppling over a waterfall, as an alternative braking systems, and as a tool to crush cars in a car-wrestling match.