iPad: The Microwave Oven of Computing

Matthew Guay at techinch writes:

And then customers bought them, took them home, and something special happened. They realized that reading eBooks or browsing the internet from their couch was nice on a tablet. They found things they would have never thought to do on a computer were fun and simple. Apps that never made sense on computers with keyboards and mice, like GarageBand and finger paint apps and eReaders, suddenly found life on a 9.7″ slate of glass and metal. Flipboard would have never become as popular on a desktop, and who would have thought of Twitter for iPad’s interface without an iPad? People that would have never touched a computer suddenly found ways a computing device could help their lives, and techies that spent 10+ hours a day in front of their glaring monitors could now break away from their hefty PCs easier. Not doing the same old stuff, but new, innovative things that you would have never thought of on a traditional PC with a screen, keyboard, and mouse on a desk. As Marco Arment said, it’s time to move on from office productivity apps; the iPad opens the window for all types of creative, interactive, personal programs. Finally, the term Personal Computer actually makes sense.

Helicopters Dropping Water on Affected Reactors

I was reading on the MITNSE blog this morning how the Japanese government/TEPCO was using Chinook helicopters to drop water on the stressed reactors. From the post:

Crews began aerial water spraying operations from helicopters to cool reactor 3 at Fukushima Daiichi shortly before 9 p.m. EDT on Wednesday, March 16. The operation was planned for the previous day, but was postponed because of high radiation levels at the plant. News sources said temperatures at reactor 3 were rising. Each helicopter is capable of releasing 7.5 tons of water. Spokesmen for TEPCO and Japan’s regulatory agency, Nuclear and Industry Safety Agency, on March 17 Japan time refuted reports that there was a complete loss of cooling water in the used fuel pool at Fukushima Daiichi reactor 4. Listening to Anderson Cooper on CNN and Rachel Maddow on MSNBC last night, I remembered a few facts. These spent nuclear fuel pools are large, much bigger than a normal swimming pool, and much deeper. CNN said about 40 feet deep of water, at least. Now my parents used to have a swimming pool at their old house, in their back yard. It was a standard 20 x 40 foot swimming pool. This is by far the most common size for a swimming pool that would be at a residential home. I specifically remember that our pool took 33,000 gallons of water to fill it. In the "deep end" of the pool, it was 9 1/2 feet deep. The "shallow end" was 3 1/2 feet. I'm going to hypothesize, given that these spent nuclear fuel pools are rectangular, and have no "shallow end", and are over 40 feet deep, that they have a LOT more water in them (or are supposed to have). I'm going to guess that it would take many more times the water from my parents' old pool to fill them. How much? 5 times (165,000 gallons)? 10 times (330,000 gallons)? More? No idea...but a lot. Now - from the MITNSE article quoted above, they were dropping 7.5 tons of water on this pool at a time. I watched it happen live and the commentators said that they made 4 drops before giving up. Why did they give up? They mostly missed their target. Why did they miss? Because the helicopters cannot get low enough to the ground to accurately drop their water without exposing the helicopter crews to too much radiation. So most of the water missed. Seven and a half tons of water sounds like a lot. But in the back of my mind, I was suspicious. I kept asking myself, doesn't water weigh a lot to begin with? After a bit of quick math, I determined that 7.5 tons of water is 15,000 pounds. One gallon of water is approximately 8.35 lb therefore 15,000 pounds of water is 1,796.4 gallons of water. So in a pool that is at least over 33,000 gallons - probably more like 100,000-500,000 gallons, they're attempting to drop less than 2000 gallons on it at a time, from several hundred feet in the air and only hit the target with 1 of 4 attempted drops. You really have to ask yourself of the competency of the Japanese nuclear regulatory officials and TEPCO at this point. Or are they just doing things like this for the benefit of the cameras because they've completely lost control of the situation and have run out of ideas?

Japan Earthquake Swarm Google Earth Animation

I saw this posted over on Capital Weather Gang:

The YouTube video below shows a time lapse of all of the earthquakes that occurred between March 9 and March 14 off the coast of Japan. The action begins to increase after about 15 seconds and the “big one” occurs at one minute and 17 seconds into the animation. After that, the map lights up with activity through the end of the animation. The tectonic flurry is jaw-dropping.

Horrifying First Person Footage in HD of Tsunami Hitting

I first saw this video posted on Saturday, March 12. This video made the rounds on sites like Reddit & Twitter due to is spectacular nature. Apparently the author managed to get access to a good internet connection since then and post an HD version of the video. This video illustrates just how powerful the Tsunami was and how quick it struck. As you can see, this town went from dry to almost completely destroyed in less than 5 minutes time.

In Focus with Alan Taylor

It has come to my attention that not everyone has gotten the memo that Alan Taylor, creator of the fantastic The Big Picture photography blog over at Boston.com left the site several months ago. The Atlantic was smart enough to make him a good enough offer to bring him over to their site, making him a Senior Editor and allowing him to start a new photography blog there, called In Focus. Alan has said previously that this move has allowed him full editorial control in a way that he never had at The Big Picture, doing things like increasing the resolution the end-user is allowed to select for the photos. In Focus allows the viewer to select either 1024px or 1280px width images. In Focus has been a wonderful source for powerful images from Japan in the last week since the earthquake. This particular image, below, was particularly moving to me. REUTERS/U.S. Navy/Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Dylan McCord You should subscribe to In Focus. It's good.

The Fragility of Free

Ben Brooks writes:

The fragility of free is a catchy term that describes what happens when the free money runs out. Or — perhaps more accurately — when the investors/founders/venture capitalists run out of cash, or patience, or both. Because at some point Twitter and all other companies have to make the move from ‘charity’ to ‘business’ — or, put another way, they have to make the move from spending tons of money to making slightly more money than they spend. Kyle Baxter wrote a follow-up to Ben Brooks' article: Twitter’s value lies in it being a communication utility, where anyone and everyone can quickly communicate information. That’s incredibly powerful, and it simply couldn’t exist if it wasn’t a free service. This doesn’t mean the strategy Twitter pursued is correct; rather, it means their error was in being so cavalier about a business model. They assumed if they reached a critical mass of users, turning it into a profitable business would be easy—and they’ve discovered that isn’t really true. It takes just as much thinking as building the actual product does. Read the first article, and then the second one. Done? Good. You may now resume your normal #dickbar bitching.