As novelist William Gibson observed, ‘The future is already here – it’s just not evenly distributed’. To whit, approximately 800m people now have access to the internet. (And it’s a huge news day for you privaleged few.) Unfortunately, the past also lingers, weighing us down like the proverbial pair of cement boots: half of Earth’s 6.6b humans have never used a telephone, and 1b are still illiterate.
- A royal destruction: Throngs of tourists crowd daily into the priceless tombs in the Valley of the Kings, brushing against walls, and even tracing reliefs with sweaty fingers.
- After lying almost untouched in the vaults of an Italian university for 500 years, a book on the magic arts written by Leonardo da Vinci’s best friend and teacher has been translated into English for the first time.
- Legend of King Arthur lives on at Tintagel.
- Quantum secrets of photosynthesis revealed.
- Sci-Am tells you how to make your own quantum eraser.
- Chimps are actually more evolved than humans.
- Was Einstein right? Scientists provide first public peek at Gravity Probe B results.
- How the internet could go from cyberspace to outer space.
- Big Brother and 1984 meet at Mount Holly, Berkeley County, South Carolina.
- Vehicle-to-grid technology: PG&E’s prototype Plug-in Electric Hybrid Vehicle, created by adding a lithium ion battery to a traditional Toyota Prius, gets 100 mpg, and would allow owners to sell energy back to their electricity provider.
- Miniature chain-mail fabric has unique mechanical and electrical properties which promise fully-engineered electronic textiles.
- Many useful inventions and innovations continue to be buried on college campuses because universities don’t think they’d be top-tier money-makers. To bring this wasted research to the marketplace, universities are being urged to try new marketing ideas such as free agency for researchers, and internet-based investment match-makers like ibridge.
- From beneath Antarctica’s Ross Sea, scientists retrieve pristine record of the continent’s climate cycles.
- Report by US Generals and Admirals warns that global warming is a threat to national security.
- Zeppelin expedition to survey sea ice in the Arctic.
- Selling off the rainforest – a modern-day scandal: Vast forests with trees each worth £4,000 sold for a few bags of sugar.
- The (coal) burning issue: Shades of CO2 battles to come.
- Using CO2 emissions from power plants yields more algae for making Omega-3 food additive and biofuel.
- An inconvenient truth: Rapa Nui did not commit ecocide.
- Can a biosphere be selfish?
- Could digging up the lead-lined coffin of Sir Mark Sykes, the World War I general who carved up the Ottoman Empire, end up saving the world?
- Cluster of UK cases shows bovine TB can spread from human to human.
- Persistent organic pesticides in oily fish linked to type 2 diabetes.
- Transfusions of patients’ own stem cells reverses type 1 diabetes.
- Infection rate of highly antibiotic-resistant gonorrhea explodes in the U.S..
- Scientists make immature sperm cells from human bone marrow. Humm… Could they make sperm cells from female bone marrow?
- Dessert recipes printed in major newspapers across the US (such as this recipe for Supernatural Brownies?) may be contributing to obesity in large cities. What about the effects of the rest of what they print?
- Dream journals being kept by students in a college psychology class have provided researchers with a unique look at how people experienced the events of 9/11.
- 55-foot section of the Berlin Wall suddenly disappears.
- Mammoth, meteorite and bezoar for sale at Christie’s auction. Just couldn’t resist that headline.
- What is this anomalous object found in Google Maps? Perhaps the world’s largest disco ball?
- 2007 crop circle ahoy!
- Nick Redfern spoons up the dirt in his new book, Celebrity Secrets: Government Files on the Rich and Famous (Amazon US and UK).
- Man awarded damages for hospital’s accidental overdose of ketamine, and his subsequent meeting with God.
- Did Woody Harrelson’s daddy shoot JFK?
- After visiting Kentucky’s new Creation Museum and Arizona’s Grand Canyon, the BBC’s Martin Redfern reports on the ongoing battle between science and religion. Includes podcast links.
- In his new book, Jesus of Nazareth, Pope Benedict takes wealthy nations to task for having ‘plundered and sacked’ Africa and other poor regions of the world. (Available at Amazon US & UK in mid-May)
- Temperate fruits such as apples could curb Ugandan poverty. Sounds like Uganda’s highland farmers should apply for Kiva loans, where, due to Kiva.org’s 100% pay-back rate (so far), you can repeatedly engage in do-it-yourself foreign aid (NYT video). Read more about how you can participate – in this – revolution in couch potato – humanitarianism.
- The Citizen’s Grand Jury, along with its Constitutionally guaranteed power of Presentiments, has been resurrected in response to the crimes of 9/11. (pdf)
- Update: U.S. women who eat a lot of beef while pregnant give birth to sons who grow up to have low sperm counts. Researchers suspect pesticides, hormones or contaminants in cattle feed may be a factor.
Thanks, Greg and Richard.
Quote of the Day:
The blunting effects of slavery upon the slaveholder’s moral perceptions are known and conceded, the world over, and a privileged class, an aristocracy, is but a band of slaveholders under another name.
Mark Twain, in A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court.