As of a few days ago, the latest Dr. Who season 5 that aired in the US on BBC America was “Cold Blood” (episode 9). But the latest episode to air in the UK on BBC 3 is “The Pandorica Opens” (episode 12). Since I have access to BBC 3 through work, i couldn’t resist when it just happened to be on, so i decided to take a sneak peak into the future.

OH MAN! This episode is so far and away the best and most amazing episode of Dr. Who i’ve ever seen. Oh, it was also the worst episode ever since it was a cliff hanger that looks to lead to an even more amazing season finale with episode 13 (“The Big Bang”).

I don’t dare give any spoilers or else i’ll get lynched, but … wow. Stay tuned people. If you haven’t started on this season of Dr. Who, i’d recommend begging, borrowing, or stealing every episode, just so you can get the background needed to watch the final two episodes.

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“Yesterday’s posthumanism is today’s boring quotidian [everyday/commonplace].”


In reading an interesting blog post about posthumanism, the author makes several good points. First off, people seem to think of being post human as something where whoever survives the apocalypse will be turned into machine zombies or something. If you stop to think about it, “post human” is something that you can really apply to us today, if viewed from the eyes of people even a century or two ago. I mean, we’ve got these little devices that fit in our pockets that connect us to the sum total of the worlds information at the click of a button. We can travel from one end of the earth to the other in hours. And we can communicate with anyone anywhere instantly (unless you’re on AT&T, then you might drop the call, but hey…) If you’re hard of hearing or have bad eyesight? No problem. Just get a hearing aid or some glasses. If your heart is bad – we can replace that. Lose a leg? Get a new one. Can’t have a baby? Grow one “in vitro”.

Do these things mean we’re no longer human? Should you go without glasses and see the world in a ball of fuzz just so you’re more “pure” somehow? Of course not. And as time moves forward, more and more things will change, and we’ll change along with them, and we’ll still be human. Or, as Jamais Cascio puts it in his article:

We will never be posthuman, because we have always been posthuman.

“Posthuman” is a term with more weight than meaning; it’s used variously to describe people with altered genomes, people with implanted machinery, people with lifespans measured in millennia, and a whole host of descriptors that ultimately boil down to “not us, not now.”

But as augmentations move from the pages of a science fiction story to the pages of a catalog, something interesting happens: they lose their power to disturb. They’re no longer the advance forces of the techpocalypse, they’re the latest manifestation of the fashionable, the ubiquitous, and the banal. They’re normal. They’re human.

technologies that we now celebrate or decry as leading to our posthuman future … the technologies of human augmentation will lead to the collapse of society … [but] the spread of the Internet and easy communication will mean that most of us will have heard about these technologies as they develop. By the time they arrive, they’ll already be boring.

Posthumanity, from this perspective, will always be just over the horizon. Always in The Future. When the systems and augmentations we now consider to be posthuman hit the real world, they will have become simply human in scale.

That’s because augmentation – the development of systems and technologies to allow us to do and to be more than what our natural biology would allow – is intrinsic to what it means to be human. Thrown weapons expanded the range of our strength; control of fire allowed us to see in the dark; written words expanded the duration of our memories. If these all sound utterly primitive and unworthy of comment, try to imagine what it would have been like to be without them – and to find yourself competing against others equipped with them. The last hundred thousand years has been the slow history of the process of augmentation.

For the people living in a future surrounded by altered genomes, implanted machinery, and vastly extended lifespans, it will all be boringly normal. Unworthy of comment. And very, very human.

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The Voyager 1 spaceprobe is officially at the edge of the solar system.

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Want your name to be included on a list in a spacecraft headed to Pluto, and be returned to earth in 50,000 years?  Click Here

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Last night the kids were screwing around at dinner so I told them to
“Mind your p’s and q’s”.  They gave me a funny look and asked what
it meant.  I told them it meant to have good manners and behave
nicely.  Afterwards I asked Luann is she knew where the saying
came from.  She didn’t, so I decided to look it up.  Here is
the best explanation I could find:

This expression, meaning “be very careful to behave correctly”, has been in use from the 17th century on. Theories include: an admonishment to children learning to write; an admonishment to typesetters (who had to look at the letters reversed); an admonishment to seamen not to soil their navy pea-jackets with their tarred “queues” (pigtails); “mind your pints and quarts”; “mind your prices and quality”; “mind your pieds and queues” (either feet and pigtails, or two dancing figures that had to be accurately performed); the substitution of /p/ for “qu” /kw/ in the speech of uneducated ancient Romans; or the confusion by students learning both Latin and Ancient Greek of such cognates as pente and quintus. And yes, we’ve heard the joke about the instruction to new sextons: “Mind your keys and pews.”

The most plausible explanation is the one given in the latest edition of Collins English Dictionary: an alteration of “Mind your ‘please’s and ‘thank you’s”.

by Mark Israel

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It’s official – SpaceShipOne has won the X-Prize!

Here’s a blow-by-blow blog from CNN anchor Miles O’Brien.

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Following is a list of what I believe to be the defining moments in avation history:

“Dawn of Flight”
The
first successful sustained powered flights in a heavier-than-air
machine were made here by Wilbur and Orville Wright on December 17,
1903 from Kitty Hawk, NC.
The Spirit of St. Louis
Lindbergh
gained sudden great international fame as the first pilot to fly solo
and non-stop across the Atlantic Ocean, flying from New York to Paris
on May 20-21st, 1927.
Breaking the “sound barrier”
On
October 14, 1947, with USAF Captain Charles “Chuck” Yeager as pilot,
the X-1-1 flew faster than the speed of sound for what is generally
accepted as the first supersonic flight by a piloted
aircraft.
“Dawn of the Space Age”
History
changed on October 4, 1957, when the Soviet Union successfully launched
Sputnik I. The world’s first artificial satellite was about the size of
a basketball, weighed only 183 pounds, and took about 98 minutes to
orbit the Earth on its elliptical path. That launch ushered in new
political, military, technological, and scientific developments. While
the Sputnik launch was a single event, it marked the start of the space
age and the U.S.-U.S.S.R space race.
“One giant leap for mankind”
Apollo
11 was the first manned mission to land on the Moon. The first steps by
humans on another planetary body were taken by Neil Armstrong and Buzz
Aldrin on July 20, 1969.
Around the world in … 9 days
Elbert
L. “Burt” Rutan is most famous for his design of the record breaking
Voyager, which was the first plane to fly around the world without
stopping or refueling. It took off on December 14, 1986. The
flight ended successfully 9 days, 3 minutes and 44 seconds later, on
December 23.
First Space Tourist
The world’s first space tourist, US businessman Dennis Tito, blasted off for the International Space Station (ISS) as scheduled at 11:37 Moscow time (0737 GMT) Saturday, April 29th, 2001, from the Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan.
Ansari X Prize
Modeled after the prize won by Charles Lindburg, to win the XPrize the contestant must:
  • build, finance, design their own ship (no government involvement)
  • carry three people 100km up (the officially designated boundry of space)
  • do it twice within two weeks

Of course, there have been some defining moments a little more on the tragic side as well:

Hiroshima
The
atomic bomb named “Little Boy” was dropped on Hiroshima by the Enola
Gay, a Boeing B-29 bomber, at 8:15 in the morning of August 6,
1945.
Apollo 1 fire
One
of the worst tragedies in the history of spaceflight occurred on
January 27, 1967 at 6:31pm when the crew of Gus Grissom, Ed White, and
Roger Chaffee were killed in a fire in the Apollo Command Module during
a preflight test at Cape Canaveral.
Challenger Explosion
At
11:38 a.m. EST on January 28, 1986, Space Shuttle Challenger lifted off
from the launch pad 39B at Cape Canaveral’s Kennedy Space Center. …
The 25th space shuttle launch received widespread attention because of
the presence of Sharon Christa McAuliffe, who was to have been the
first teacher in space. … About one minute, 13 seconds after launch,
as students across the country watched on through live television
feeds, the shuttle tragically exploded, killing all seven crew
members.
9/11
On
Tuesday, September 11, 2001, terrorists use commercial Boeing 757 and
767 airplanes as missiles and crash into the twin towers of New York
and the Pentagon.
Columbia breakup
February
1st, 2003 was a clear sunny day, the perfect day for the Columbia
shuttle to return to earth. Everyone at NASA was excited because the
shuttle would bring back many important research results from its
16-day mission. No one suspected anything unusual. … the shuttle lost
contact with NASA at approximately 9:00 AM … The worst nightmare had
happened. The space shuttle Columbia and her seven crewmembers were
lost!
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Hidden deep inside eastern Utah’s nearly inaccessible Book Cliffs
region, 130 miles southeast of Salt Lake City is a secret under wraps:
a string of ancient settlements thousands of years old in near perfect
condition.

Full story…

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