Archive for the ‘Fun stuff’ Category

The outer space Christmas tree

Wednesday, December 17th, 2008

This is an example how software takes the readings of radio telescopes and converts them into beautiful pictures to allow us to better appreciate outer space.

Known as the Christmas Tree cluster, this colorful collection of stars lies 2,600 light-years from Earth in the constellation of Monoceros, the unicorn.

This is the way this region of space was first seen through a telescope on an 18th-century Christmas Day–and you’ve got a celestial “tannenbaum”, complete with “ornamental” blue stars and gas clouds turned a festive red by young stars’ light.

Seen anew in this image from Chile’s La Silla Paranal Observatory released Tuesday Dec 16 2008, the so-called Christmas Tree star cluster includes many stellar “nurseries,” providing brilliant opportunities for the study of star birth.

The cluster was first discovered in the 18th century but was captured anew in this stunning image by by the 2.2-meter Max Planck Society/ESO telescope at La Silla observatory in the Atacama Desert. The telescope was outfitted with a specialized astronomical camera called the Wide Field Imager and a series of filters, and then aimed at the cluster for 10 hours to get the full-color image above.

The swirling gas clouds appear red because of ultraviolet light emanating from the young, hot stars that look like blue ornaments on a Christmas tree. The triangular feature near the bottom of the photo is an area of gas called the Cone Nebula.

The brightest star, at the top of the image, can be seen by the naked eye. The furry texture of the light to its right earned that area the name Fox Fur Nebula.

The whole cluster is in a star-forming molecular cloud, and the area between the brightest star and the tip of the cone is a great place for studying how stars are born.

Search engines – what was hot in 2008?

Monday, December 15th, 2008

Search engines have their fingers on the pulse of their users’ psyche. Here’s what those users were interested in this year, based on their search queries:

Yahoo

1. Britney Spears

2. WWE

3. Barack Obama

4. Miley Cyrus

5. RuneScape

6. Jessica Alba

7. Naruto

8. Lindsay Lohan

9. Angelina Jolie

10. American Idol

Ask.com

1. Dictionary

2. MySpace

3. Google

4. YouTube

5. Facebook

6. Coupons

7. Cars

8. Craigslist

9. Online degrees

10. Credit score

Google

1. Obama

2. Facebook

3. ATT

4. iPhone

5. YouTube

6. Fox News

7. Palin

8. Beijing 2008

9. David Cook

10. Surf the channel

Sources: Yahoo, Ask.com and Google

Keep Your USB Drive Close with a Clothes Pin

Saturday, November 8th, 2008

I saw this article on gizmodo.com. It’s at Keep Your USB Drive Close with a Clothes Pin

While this may be a novel way of keeping track of where your USB drive is, there are other alternatives. One of my USB drives is attached to my key chain. Another I got from a Microsoft event that contained highlights of the talks given that day. This was in lieu of a CD/DVD. It has a ribbon that is attached to the drive and  can be worn around your neck.

Interesting and fun ways to keep your USB drive safe.

The top 20 things programmers say when their programs don’t work

Wednesday, October 8th, 2008

Mike, our senior programmer sent this to me earlier today. We’d like to add some levity to this blog because even though this is basically a technical blog, we do like to have some fun as well.

20. That’s weird….
19. It’s never done that before.
18. It worked yesterday.
17. How is that possible?
16. It must be a hardware problem.
15. What did you type in wrong to get it to crash?
14. There is something funky in your data. OR It’s a data problem, not a program problem.
13. I haven’t touched that module in weeks!
12. You must have the wrong version.
11. It’s just some unlucky coincidence.
10. I can’t test everything!
9. THIS can’t be the source of THAT.
8. It works, but it hasn’t been tested.
7. Somebody must have changed my code.
6. Did you check for a virus on your system?
5. Even though it doesn’t work, how does it feel?
4. You can’t use that version on your system.
3. Why do you want to do it that way?
2. Where were you when the program blew up?

And the Number One Thing Programmers Say When Their Programs Don’t Work:

1. “It works on my machine..”.

source: unknown

How many of these have we used on our clients? We’re not sure. You’d have to ask the clients.