Time-lapse video condenses last night’s blizzard into 40 seconds [Video]
Gigantic Storm With Huge Tail Erupts on Saturn
An enormous storm has erupted in Saturn’s northern hemisphere.
Amateurs first sighted the storm earlier this month, but the Cassini spacecraft moved into a good position on Dec. 24 to photograph it from about 1.1 million miles away. Earth received the raw and unprocessed shots today.
The storm has a huge central funnel and a long tail that sweeps around Saturn’s northern hemisphere for tens of thousands of miles. A shot in blue light (left) reveals the extent of the tail, but infrared light (right) shows detail of the storm’s amorphous core. The photos were taken exactly a month after Cassini recovered from a solar-flare-induced error that temporarily silenced the spacecraft from Nov. 2 through Nov. 24.
Saturn’s weather is complex like Jupiter’s, but it’s often difficult to see such storms beneath Saturn’s hazy outer atmosphere, wrote Carolyn Porco, a planetary scientist and leader of Cassini’s imaging team, on Twitter.
Images: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute
See Also:
- This Summer’s Sexiest Images From Saturn
- Video: Two Full Days of Saturn’s Aurora
- Red in Jupiter’s Spot Not What Astronomers Thought
- Cassini Spacecraft Spots New Object in Saturn’s Rings
- NASA: Cassini Camera Will Be Offline Until Nov. 24
Farm Animals Get 80 Percent of Antibiotics Sold in U.S.
How to buy a Dell WITHOUT windows
I was asked by a friend to get a Fedora CD to her and her friend so that their children can learn to use Linux. Â I suggested that I will help by shipping the Live CDs as well as spending some time (along with my 2 sons) to teach their sons how to use Linux.
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harish pillay |
Initial Question/Comment: h.pillay@Ieee.org
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System |
You are now being connected to an agent. Thank you for using Dell Chat
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System |
Connected with Dell Rep
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Dell Rep |
Welcome to Dell Sales Chat. My name is Dell Rep. I’ll be your personal sales agent. How may I assist you. If you proceed to place your order online, please indicate my name, Dell Rep, as your sales representative so that I’ll be able to track your order for you.
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harish pillay |
Hi, Dell Rep. Can you point me to where I can get the n-series vostro v13?
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harish pillay |
i do not want to buy windows for the machine.
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Dell Rep |
we do not offer n-series of the Dell system online
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harish pillay |
why?
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harish pillay |
does microsoft restrict sales of n-series online?
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Dell Rep |
i’m not too sure on that but V13 has being replaced by the V130
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harish pillay |
ok, so I would like to buy a v130 without an OS (I will settle for freedos).
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harish pillay |
i prefer the n-series v-130 then.
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Dell Rep |
the V130 is not offering any Free DOS version at the moment
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Dell Rep |
let me check on the availability of the V13
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Dell Rep |
we do offer Free DOS offline
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harish pillay |
it does not matter if it has freedos or fedora (or even ubuntu). i want to buy the machine without any microsoft os.
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Dell Rep |
any particular specifications on your mind?
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harish pillay |
i will be running Fedora and/or Red Hat Enterprise Linux on them. I have the apps taken care of already.
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Dell Rep |
any specific hardware requirement
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harish pillay |
Why don’t you focus on asking about the OS? the hardware is OK as it is.
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harish pillay |
64-bit, 8G would be nice, but 4G RAM is OK. USB (3.0 would be nice), bluetooth, wifi.
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Dell Rep |
please note that you may find difficulties for the correct drivers as we have not tested on the compatibility of the drivers with the OS you intend to install
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harish pillay |
not that you support windoze drivers anyway.
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Dell Rep |
any other hardware requirement
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harish pillay |
none
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Dell Rep |
also is this purchase are for your company or personal?
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harish pillay |
does it matter?
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Dell Rep |
i need to generate the quotation for you
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harish pillay |
Intel Corporation WiFi Link 5100, Realtek Semiconductor Co., Ltd. RTL8111/8168B PCI Express Gigabit Ethernet controller,
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harish pillay |
is there a price difference if the quote was for corporate vs consumer?
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Dell Rep |
there’s no difference unless your company has a specific contract with Dell
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harish pillay |
fair enough. give me the consumer quote first.
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Dell Rep |
can i have your full legal name, address as well as your contact no
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harish pillay |
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Dell Rep |
alright, let me work the quotation and emailed it to you?
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harish pillay |
ok. h.pillay@ieee.org
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Dell Rep |
noted
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harish pillay |
so are we done or what?
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Dell Rep |
unless you’ve others to add.
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harish pillay |
so the quote will be without windows?
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Dell Rep |
yes
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harish pillay |
that’s fine. can you provide me with the quote that shows with and without windows?
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harish pillay |
i want to know the difference.
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Dell Rep |
alright
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harish pillay |
not that i want windows.
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harish pillay |
are you mailing the quote now?
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Dell Rep |
give me about 5 mins and i shall be able to send it to you
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harish pillay |
ok thanks. i will be keeping this chat transcript and blanking out your name.
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Dell Rep |
thanks
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harish pillay |
the reason for keeping the chat transcript is so that I can post this to my blog stating that there is a way to buy non-windows Dell machines but one has to ask for it.
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harish pillay |
so, keeping your name off the transcript is key as it is not you but your organization that is at fault here.
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Dell Rep |
we do have regular request for n-series of system from time by time
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Dell Rep |
we do not offer is sometimes to avoid misunderstanding from certain customers where they look for the cheapest system and only to find out that no OS was installed
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harish pillay |
and I want to make it a permanent request and something that I can find from your online catalog. As long as it does not appear, I think Dell is doing the whole world a disservice and pandering to Microsoft’s monopolistic heavyhand.
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Dell Rep |
we had that quite a lot previously
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Dell Rep |
that’s the reason we choose to offer all with the OS preinstalled
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harish pillay |
and if you explain to people, they will understand.
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Dell Rep |
not all customer are as understanding as you
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harish pillay |
so long as dell hides the info (or makes it hard to find), these misunderstandings can happen.
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Dell Rep |
we have lots of customer who choose the cheapest and only to find out that no OS is installed
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Dell Rep |
we don’t really hide the info as long as a customer request for it, we’ll be able to offer
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Dell Rep |
we just limit them options online to avoid misunderstanding
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Dell Rep |
anyway perhaps we may work out something in future
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Dell Rep |
i’ve just emailed both quotation to you. could you please check and revert
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Dell Rep |
Is there anything else I may assist you? If there’s no further assistance required, you may email me at DELL REP @dell.com shall you need further assistance / clarifications.
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System |
The session has ended!
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Slouching toward idiocracy? | Gene Expression
The September issue of Discover Magazine had an interesting piece, If Modern Humans Are So Smart, Why Are Our Brains Shrinking? It’s now online, though to read the full article you’ll have to have a print subscription, or, pay 99 cents to get a digital copy of that issue. John Hawks is described as “a bearish man with rounded features and a jovial disposition.â€
The background to this phenomenon is rather simple. For several millions years up to ~200,000 years ago there was a study increase in hominin cranial capacities. I say hominin because it seems that this increase was evident in all branches of the human lineage. Neandertals were increasing in cranial capacity, just as African humans were. Then there was a leveling off and stabilization. Finally, over the past 15,000 years or so there has been a decline, from a median of 1,500 cubic centimeters (cc) to 1,350 cc.
You can read the article for an elaboration on the various hypotheses. But roughly, some think we’re getting less intelligent, while others believe that the brain is reorganizing its structure and development. Remember that the brain uses about ~20% of our caloric intake. It’s a metabolically expensive organ.
I would like to add that even if the median human intelligence is decreasing, the current generation has the largest absolute number of very bright people alive at any given time. This is a natural function of the large human population. If the stability of civilization rests not on the median human, but the coordination and mobilization of large numbers of cognitively gifted humans, then perhaps we should not worry too much in the short to medium term. Even with stabilizing world populations we’ll have a generation or two of large numbers of brights before differential fitness of the smart and dull really start eroding the numbers of the former.
Showcasing 65 of the Best Website Designs of 2010
Throughout the year I’ve showcased my favourite website designs findings in the Line25 Sites of the Week roundups. This special end of year post showcases the best of the best, pulling together the awesomest designs from all the 2010 Sites of the Weeks into one showcase of super cool sites.
A Modern Eden
Foundation Six
Little Black Dress Society
Themify
Fudge
Virb
Image Mechanics
Nordkapp
Dawghouse Design Studio
Ben the Bodyguard
Chirp
Fi
Fhoke
Mark Hobbs
Ideaware
Analog
Arbutus
Pound & Grain
Simon Collison
Flourish Web Design
Lift
31Three
80/20
Ribbons of Red
Paravel
Campl.us
Feedstitch
Thomas Bishop
Carsonified
Box
Made By Water
New Adventures in Web Design
Kaleidoscope
Yaron Schoen
Core8
Fresh01
Jeroen Homan
Oliver James Gosling
Yaili
Team Excellence
Pieoneers
45Royale
Postbox
The Visual Click
Area17
Adlucent
Coolendar
efingo
Robedwards
So1o
Cofa Media
You Know Who
Eight Hour Day
Joey Lomanto
McKinney
Amazee Labs
Review App
Nosotros
Allison House
Iron to Iron
Galphin Industries
AwesomeJS
Savvy
Rype Arts
Applicom
What happens when two black holes are smashed together? [Video]
2010 in photos: BP and climate disasters
OILPOCALYPSE: The growing oil slick in the Gulf of Mexico is captured in this image from NASA’s (MODIS) instrument aboard the Terra satellite. This natural-color image acquired April 29, 2010 shows a twisting patch of oil nearly 125 km (78 mi) wide. Approximately 4 million barrels (170 million gallons) were released overall. (NASA Earth Observatory/Jesse Allen/University of Wisconsin SSEC)
The headlines of 2010 were driven by fossil fuel disasters — involving the dangers of extraction or the biblical might of the climate they have polluted. Hundreds of thousands of people died in climate disasters, and hundreds of millions more affected by floods, droughts, storms, and wildfires. Below is a small selection of the most striking and iconic news photography of 2010, from the BP disaster to the Pakistan floods, from Wonk Room’s Brad Johnson.
Meanwhile, polluters successfully blocked enactment of climate policy or oil industry regulation in the United States, as the Obama administration advanced health care reform and other legislative priorities.

OILPOCALYPSE: In this aerial photo taken in the Gulf of Mexico more than 50 miles southeast of Venice on Louisiana’s tip, the Deepwater Horizon oil rig is seen burning Wednesday, April 21, 2010. Eleven men working on the platform were killed, and 17 others injured. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

OILPOCALYPSE: A bird is mired in oil on the beach at East Grand Terre Island along the Louisiana coast on Thursday, June 3, 2010. Crude oil flowed from a hole in the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico for three months after the Deepwater Horizon oil rig exploded and sank on April 20th, 2010. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

SUDAN DROUGHT: Two-year-old Dhoal, a child suffering from severe malnutrition, is swarmed with flies as he cries on a bed at a local hospital in the southeast Sudanese town of Akobo on April 10, 2010. The population in Akobo and the surrounding counties in the Jonglei state in southern Sudan are suffering from the effects of a devastating drought and tribal conflict. Aid officials have called Akobo the “hungriest place on earth,†after a survey showed that 46 percent of children under five are malnourished. (ROBERTO SCHMIDT/AFP/Getty Images)

RUSSIA BURNING: As central Russia suffered through its hottest summer in thousands of years, hundreds of wildfires swept the countryside, causing billions in damage. Russians here try to stop a fire from spreading near the village Golovanovo, Ryazan region, on August 5, 2010. (NATALIA KOLESNIKOVA/AFP/Getty Images)

TENNESSEE FLOOD: Lighthouse Christian School teacher Heather Harrell reacts after finding her grandmother’s Bible in her classroom that was destroyed by the flood in Antioch, Tennessee on Monday, May 3, 2010. (AP Photo/The Tennessean, Shelley Mays)

EUROPE FLOODS: After months of heavy rainfall caused some of the worst floods Europe has seen in decades, farmers help a horse to jump into an amphibious vehicle in flooded Juliszew village in central Poland at Wisla river on May 24, 2010. (JANEK SKARZYNSKI/AFP/Getty Images)

PAKISTAN FLOODS: Starting in July and lasting for months, some of the worst flooding in Pakistan’s history took place – at one point nearly one fifth of the country was underwater. Here, Pakistani flood victim Mohammed Nawaz hangs onto a moving raft as he is rescued by the Pakistan Navy August 10, 2010 in Sukkur, Pakistan. (Paula Bronstein/Getty Images)

PAKISTAN FLOODS: Pakistani villagers raise hands to get food dropped from an army helicopter at a flood-hit area of Kot Addu, in central Pakistan on Saturday, Aug. 7, 2010. (AP Photo/Khalid Tanveer)

KILLING KANSAS: A farmer works in a field southwest of WaKeeney, Kansas with ominous clouds looming overhead on Sunday, June 20, 2010. Severe weather battered parts of northwest Kansas with heavy rain, wind, hail and isolated tornadoes. (AP Photo/The Hays Daily News, Steven Hausler)

HAITI CHOLERA: A woman with cholera symptoms waits for treatment at a public hospital in Limbe village near Cap Haitian, Haiti on Monday Nov. 22, 2010. Thousands of people have been hospitalized for cholera across Haiti with symptoms including serious diarrhea, vomiting and fever and at least 1,100 people have died. (AP photo/Emilio Morenatti)

GUATEMALA SINKHOLE: A tremendous sinkhole caused by the heavy rains of Tropical Storm Agatha in Guatemala City was estimated to be 30 meters wide and over 60 meters deep. As the sinkhole formed, it swallowed a clothing factory about three miles from the site of a similar sinkhole three years earlier. The clothing factory had closed only an hour before it plunged into the Earth. (REUTERS/Casa Presidencial)

OILPOCALYPSE: Crude oil from the Deepwater Horizon oil spill washes ashore in Orange Beach, Alabama, Saturday, June 12, 2010. (AP Photo/Dave Martin)

ISRAEL WILDFIRE: A firefighting aircraft flies over a forest fire on Mount Carmel caused by record heat and drought near the northern city of Haifa December 3, 2010. (REUTERS/Stringer)

SOUTHWEST CHINA FLOODS: Officials inspect a train on a bridge after passengers were evacuated near Guanghan in southwest China’s Sichuan province on August 19, 2010 an area hit hard by flooding that plagued China for weeks. The train traveling in southwestern China derailed after floods destroyed the bridge, plunging at least two carriages into a river, but all passengers were safe. (STR/AFP/Getty Images)

KATRINA PLUS FIVE: The Press Park housing projects, which were flooded during Hurricane Katrina five years ago, sit abandoned August 26, 2010 in New Orleans, Louisiana. (Mario Tama/Getty Images)

NORTHWEST CHINA FLOODS: A man grieves at the site of a mud slide that swept away part of the town of Zhouqu in northwest China’s Gansu province on Thursday Aug. 12, 2010. (AP Photo)

KENYA DROUGHT: Stefano De Luigi, a VII Network for Le Monde Magazine photographer based in Italy, won the second prize in the Contemporary Issues Singles category of the World Press Photo Contest 2010 for this photograph of a giraffe killed by drought in northeast Kenya that experts say is the worst in the country since 1996. (REUTERS/Stefano De Luigi/VII Network/Le Monde Magazine)

GLACIAL RETREAT: Mount Everest’s East Rongbuk Glacier has lost some 350 vertical feet of ice between August 1921 and October 2008. (David Breashears, © National Geographic)

JORDAN DROUGHT: After six years of drought, measuring sticks are useless at the Ziglab Dam in Jordan, built to catch water flowing west into the Jordan River for irrigation. Its reservoir has shrunk to a fifth of capacity and hasn’t filled since 2003, forcing Jordan to ration water. (Paolo Pellegrin, Magnum © National Geographic)

WEATHER BOMB: Visible satellite image of the October 26, 2010 superstorm taken at 5:32pm EDT. At the time, Bigfork, Minnesota was reporting the lowest pressure ever recorded in a U.S. non-coastal storm, 955 mb. (NASA/GSFC)

CLIMATE CONFERENCE: Greenpeace activists wield a giant life preserver 50 feet in diameter, appealing to reaching consensus at the Cancun climate change summit, held in Mexico between Nov. 29 and Dec. 10. (Photo by Elizabeth Ruiz / Greenpeace)
How To Be Popular On Facebook, Quantified
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Apple Forces Steve Jobs Action Figure Off eBay
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