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Missing Mary Road

odds and ends

December 24th, 2006 by abbas

ten of the oddest people on earth.

Ngoc: three decades without sleep

Sixty-four-year-old Thai Ngoc, known as Hai Ngoc, said he could not sleep at night after getting a fever in 1973, and has counted infinite numbers of sheep during more than 11,700 consecutive sleepless nights. “I don’t know whether the insomnia has impacted my health or not. But I’m still healthy and can farm normally like others,” Ngoc said. Proving his health, the elderly resident of Que Trung commune, Que Son district said he can carry two 50kg bags of fertilizer down 4km of road to return home every day.

Posted in News, People | 2 Comments »

the politics of a military man

December 24th, 2006 by abbas

In the LRB, Tariq Ali on Musharraf:

Musharraf tells us he agreed to become Washington’s surrogate because the State Department honcho, Richard Armitage, threatened to bomb Pakistan back to the Stone Age if he didn’t. What really worried Islamabad, however, was a threat Musharraf doesn’t mention: if Pakistan refused, the US would have used Indian bases.

Musharraf was initially popular in Pakistan and if he had pushed through reforms aimed at providing an education (with English as a compulsory second language) for all children, instituted land reforms which would have ended the stranglehold of the gentry on large swathes of the countryside, tackled corruption in the armed forces and everywhere else, and ended the jihadi escapades in Kashmir and Pakistan as a prelude to a long-term deal with India, then he might have left a mark on the country. Instead, he has mimicked his military predecessors. Like them, he took off his uniform, went to a landlord-organised gathering in Sind and entered politics. His party? The evergreen, ever available Muslim League. His supporters? Chips off the same old corrupt block that he had denounced so vigorously and whose leaders he was prosecuting. His prime minister? Shaukat ‘Shortcut’ Aziz, formerly a senior executive of Citibank with close ties to the eighth richest man in the world, the Saudi prince Al-Walid bin Talal. As it became clear that nothing much was going to change a wave of cynicism engulfed the country.

Musharraf is better than Zia and Ayub in many ways, but human rights groups have noticed a sharp rise in the number of political activists who are being ‘disappeared’: four hundred this year alone, including Sindhi nationalists and a total of 1200 in the province of Baluchistan, where the army has become trigger-happy once again. The war on terror has provided many leaders with the chance to sort out their opponents, but that doesn’t make it any better.

Keep reading. It’s great. via 3QD

Posted in People, Politics | No Comments »

take your protein pills

December 24th, 2006 by abbas

To return to Earth the space shuttle must make a series of complicated manouevres to align itself into the correct position to achieve a safe descent. 1. The shuttle flies upside down in orbit to control its heating.
2. To re-enter the atmosphere, the shuttle is turned tail first to the direction of travel, and fires its engines to slow its speed.
3. The orbiter is then flipped the right way up and enters the top layer of the atmosphere at about a 40-degree angle from horizontal with its wings level.

How the Shuttle manouevres for landing
4. The orientation keeps its black thermal tiles facing the majority of the heat - as high 1,650C (3,000F) on the leading edges of the wings and nose.
5. As its speed drops, the shuttle starts to fly more like an aircraft, using its rudder and wing flaps for control. It banks sharply to slow its speed still further
6. The shuttle falls from a height of more than 360km at speeds that top Mach 30, and at an angle of 19 degrees, far steeper than that of a commercial aircraft. The spacecraft comes to a dead stop half a world a way from where it began the descent. 
via BBC

Posted in Science | 1 Comment »

coke lore

December 15th, 2006 by abbas

Have you ever wondered why Coke comes with a smile? It’s because it gets you high. They took the cocaine out almost a hundred years ago. You know why? It was redundant.

  • In The First 10 minutes: 10 teaspoons of sugar hit your system. (100% of your recommended daily intake.) You don’t immediately vomit from the overwhelming sweetness because phosphoric acid cuts the flavor allowing you to keep it down.
  • 20 minutes: Your blood sugar spikes, causing an insulin burst. Your liver responds to this by turning any sugar it can get its hands on into fat. (There’s plenty of that at this particular moment)
  • 40 minutes: Caffeine absorption is complete. Your pupils dialate, your blood pressure rises, as a response your livers dumps more sugar into your bloodstream. The adenosine receptors in your brain are now blocked preventing drowsiness.

Keep reading.

Posted in Culture, Misc, Science | 8 Comments »

the dynamics of passwords

December 15th, 2006 by abbas

the following is a complete reproduction of an article from wired magazine authored by bruce schneier.

How good are the passwords people are choosing to protect their computers and online accounts?

It’s a hard question to answer because data is scarce. But recently, a colleague sent me some spoils from a MySpace phishing attack: 34,000 actual user names and passwords.

The attack was pretty basic. The attackers created a fake MySpace login page, and collected login information when users thought they were accessing their own account on the site. The data was forwarded to various compromised web servers, where the attackers would harvest it later.

MySpace estimates that more than 100,000 people fell for the attack before it was shut down. The data I have is from two different collection points, and was cleaned of the small percentage of people who realized they were responding to a phishing attack. I analyzed the data, and this is what I learned.

Password Length: While 65 percent of passwords contain eight characters or less, 17 percent are made up of six characters or less. The average password is eight characters long.

Specifically, the length distribution looks like this:

1-4 0.82 percent
5 1.1 percent
6 15 percent
7 23 percent
8 25 percent
9 17 percent
10 13 percent
11 2.7 percent
12 0.93 percent
13-32 0.93 percent

Yes, there’s a 32-character password: “1ancheste23nite41ancheste23nite4.” Other long passwords are “fool2thinkfool2thinkol2think” and “dokitty17darling7g7darling7.”

Character Mix: While 81 percent of passwords are alphanumeric, 28 percent are just lowercase letters plus a single final digit — and two-thirds of those have the single digit 1. Only 3.8 percent of passwords are a single dictionary word, and another 12 percent are a single dictionary word plus a final digit — once again, two-thirds of the time that digit is 1.

numbers only 1.3 percent
letters only 9.6 percent
alphanumeric 81 percent
non-alphanumeric 8.3 percent

Only 0.34 percent of users have the user name portion of their e-mail address as their password.

Common Passwords: The top 20 passwords are (in order):

password1, abc123, myspace1, password, blink182, qwerty1, fuckyou, 123abc, baseball1, football1, 123456, soccer, monkey1, liverpool1, princess1, jordan23, slipknot1, superman1, iloveyou1 and monkey. (Different analysis here.)

The most common password, “password1,” was used in 0.22 percent of all accounts. The frequency drops off pretty fast after that: “abc123″ and “myspace1″ were only used in 0.11 percent of all accounts, “soccer” in 0.04 percent and “monkey” in 0.02 percent.

For those who don’t know, Blink 182 is a band. Presumably lots of people use the band’s name because it has numbers in its name, and therefore it seems like a good password. The band Slipknot doesn’t have any numbers in its name, which explains the 1. The password “jordan23″ refers to basketball player Michael Jordan and his number. And, of course, “myspace” and “myspace1″ are easy-to-remember passwords for a MySpace account. I don’t know what the deal is with monkeys.

We used to quip that “password” is the most common password. Now it’s “password1.” Who said users haven’t learned anything about security?

But seriously, passwords are getting better. I’m impressed that less than 4 percent were dictionary words and that the great majority were at least alphanumeric. Writing in 1989, Daniel Klein was able to crack (.gz) 24 percent of his sample passwords with a small dictionary of just 63,000 words, and found that the average password was 6.4 characters long.

And in 1992 Gene Spafford cracked (.pdf) 20 percent of passwords with his dictionary, and found an average password length of 6.8 characters. (Both studied Unix passwords, with a maximum length at the time of 8 characters.) And they both reported a much greater percentage of all lowercase, and only upper- and lowercase, passwords than emerged in the MySpace data. The concept of choosing good passwords is getting through, at least a little.

On the other hand, the MySpace demographic is pretty young. Another password study (.pdf) in November looked at 200 corporate employee passwords: 20 percent letters only, 78 percent alphanumeric, 2.1 percent with non-alphanumeric characters, and a 7.8-character average length. Better than 15 years ago, but not as good as MySpace users. Kids really are the future.

None of this changes the reality that passwords have outlived their usefulness as a serious security device. Over the years, password crackers have been getting faster and faster. Current commercial products can test tens — even hundreds — of millions of passwords per second. At the same time, there’s a maximum complexity to the passwords average people are willing to memorize (.pdf). Those lines crossed years ago, and typical real-world passwords are now software-guessable. AccessData’s Password Recovery Toolkit would have been able to crack 23 percent of the MySpace passwords in 30 minutes, 55 percent in 8 hours.

Of course, this analysis assumes that the attacker can get his hands on the encrypted password file and work on it offline, at his leisure; i.e., that the same password was used to encrypt an e-mail, file or hard drive. Passwords can still work if you can prevent offline password-guessing attacks, and watch for online guessing. They’re also fine in low-value security situations, or if you choose really complicated passwords and use something like Password Safe to store them. But otherwise, security by password alone is pretty risky.

Posted in Culture, Technology | No Comments »

springfield galactica

December 13th, 2006 by abbas

Dylan Meconis has all these cool Simpsonesque images of the entire BSG crew.

Posted in Humour, TV/Movies | 2 Comments »

pride rock

December 12th, 2006 by abbas

A group of lions were marooned in a small island fifteen years ago when the course of the river changed. Instead of perishing, they’ve learned to swim and became strong (as well as large and smart) enough to hunt the only prey available: the giant buffalo.

Thus, the island has become a unique, ecological experiment. In order to exist without the customary spectrum of weaker African prey like zebra, giraffe and impala, the Duba lions have had to develop distinct strategies in order to trap the single available food source.

They have adapted to this challenge by hunting during the day under the baking African sun, swimming through deep rivers in the hunt for buffalo. This water-based training programme combined with a diet of protein-rich buffalo meat has led to the development of huge muscles, and these super-cats now dwarf other lions.

The island lions also use highly advanced psychology in their quest for food, predicting the course of the buffaloes’ daily trek by anticipating their need for water — then lying in wait at the precise spot along the river where the herd will eventually stop for refreshment.

In turn, the buffalo have responded to the threat by merging into a vast mega-herd of 1,200 beasts — five times the size of a normal group. They have also, at times, turned on the lions, killing isolated cubs.

Posted in News, Science | 6 Comments »

lost and found

December 12th, 2006 by abbas

parody of lost.

Posted in TV/Movies | No Comments »

geocaching

December 12th, 2006 by abbas

k5 gets into the nitty and gritty of what geocaching is all about. i’ve been meaning to looking into buying a personal gps. maybe i’ll start geocaching soon. seems like a lot of fun.

Posted in Culture, Technology | No Comments »

yo vanilla

December 12th, 2006 by abbas

Japanese researchers have succeeded in making the sweet smell of vanilla come out of the last thing people could imagine — cow dung. In a world-first recycling project, a one-hour heating and pressuring process allows cow feces to produce vanillin, the main component of the vanilla-bean extract, according to researcher Mayu Yamamoto.

Compared with usual vanilla, “this component is exactly the same but it would be difficult for people to accept it in food, given the recent rules of disclosing the origins of ingredients,” she said.

Posted in News, Science | 1 Comment »

wii wiilii wiinkii

December 12th, 2006 by abbas

why you shouldn’t buy a wii. i am planning on buying one in january. should be fun.

Posted in Technology | 1 Comment »

Firefly universe as an MMORPG?

December 7th, 2006 by abbas

The canceled sci-fi series enjoys a fan base as dedicated as the show’s run was short. Now Firefly fanatics will be able to live in a massively multiplayer online universe carved from Joss Whedon’s vision. A Wired News exclusive by Mark Wallace.

Shiny as it may be, I think some things are better left buried. As much as I love the show and would love to see it back on air, I don’t know if this will make it any good or bad. Think the way of WoW or Star Wars Galaxies. Hmm…I guess we’ll have to wait and see.

Posted in TV/Movies | 2 Comments »

“hello, you’re through to caprica ltd…”

December 7th, 2006 by sasha

battlestar galatica

Posted in Blogs | 5 Comments »

mightier than the sword

December 7th, 2006 by abbas

these are some profoundly beautiful artistic creations by jennifer maestre made just with pencils. she’s done nails, beads and pins too!

Posted in Arts & Literature | 3 Comments »

power science

December 6th, 2006 by abbas

Symmetry Magazine provides 60 second explanations of a series of physical phenomena, including the Acceleration of Particles, the Higgs Boson, superconductors, even The Standard Model, and much more. On Quarks:

Quarks are fundamental building blocks of matter. They are most commonly found inside protons and neutrons, the particles that make up the core of each atom in the universe. Based on current experimental evidence, quarks seem to be truly fundamental particles; they cannot be further subdivided.

Protons and neutrons mainly contain two types of quarks. These are called up and down quarks. For reasons still unknown, nature also designed two copies each of the up and down quarks, identical except for having larger masses. The heavier copies of the up quark are called charm and top quarks; the copies of the down quark are named strange and bottom quarks. Converting energy into mass, accelerators produce these heavier, short-lived quarks through particle collisions.

Posted in Science | No Comments »

losing my religion

December 6th, 2006 by abbas

What sort of insane thoughts go through these peoples heads? Dennis Prager, who is demanding Muslim Rep.-elect Keith Ellison swear in using the bible, was appointed by President Bush in September to the taypayer-funded U.S. Holocaust Memorial Council. Are all Jews also asked to swear in using the Bible?

Edit: Bob Merkin has his rant on this whole topic. Go check it out on Planet Vleeptron.

Posted in Politics, Religion | 5 Comments »

smutflakes

December 5th, 2006 by abbas

sami shah of blackfish fame has posted three short clips of one of his comedy shows. do check it out.

Posted in Humour | 1 Comment »

physics stories of 2006

December 5th, 2006 by abbas

Courtesy AIP.

THE PHYSICS STORY OF THE YEAR FOR 2006 was, we believe, the new high precision (0.76 parts per trillion uncertainty) measurement of the electron’s magnetic moment by Gerald Gabrielse and his colleagues at Harvard. Then in a second paper the same experimenters used the new moment in tandem with a fresh formulation of quantum electrodynamics (QED) provided by theoretical colleagues to formulate a new value for the fine structure constant (denoted by the letter alpha), the pivotal parameter which sets the overall strength of the electromagnetic force. The new value has an uncertainty of 0.7 parts per billion, the first major revision of alpha in 20 years. A comparison between this new value and values determined by other methods provides the best test yet of quantum electrodynamics (QED) ( also see Physics Today, Aug 2006).
Other top physics stories for the year, in no particular order, are listed below with links to pertinent PNU items (and sometimes figures) from the past year. These top stories include the observation of many more supernovas at redshifts of 1, thus establishing the idea that dark energy was around even in the early universe; the first direct measurement of turbulence in space; the best direct test of Einstein’s E=mc^2 formula; new WMAP measurements of the cosmic microwave background, including polarization information, help to sharpen cosmological numbers such as the age or the flatness of the universe; first matter-antimatter chemistry; elements 116 and 118; 2006 Nobel prize in physics for Smoot and Mather; advances in plasmonics, or “two-dimensional light”; advances in the study of graphene, including the discovery of a new form of the Hall effect; progress at several labs in modeling gravity wave transmissions from black hole mergers, the kinds of events which LIGO or LISA would possibly detect; measuring the presence of virtual strange quarks inside protons; acoustic lasers; evidence for negative electrical resistance; a particle laser or “PASER”; hypersound; heaviest baryons discovered; investigating whether the electron/proton mass ratio changed over time; optical “cloaking” (Science, 8 Sept); telecloning; rare positronium ion; wireless energy transfer; the sharpest object ever made; chemical transistor; radioactive scorpion venom for brain cancer therapy; liquid flowing uphill; and stock market criticality.

Posted in Science | 1 Comment »

nasa’s image of the day

December 5th, 2006 by abbas

Forty-one years ago today on Dec. 4, 1965, NASA launched Gemini VII. With this mission, NASA successfully completed its first rendezvous of two spacecraft. This photograph, taken by Gemini VII crewmembers Frank Lovell and Frank Borman, shows Gemini VI in orbit 160 miles (257 km) above Earth. The main purpose of Gemini VI, crewed by astronauts Walter Schirra and Thomas Stafford, was the rendezvous with Gemini VII. The main purpose of Gemini VII, on the other hand, was studying the long-term effects of long-duration (up to 14 days) space flight on a two-man crew. The pair also carried out 20 experiments, including medical tests. Although the principal objectives of both missions differed, they were both carried out so that NASA could master the technical challenges of getting into and working in space.

Posted in Science | No Comments »

predators vs prey

December 5th, 2006 by abbas

a fascinating collection of videos of predators vs. their prey over at national geographic. octopi are so bad ass it’s not even funny.

Posted in Misc, Science | 1 Comment »

Lost

December 4th, 2006 by sasha

series 3 is in full swing… for fans, it might be great to know that they have commissioned up to SEVEN series! i personally, as much as i love watching Lost, am slightly annoyed!!

the whole dvd box set thing is cool though, especially for people who don’t own a tv (like me).

tv box sets worth getting (no particular order):

24
prison break
lost
wonderfalls
battlestar galatica
firefly
mind your language
regenesis

please add in your own recommendations..

Posted in TV/Movies | 4 Comments »

eeyore made a friend

December 4th, 2006 by abbas

This mule just gave birth. So what’s neat about that, you think. Here’s why it’s amazing (hint: it’s a mule!)

A mule is the hybrid of a horse and a donkey and should be sterile - except in this instance.

There have only been two substantiated cases of a mule giving birth in the past quarter century: one in China in 1988 and the other also in Morocco in 1984.

Posted in News | 1 Comment »

mickey and minnie

December 4th, 2006 by abbas

From USC’s Regional History Collection, here are some early photos of the grand opening of Disneyland (and yes, that’s Uncle Walt at the controls of the Viewliner, the train that ran between Fantasyland and Tomorrowland)

Posted in Culture, Misc | No Comments »

ho ho ho

December 4th, 2006 by abbas

in the spirit of the coming holidays and the long upcoming winter, here’s how to make a 3D paper snowflake.

Posted in Misc | 1 Comment »

durian

December 4th, 2006 by abbas

More than 1,000 people are feared dead after Typhoon Durian hit the Philippines:

Official figures showed 450 dead, 507 injured and 599 missing, but Sen. Richard Gordon, head of the local Red Cross, said he believed more than 1,000 died in the thousands of homes that were buried under 1 1/2 meters (5 feet) of volcanic debris, mud and flood waters.

“At this time, no more. I’m sorry,” Juan Garcia, mayor of devastated Guinobatan town, said when asked about prospects of survivors being found. “It’s almost impossible. They have been buried under sand and boulders. I don’t think they can survive. It’s impossible for anyone to survive.”

Posted in News | No Comments »

trivial pursuit

December 4th, 2006 by abbas

how well can you pick out countries on a map of the world? I got a 42 my first time.  lemme know how you scored.

Posted in Misc | 5 Comments »

Jai guru deva om

December 4th, 2006 by abbas

speaking of galaxies,  here is a map of the entire united federation of planets. i never realized cardassia was so small.

Posted in Culture, TV/Movies | No Comments »

the end is nigh

December 3rd, 2006 by abbas

Galaxies collide, it’s the way of the universe. In about 3 billion years, our Milky Way galaxy will cross path and collide with the Andromeda galaxy (which is much bigger).

This simulation shows what’s in store for our poor Milky Way galaxy.

Posted in Science | 3 Comments »

state of affairs

December 3rd, 2006 by abbas

no comment. there really isn’t anything left to say. courtesy dawn.com

HYDERABAD: Job-seekers beaten up by police

By Our Correspondent

HYDERABAD, Dec 2: Police on Saturday baton-charged candidates appearing for test in the office of the director-general of the Sindh Agriculture Extension for 20 posts of different cadres.

About 3,700 candidates arrived in the office premises and intended to get chance for test-cum-interview in the office.

It led to mismanagement because of small space available in the office.

The candidates tried to enter interview hall in large numbers.

As a result, agriculture authorities called police who on arrival used force to control the crowd.

The candidates got provoked and raised slogans against the officials for denying them opportunity to appear in interview.

A group of candidates tried to enter office of the director which aggravated the situation.

In view of mismanagement, police also stopped the director coordination Abdul Khaliq Soomro from entering the office building which infuriated officials of the agriculture department.

It led to an exchange of hot words between them and police left the venue.

The police force was again called by senior officials of the agriculture department.

Agriculture officials said that interviews of candidates for the posts of chowkidar, steno typist, junior clerk, photographer and watchman were fixed on the same day and there was only one committee of officers to hold interviews.

It led to serious administration problem in the office because they could not control crowd.

Posted in News | No Comments »

the drinks are on me! (kinda…)

December 1st, 2006 by sasha

ok, so apparantly this large UK booze store Thresher, gave its employers a voucher that is valid from today till the 10 December offering 40% off ALL their wine (red and white, french, spanish, italian) and champagne (incl. pink). All of it!

There was no promotion, no ads, no annoying jingle, no nothing! Just simply a voucher given to a few select employees. So to get your hands on one of these coupons you needed to know someone who had one or you have to download it here [PDF file]. Hah! Somehow its found its way online and only a few million people have downloaded it!!

So with the party season coming up, this is uhm quite a lucrative discount to get your hands on. The reason I am blogging it here - gosh, you didn’t think that I was being unscrooge like … charitable type! - hell no, the reason is because its just a great example of the power of the internet. With millions having downloaded it, it will be interesting (for want of a better word) to see how this pays off and if the company (which has stores on almost every high street corner) can withstand such a discount - for now its impossible to access their site as they couldnt cope with the traffic online! So do download the coupon or pass it on and lets see what happens…

Cheers!

Posted in People, Technology | 2 Comments »

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