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literatura, teknolohia, gadgetsFebruary 3, 2006 10:43 pm

ayna, maliwayak metten ti agikur-it… febrero man gayamen!

adtoy man ti maysa a pakamakam:

cell

Though best-selling scare-monger Stephen King doesn’t own a cellphone himself (he disdains the little monsters), a voicemail message encouraging recipients to buy his new book, CELL, hits more than 100,000 mobile phones of his most ardent fans today. In the book, a mysterious phenomenon referred to as “The Pulse” infects the brains of anyone who happens to have their ear to the phone when the spike hits. A power-suited businesswoman turns into a biting and screaming banshee who tries to tear the throat from a Mr. Softee ice cream truck driver, and a bodybuilder is spotted running starkers down the block and whipping shorn car antennas in both fists to and fro. The story’s hero, Clay Riddell, a comic book creator in Boston who has just signed a breakthrough deal with a publisher, luckily ducks the antenna-whipper, but it isn’t long before he and a pair of fellow “normies” – those who weren’t zapped by the Pulse – must face hordes of zombies as they attempt to survive and makes sense of what the hell’s going on. (manipud iti engadget.com)

very versatile a talaga a writer ni king, ania? no ania ti uso, no ania ti adda ken agdama a teknolohia ket makapanunot latta iti nakabutbuteng a senario wenno situasion.

literatura, kompiuters, siensiaOctober 13, 2005 9:43 am

kitaem man lang, nasiglat a talaga dagiti ruso.

Blogging Predicted by 19th Century Russian Prince

Ask a Russian where television, fashion shows, hip-hop or hieroglyphs were invented and you will no doubt hear — in Russia. Believing in the Russian genius is an essential feature of the Russian mentality. That is why no Russian was surprised when we found out with the help of Lenta.ru the Internet in general, and blogging in particular, was, if not invented, at least predicted by a Russian back in 1837.

Prince Vladimir Odoevsky, 1803-1869, was a gifted man. Apart from writing philosophical books, stories for children and composing pieces of music, he also wrote science fiction, trying to imagine what his country would look like in 2,500 years, in 4338.

The fact that among other utopian inventions Odoevsky described something very close to the Internet and blogging was brought to public attention by — surprise, surprise — a blogger. Ivan Dezhurny, a Russian music producer, is generally fond of futuristic literature. Reading Odoevsky’s novel “Year 4338”, written in 1837, Dezhurny republished selected bits of the book on his personal blog to the delight of his readers.

Odoevsky suggested in future there would be a kind of connection between houses that would allow people to communicate quickly and easily, the way they do now via the Internet.

“Houses are connected by means of magnetic telegraphs that allow people who live far from each other to communicate,” Odoevsky wrote.

Even more interestingly, Odoevsky suggested every household would publish a kind of daily journal or newsletter and distribute it among selected acquaintances, a habit which Russian bloggers immediately recognized as blogging.

“We received a household journal from the local prime minister, which among other things invited us to his place for a reception,” one of Odoevsky’s characters tells a friend.

“The thing is that many households here publish such journals that replace common correspondence. Such journals usually provide information about the hosts’ good or bad health, family news, different thoughts and comments, small inventions, invitations to receptions.”

However, Odoevsky, a prince and a wealthy man, could not imagine people taking so much bother to keep their acquaintances updated on their daily affairs. He suggested the job would be carried out by the butler.

“The job of publishing such a journal daily or weekly is carried out by the butler. It is done very simply: receiving an order from the masters, he makes a notice of what they tell him, then make copies by camera obscura and sends them to the acquaintances.”

Odoevsky’s book contains other curious predictions, such as the threat of the Earth colliding with a comet and Russians planning to fire rockets at it to prevent the collision.

Literature theorists say the unusual remoteness of Odoevsky’s predictions — 2,500 years — could be explained by the slow pace of life that Russian society led in the 19th century.

source: http://www.mosnews.com/feature/2005/10/10/bloggingpredicted.shtml

agasem dayta, nasirmata ti maysa a mannurat, science fictionist, daytoy internet ken panagkanabalaag!

saan la gayam a da jules verne, h.g. wells kdpy ti nakapugto ken nakapadto kadagiti banag nga adda ken realidad itan.

literatura, siensiaSeptember 14, 2005 11:22 am

nagunday man ken nagadayo ti dinaliasatna daytoy a lawag sakbay a nasirip dagiti taga-daga.

NASA’s satellite detects most distant star burst

LOS ANGELES, Sept.12 (Xinhuanet) — A gamma-ray burst from the edge of the visible universe has been spotted by NASA’s Swift observing satellite. Astronomers said on Monday it’s the most distant explosion ever.

This powerful burst, detected on September 4, marks the death of a massive star and the birth of a black hole. It comes from an era soon after stars and galaxies first formed, about 500 million to 1 billion years after the Big Bang.

The fact that the burst occurred at 13 billion light years away means what the Swift telescope spotted actually happened 13 billion years ago, while the Universe is thought to be 13.7 billion years old according to the Big Bang theory, the researchers explained.

They measure cosmic distances by redshift, the extent of light shifting toward the red, or lower energy, part of the electromagnetic spectrum during the light’s long journey across the Universe.

The greater the distance, the higher the redshift. The September 4 burst, named GRB 050904, has a redshift of 6.29, equal to a distance of about 13 billion light-years from the Earth. The previous most distant gamma-ray burst had a redshift of 4.5. The most distant quasar known is at a redshift of 6.4.

The Swift satellite detected the burst first and notified scientists of its location. Then scientists used the Southern Observatory for Astrophysical Research telescope in Chile to discover the burst afterglow, and nail down the distance. A Japanese team confirmed the distance and fine-tuned the redshift measurement to 6.29 later.

“We designed Swift to look for faint bursts coming from the edge of the Universe,” said Neil Gehrels, Swift principal investigator.

“Now we’ve got one and it’s fascinating. For the first time we can learn about individual stars from near the beginning of time. There are surely many more out there.”

This burst comes from a lone star, astronomers said while beingpuzzled how a single star could have generated so much energy as to be seen across the entire Universe. The team has not yet determined the nature of the exploded star.

This burst was also very long, lasting more than 200 seconds, whereas most bursts last only about 10 seconds. The detection of this burst confirms that massive stars mingled with the oldest quasars, and that even more distant star explosions can be studied through combined observations of Swift and the network of telescopes.

One of the best ways to study the earliest stars is watching for their explosions, mission scientists said. The Swift satellite can pinpoint the location of the explosions with its gamma ray detector, and telescopes can study the composition of the debris to understand where and when these stars formed and what they were made of.

“This is uncharted territory,” said Daniel Reichart at University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, who led the distance measurement.

“This burst smashes the old distance record by 500 million light-years. We are finally starting to see the remnants of some of the oldest objects in the Universe.”

hmm. nagimas a referencia iti masurat a science fiction, ania?

numona ta nannanamek pay laeng ‘tay kalpasko a nabasa nga ebook idi napan a lawas, ti “deception point” ni dan brown. maipapan iti karkarna a meteor a nasarakan ti nasa iti north pole, nga addaan kano fossils. hmmm. mayat ti estilo ni brown ta paglaokenna ti science kada thrill kada suspense. ngem maymaysa ti estilona kadagiti nabasakon a nobelana (the da vinci code,” “angels and demons,” sa daytoy “deception point” [madamak pay la a rugrugian ‘tay digital fortress]). dimo namnamaen ti culprit iti udi ti nobela, yaw-awannaka ni brown tapno dim’ pulos atapen a daytoy a karakter ket isu gayam ti mastermind ti amin!

literatura, siensiaJuly 15, 2005 10:34 am

naisalumina man daytoy a duktal dagiti sientista:

Newly discovered planet has 3 suns.

planeta a tallo ti initna? you’ll wonder no kasta met ti lubongtayo. ania ngatat’ kasasaadtayo no tallo wenno ad-adu ti init a pagrikrikusan ti lubongtayo? di kad’ ngata nakapudpudot met? ngem depende met no kua iti distansia dagiti init. ket ania no iti kaadu ti init ket awan no kuan ti rabii ket bin-igen nga aldaw?

iti science fiction, adda nalatak a sarita ni isaac asimov, ti nightfall, maipapan iti maysa a lubong nga adu ti initna a kankanayon nga aldaw. ngem actually, saan a kankanayon. ta iti kada sangaribu a tawen wenno tunggal milenium ket kasla agtutulag dagiti init nga agsasaruno a lumnek ket agpukaw ti lawag, tumpuar ti rabii–maysa laeng met ketdi a rabii. kabutbuteng unay dagiti agindeg iti daydiay a lubong ti nasao a penomenon. agsipud ta mapasamak laeng iti kada 1,000 a tawen ti idadateng ti rabii, awan ti sibibiag a makaibaga iti padasna no kasta a kumutanen ken alun-unenen ti rabii ti lubong. kadagiti agindeg a naruam iti bin-ig nga aldaw, dakkel a didigra daytoy ket kaam-amakda unay.

hmm, spoilers! ala, diakon estoriaen amin ditoy ti pakaestoriaan ti nightfall. basaenyo met, a, ket namnamenyo ti saborna!