| Horton Hears a Microbial Extinction Event |
[Dec. 26th, 2009|12:39 pm] |
| [ | Tags | | | doomed, parts, poop | ] |
| [ | listening to |
| | Hanzel und Gretyl -- Mutant Starseed Creation | ] |
Bugs Inside: What Happens When the Microbes That Keep Us Healthy Disappear? The human body has some 10 trillion human cells -- but 10 times that number of microbial cells. So what happens when such an important part of our bodies goes missing? With rapid changes in sanitation, medicine and lifestyle in the past century, some of these indigenous species are facing decline, displacement and possibly even extinction. In many of the world's larger ecosystems, scientists can predict what might happen when one of the central species is lost, but in the human microbial environment -- which is still largely uncharacterized -- most of these rapid changes are not yet understood. Meanwhile, each new generation in developed countries comes into the world with fewer of these native populations. "They're actually missing some component of their microbiota that they've evolved to have," Foxman says. Previously, previously. |
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| How to use Facebook with a feed reader |
[Dec. 22nd, 2009|04:33 pm] |
| [ | Tags | | | lazyweb, www | ] |
| [ | listening to |
| | The Coathangers -- Bury Me | ] |
I almost never actually visit the Facebook web site: I follow it through a feed reader (in my case, NetNewsWire) along with all of my other feeds. Besides the obvious benefits to this, one great side effect is that you never, ever see the output of applications (e.g., quiz results) or the other useless noise like "so-and-so is now friends with someone else you already know". The only drawback I've found is that you also don't see notifications about photos that your friends have uploaded. (You do see links that they post, however: just not Facebook-hosted photos. It's a bizarre omission.) Anyway, I just had to explain to someone how to accomplish this feat, which made me realize how completely non-obvious Facebook has made this. Finding these feeds is a complete pain in the ass. They've really gone out of their way to hide the URLs you need to use. So. You have to subscribe to three or four different feeds. - Posts: Find the Posts feed by going to http://www.facebook.com/posted.php. On the upper right of the page is a gray box, and at the bottom of that box is a link entitled "My Friends' Links" with the RSS logo next to it. Copy that URL. Subscribe to it in your feed reader. This is the RSS URL for any links and (external) images that your friends post.
- Notes: Find the Notes feed by going to http://www.facebook.com/notes.php and repeating the above. This is the RSS URL for things that your friends post via the "Notes" app, which is (I guess) the more blog-like way of posting long things to Facebook.
- Notifications: Find the Notifications feed by going to http://www.facebook.com/notifications.php and repeating the above. This is the RSS URL for things like "so-and-so commented on your status". You might not care to subscribe to this one because you can get all of these kind of notifications in email.
- Status Updates: This is the RSS URL for the "What are you doing?" Twitter-like part of Facebook. This is the one you probably care about, and it is trickier, because Facebook no longer links to the feed URL! Nice one guys. You have to construct this URL by editing one of the above URLs. E.g., take the "Notes" URL and change the part of the URL that says "friends_notes" to "friends_status". Keep the parts of the URL before and after that, including the magic numbers at the end.
There. Wasn't that SIMPLE? Previously: How to use Livejournal with a feed reader. |
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| Today in Sodomy news |
[Dec. 18th, 2009|03:05 pm] |
Eighth Graders In Oral Plea A pair of Georgia eighth graders this week copped to public indecency charges after they engaged in oral sex while a substitute teacher was helping other students at the front of the classroom. [...] As part of the plea, sodomy charges against both students were dropped, and a probation violation count leveled against the boy was dismissed. After being held at a youth detention facility, the girl was released to her parents's custody. The boy, however, remains locked up, according to a law enforcement official. |
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| Score update |
[Dec. 18th, 2009|09:39 am] |
So far the Grumps have the advantage today.
Grumps - 8 billion Warm Fuzzies - eleven |
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| Playstation and Facebook: unclear on the concept. |
[Dec. 17th, 2009|06:41 pm] |
| [ | Tags | | | computers, toys, www | ] |
| [ | listening to |
| | Say Hi To Your Mom -- But She Beat My High Score | ] |
I saw that in the latest PS3 OS update, they added Facebook integration. Now, there's one and exactly one thing that could possibly be useful for, right? You've already thought of it in the time it took you to read that sentence. The one useful thing would be to unify your friends lists, so that your PS3 can automatically know which of your Facebook friends are online without you having to search for and then manually enter all of their Playstaion Network IDs. Guess what, it doesn't do that. All it does is make it so that the PS3 can spam your Facebook Status every time you buy a game, and every time you upload a trophy. Who would ever, ever want it to do either of these things? I'll bet a "Social Media Consultant" was involved. |
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| tap |
[Dec. 17th, 2009|06:14 pm] |
| [ | Tags | | | mpegs, parts, robots | ] |
| [ | listening to |
| | Depth Charge -- Shaolin Buddha Finger | ] |
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| The question has been moved forward |
[Dec. 17th, 2009|02:18 pm] |
Ladies only:
If I was the last man on the planet... would you consider going out with me? Oh wait... if I was the last other human on the planet... |
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| Your tax dollars at work. |
[Dec. 17th, 2009|01:48 am] |
Insurgents Hack U.S. Drones Militants in Iraq have used $26 off-the-shelf software to intercept live video feeds from U.S. Predator drones, potentially providing them with information they need to evade or monitor U.S. military operations. Senior defense and intelligence officials said Iranian-backed insurgents intercepted the video feeds by taking advantage of an unprotected communications link in some of the remotely flown planes' systems. Shiite fighters in Iraq used software programs such as SkyGrabber -- available for as little as $25.95 on the Internet -- to regularly capture drone video feeds, according to a person familiar with reports on the matter. The potential drone vulnerability lies in an unencrypted downlink between the unmanned craft and ground control. The U.S. government has known about the flaw since the U.S. campaign in Bosnia in the 1990s, current and former officials said. But the Pentagon assumed local adversaries wouldn't know how to exploit it, the officials said. Today, the Air Force is buying hundreds of Reaper drones, a newer model, whose video feeds could be intercepted in much the same way as with the Predators, according to people familiar with the matter. A Reaper costs between $10 million and $12 million each and is faster and better armed than the Predator. General Atomics expects the Air Force to buy as many as 375 Reapers. |
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| Repository of All Human Knowledge - In Anime. |
[Dec. 16th, 2009|12:33 pm] |
Our work here will not be complete until every Wikipedia page contains an "In Anime" sub-section. Is there a blog that highlights the stupidest Wikipedia events? I subscribe to the RSS feed of the Lamest edit wars article, but I find that insufficient. |
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