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Current Topic: Miscellaneous |
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Exclusive: WANTED: U.S. workers for crippled Japan nuke plant | Reuters |
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Topic: Miscellaneous |
7:51 am EDT, Apr 1, 2011 |
A U.S. recruiter is hiring nuclear power workers in the United States to help Japan gain control of the stricken Fukushima Daiichi plant, which has been spewing radiation. The qualifications: Skills gained in the nuclear industry, a passport, a family willing to let you go, willingness to work in a radioactive zone.
Exclusive: WANTED: U.S. workers for crippled Japan nuke plant | Reuters |
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F.B.I. Seeks Help Cracking Code in Murder Victim’s Notes - NYTimes.com |
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Topic: Miscellaneous |
7:43 am EDT, Apr 1, 2011 |
A body is found. In the victim’s pants are two notes written in some sort of code. The F.B.I. is called in and concludes the man was murdered. But the encrypted notes have the F.B.I. stumped — so stumped that this week, after years of trying to decipher them, it posted what amounted to a public request for help on its Web site.
F.B.I. Seeks Help Cracking Code in Murder Victim’s Notes - NYTimes.com |
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Three Sites Where You Can Monitor U.S. Radiation Levels - Jeff McMahon - The Ingenuity of the Commons - Forbes |
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Topic: Miscellaneous |
12:30 am EDT, Mar 30, 2011 |
This is interesting... Traffic has never been higher at websites that display data from radiation monitoring stations. We list three such sites below.
One of the sites is an amateur effort anyone can participate in: Mineralab, a Prescott, Arizona, company that sells geiger counters, maintains radiationnetwork.com, “a nationwide grass roots effort to monitor the radiation in our environment.” The network collects data from private citizens nationwide who keep their geiger-counters running, with data uploading automatically to the website in real time.
I really want a gieger counter now. Figure they should be easy to pick up on ebay in about 6 months. :) The EPA's own monitoring system appears to be down: The Environmental Protection Agency’s RadNet system is designed to detect radiation from accidents like the Fukushima disaster in Japan and from foreign nuclear tests. It displays a map of the United States with monitoring stations highlighted. Click on one for a graphic representation of its data. Last night the graphs were displaying no data—in the wake of EPA’s revelation that radiation had been detected in rainwater. Above empty frames appeared the message, in bold: “To-date, levels recorded at this monitor have been thousands of times below any conservative level of concern.”
Censorship? Consider this view: (and make sure you click through to the various source links, including about deep water horizon - especially the present dolphin kill going on in the gulf...) The EPA has pulled 8 of its 18 radiation monitors in California, Oregon and Washington because (by implication) they are giving readings which seem too high... The EPA is considering drastically raising the amount of allowable radiation in food, water and the environment.
When things like this happen its worth asking yourself if this is one of those two times a day when the stuck clock is right. Three Sites Where You Can Monitor U.S. Radiation Levels - Jeff McMahon - The Ingenuity of the Commons - Forbes |
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'First to file' is threat to job creation - The Hill's Congress Blog |
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Topic: Miscellaneous |
2:08 pm EDT, Mar 28, 2011 |
"Observers attributed much of [America’s] rapid technological progress to its distinctive patent system. Quite revolutionary in design at inception, the U.S. patent system came to be much admired for providing broad access to property rights in new technological knowledge. These features attracted the technologically creative, even those who lacked the capital to directly exploit their inventions.”
'First to file' is threat to job creation - The Hill's Congress Blog |
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Know your nukes: understanding radiation risks in Japan |
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Topic: Miscellaneous |
7:40 am EDT, Mar 28, 2011 |
External exposure to radioactivity can be bad, but it's far worse to have ingested a radioactive isotope, since the energy from its decay is pretty much guaranteed to damage a cell. Unfortunately, our own bodies work against us when it comes to specific isotopes, since they are either identical or closely related to the elements our bodies rely on to perform basic functions. One example is potassium, which our body uses to maintain salt balances in cells and transmit electrical signals. In general, your body tries to hang on to all the potassium it gets, but the same mechanisms that hold onto potassium also work to keep cesium in the body, and a radioactive form of cesium has been released at Fukushima.
Know your nukes: understanding radiation risks in Japan |
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Misstated risks from Fukushima fallout? |
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Topic: Miscellaneous |
7:40 am EDT, Mar 28, 2011 |
But cesium-137 and radioactive iodine - the two main radioactive substances being spewed by the leaking Japanese nuclear plants - are not naturally-occurring substances, and can become powerful internal emitters which can cause tremendous damage to the health of people who are unfortunate enough to breathe in even a particle of the substances, or ingest them in food or water.
Misstated risks from Fukushima fallout? |
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Prosecute Guppies; Let the Sharks Roam Free | The Big Picture |
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Topic: Miscellaneous |
10:41 am EDT, Mar 26, 2011 |
Joe Nocera’s last column in today’s NYT (he moves to the OpEd pages) tells a simply ghastly tale of misplaced governmental priorities: In Prison for Taking a Liar Loan. It tells the horror show story of how the IRS came across one of the 15 million liar loans written during the credit bubble. An excerpt simply will not do it any justice — go read it in its entirety.
Basically, they decided this dude was living beyond his means, so they investigated him. He is now in jail. Key points: NYT says evidence against him is very thin. NYT suggests that both the guy who sold the loan and the corp he worked for knew about these fraudulent loans and encouraged them. The guy who sold him the loan went to prison for selling other fraudulent loans and got less time than he did. He had to pay restitution - to the corporation that sold him the liar loan. None of the corporate management has been prosecuted even though they have admitted that they knew some of these loans were cooked. Its not clear why this guy became a priority for prosecutors. It may be the case that the small fish are slower and easier to catch. Prosecute Guppies; Let the Sharks Roam Free | The Big Picture |
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Topic: Miscellaneous |
10:05 am EDT, Mar 25, 2011 |
Nathaniel Borenstein (the creator of MIME) sent the email below to the Interesting People list last week. I've been meaning to post a link to it, because I have found that it mirrors what I've been thinking about the Fukushima crisis. As the crisis continues to unfold I continue to come back to this email. I like nuclear power. It think its a sustainable approach to energy production that does not require foreign dependence. On the other hand, it does produce some nasty waste and has some significant health hazards associated with it. Disposal of nuclear waste is not a solved problem in the United States. Furthermore, other forms of energy production and other industrial processes also have risks, but I don't think any such process approaches the potential of a nuclear plant to contaminate a wide area in the event of a worst case scenario. So nuclear energy is not a no-brainer. A lot of thought has to be put into doing it safely. People have gotten it wrong in the past and there are problems that remain unsolved. The wrong answers can have significant consequences. As an engineer, I know people sometimes get the wrong answers and that things sometimes fail. The whole purpose of a regulatory regime and public pressure is to make sure that people are dotting i's and crossing t's. I am tired of pundits telling us that everything is A-OK with Fukushima and by the way, if you are concerned about the situation you are an idiot who obviously doesn't know anything about science. The situation at Fukushima is not under control. Unexpected bad news is announced by the power company and the Japanese government every day. There is radiation all over Japan. Its in the food and its in the water. No, there isn't a lot of it, but there is enough that it can pose a risk to people's health - that is a problem. It is not yet clear that the situation will not get worse. It is possible that it will get worse. Containment breaches and more signification radiation releases remain a risk. It is also not clear that the designers of the plant considered the scenario that occurred here. Given the level of respect that I personally have for Japan's technical and political sophistication I am surprised by that lack of clarity. If they didn't consider what to me seems like a rather obvious possibility given the region's geological history it is not clear that the designers of other plants around the world have also considered the real worst case scenarios their plants may face, even if they say that they have. So there is a problem here. It is a real problem, and there is real cause for reasonable people to be alarmed. I really hope nothing catastrophic happens and we can all relax and go forward and build new nuclear plants with even safer processes, but "Its all good dude" is not a reasonable position to take at this time. Until the situation is, in fact, under control, and has been completely studied, it is not rea... [ Read More (0.2k in body) ] |
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Topic: Miscellaneous |
8:10 am EDT, Mar 24, 2011 |
New Yorker magazine cover, March 28, 2011 by Christoph Niemann.
Dark Spring |
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