And yew thought yew knew every plucking thing!

Saturday, December 5, 2009

I Bet You Didn't Know

Before the Battle of Agincourt in 1415, the French, anticipating
victory over the English, proposed to cut off the middle finger of all
captured English soldiers. Without the middle finger it would be
impossible to draw the renowned English longbow and therefore they
would be incapable of fighting in the future. This famous English
longbow was made of the native English Yew tree, and the act of
drawing the longbow was known as "plucking the yew" (or "pluck yew").

Much to the bewilderment of the French, the English won a major upset.
And began mocking the French by waving their middle fingers at the
defeated French, saying, See, we can still pluck yew!

Since 'pluck yew' is rather difficult to say, the difficult consonant
cluster at the beginning has gradually changed to a F', and thus the
words often used in conjunction with the one-finger-salute!

It is also because of the pheasant feathers on the arrows used with
the longbow that the symbolic gesture is known as "giving the bird."

IT IS STILL AN APPROPRIATE SALUTE TO THE FRENCH TODAY!

And yew thought yew knew every plucking thing!

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Get Medieval: How to Build a Metal Forge

Thursday, December 3, 2009

Make a propane-powered forge in your garage and get your hammer and anvil ready
By Vin Marshall Posted 12.03.2009 at 3:59 pm 0 Comments

Propane Forge The forge, assembled. Vin Marshall

Forging steel is significant for several reasons. It's one of the oldest metal-forming operations in existence. Blacksmiths throughout history have (and continue to) forge steel to create things ranging from practical to beautiful and everywhere in between. Industrial processes often involve forging not only for the efficiency with which it forms metal, but also for the way in which it strengthens the part by aligning the grains in the steel along the lines of its shape. Did you know that you could be doing this same time-tested technique at home? Here is how I built my own propane forge.

At my old shop, I had a talented blacksmith as a neighbor (check out his work: www.andyuprightmetalworks.com) who got me interested enough to take a stab at forging on my own. I did some interwebs research and came upon a few Web sites on which people documented their own forge builds. Almost all of them used a burner design called the "Reil Burner," which has the distinct DIY advantage of being constructed almost entirely from plumbing parts. If you have access to a drill press or a drill and a very steady hand, you can build this burner.

After finding out how easy this was to do, I was hooked on the idea of forging at home. I needed three things to start. A hammer, an anvil and a forge. One of the things that I find most fascinating about blacksmiths is that they traditionally build all the rest of their tooling starting with those three simple items, and in so doing, learn their trade. The hammer and the anvil are easy to obtain. Lets look at how to construct a simple propane forge.

Propane Forge: The forge, assembled.  Vin Marshall

We need two things for our forge: A box to hold heat and a burner to make heat.

Lets look at the burner first. There is an awful lot of forge related and other information on Ron Reil's page, including the details of just how and why his propane burner works so well. If you want to cut to the chase, as I'm going to do here, then start with this set of plans for the Reil Burner. I also recommend reading at least some of the supporting documentation on the site, such as this page about the EZ-Burner.

Propane Forge Burner
Forge - The Burner:  Vin Marshall

I made my burner very slightly differently than the Reil burner. Using an idea I stole years ago from someone else's forge page (I cannot remember exactly where or I would cite it), I used a MIG welding tip as the propane gas jet instead of a #60 drill hole. In theory, that would have allowed me to adjust the fuel / air mixture by changing welding tips, though I never did. I'm fairly certain that either method will work equally well. I also mounted my 1/8" gas tube through the pipe reducer rather than on the face of it. Again, I don't think this makes any difference in the function of my burner. It just seemed like a cleaner way to assemble the burner.

To build this burner, you will need to acquire the following:

  • 8" long, 3/4" black pipe nipple
  • 1 1/2" to 3/4" pipe reducer
  • 3" long, 1/8" pipe nipple (I used brass here because I ended up sourcing parts at Home Depot and that was what they had. Either brass or steel will work fine.)
  • 1/8" pipe cap (of the same material as the 1/8" nipple)
  • 1/8" to 1/4" NPT bushing (same material as above)
  • 1/4" ball valve
  • An 0.040" or 0.045" MIG welding tip (if you decide to use this as the gas jet)
  • 3" of 1" I.D. pipe
  • 5 3/4" long #4 set screws.
  • If you are mounting the 1/8" nipple used to the face of the pipe reducer, you will only need 3 of the above set screws. You will also need two small U-brackets suitable for holding the 1/8" pipe nipple and 4 machine screws of a suitable size to use with those brackets.

The pipe reducer must be modified slightly to accept the 1/8" pipe nipple that will carry the gas flow. If you choose to follow the construction of my burner, drill two 7/16" holes in the sides of the reducer such that the pipe nipple can pass through the center of the large end. This is the arrangement pictured. You will also need to drill and tap two holes for set screws in the back of the reducer. These set screws retain the pipe nipple.

Alternately, pipe hold-down clamps can be used to attach the 1/8" pipe nipple. This will require four holes to be drilled and tapped so that the clamps can be bolted to the back of the reducer.

Gas Metering Jet
Forge - Gas Metering Jet: I stole someone else's clever idea (a long ago, and I cannot remember where I found it) to use a welding tip as the gas metering jet instead of drilling a hole in the gas tube. This allows for a certain amount of fine tuning of the flame, by changing out the "jets."  Vin Marshall

The 1/8" pipe nipple itself must also be modified. This pipe provides the gas flow to the burner and contains the gas metering jet. In the simplest implementation of this design, a #60 wire size hole in the pipe nipple is sufficient (really small drills are given numerical sizes called wire sizes. You will probably have to order this drill if you do not already have one, unless you have a great local hardware store). I decided to make my life a bit more complicated - probably needlessly so - and drilled and tapped this pipe nipple to accept a MIG-welding-gun tip.

After the pipe reducer and the 1/8" pipe nipple have been prepared, the rest of the burner basically bolts together.

The 1/8" tube carrying propane into the burner
Forge - Burner Gas Plumbing: The 1/8" tube carrying propane into the burner is mounted through or on the back of the reducing pipe fitting. In my design, I mounted it through this fitting.  Vin Marshall

The 8" long 3/4" pipe nipple threads into the 3/4" side of the pipe reducer. The 1/8" pipe nipple is inserted through the holes or under the clamps on the other end of the pipe reducer. If you are taking the welding-tip-as-gas-jet approach, install the welding tip now. Using teflon tape or pipe dope, assemble the pipe cap onto one of the protruding ends of the 1/8" pipe nipple and the plumbing necessary to connect to the propane line from your regulator on the other. In my case, that plumbing consisted of a brass 1/8" NPT to 1/4" NPT bushing and a 1/4" NPT ball valve. From there, a 1/4" propane hose connects to a regulator mounted on the propane tank.

Flared Cone for the Propane Burner
Forge - Flared Cone:  Vin Marshall

The last bit of fabrication in the burner is the cone. This requires some forging. You can either improvise with an oxy-acetylene torch and a rosebud tip, use someone else's forge, or wait until yours is set up to make this last piece. When you do make it, following the Reil burner plans, flare one end to be about 1/8" larger all around. After the cone has cooled, you'll need a way to attach it to the business end of the burner. Drilling and tapping for three set screws 120 degrees apart worked well for me. Ron Reil's EZ-Burner page gives instructions for positioning this cone on the burner to give a properly tuned flame.

At this point, you have a working basic burner. There are many refinements that could be made (the idle circuit some people use would be a great improvement), but you have at least enough of a burner to begin forging. So now let's build the box.

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White House gate crashers

Saturday, November 28, 2009

statedinner1125

  • These people are officially the greatest showboat reality-tv-whore badasses ever. Tareq and Michaele Salahi totally crashed the White House’s state dinner last night, and they did it in a blatant way, with Facebook photos, time with Rahm Emanuel (above) and no security clearance. Who knows how they got in; we wanna know what they’re gonna get out of it. source

Posted by Ernie Smith • Permalink

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UFO-obsessed Briton loses bid to block US extradition

Thursday, November 26, 2009

UFO-obsessed Briton loses bid to block US extradition

November 26, 2009 by Trudy Harris --> McKinnon, accused of hacking into US military and NASA computers, faces extradition to the United States

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Briton Gary McKinnon leaves the High Court in central London in January 2009. McKinnon, accused of hacking into US military and NASA computers, faces extradition to the United States after the British government Thursday rejected last-ditch requests to block the move.

A Briton accused of hacking into US military and NASA computers faces extradition to the United States after the British government Thursday rejected last-ditch requests to block the move.

Home Secretary Alan Johnson said he concluded that sending Gary McKinnon to the United States would not breach his human rights, and has no general discretionary powers to stop the extradition.

"If Mr McKinnon's human rights would be breached, I must stop the extradition. If they would not be breached, the extradition must go ahead," Johnson said in a statement.

"As the courts have affirmed, I have no general discretion," he said.

McKinnon, who suffers from a form of autism, could spend life in prison if convicted by a US court of gaining access to 97 computers in 2001 and 2002 in the aftermath of the September 11, 2001 attacks.

McKinnon says he was only looking for evidence of unidentified flying objects (UFOs) when he hacked into the US Navy and space agency computers.

Throughout the long-running case, McKinnon's lawyers have argued against extradited in part because he suffers from Asperger's Syndrome, and could commit suicide or suffer psychosis if it went ahead.

McKinnon's mother slammed the minister's decision as "barbaric".

Janis Sharp warned that the 43-year-old was terrified of extradition and the case has taken its toll on his mental health.

"To force a peaceful, vulnerable, misguided UFO fanatic like Gary thousands of miles away from his much-needed support network is barbaric," Sharp said.

"This is a cruel and miserable decision," she said, adding that the , should "hang their heads in shame."

"If the severity of Gary's medical condition isn't sufficient to prevent his extradition, I can't imagine what is. God help others facing a similar fate."

His cause has drawn high-profile support, including from Trudie Styler, wife of rock star Sting, who urged Britons to write to the Home Secretary.

Last month, the High Court in London refused McKinnon leave to appeal to Britain's new Supreme Court against his extradition.

The Home Office agreed to study new medical evidence about McKinnon before deciding on his extradition.

But Johnson has since told McKinnon's family that he could not block the move on medical grounds.

He said however he had received guarantees from US authorities that McKinnon's medical needs would be met once extradited, and, if convicted, he would not serve any time in a "supermax" prison.

"Due to legitimate concerns over Mr McKinnon's health, we have sought and received assurances from the United States authorities that his needs will be met," Johnson said.

"Finally, should Mr McKinnon be extradited, charged and convicted in the US and seek repatriation to the UK to serve a custodial sentence, the government will, of course, progress his application at the very earliest opportunity."

McKinnon's solicitor said she would now seek a judicial review of Johnson's decision, and lodge an application before the High Court within seven days.

"We are certainly coming to the end of the road, but we are just hoping that at some point, someone sees sense and steps in," Karen Todner told the BBC.

"In some ways it's like dealing with a death row case, we genuinely believe Gary's life is at stake here."

His lawyers say he could easily be prosecuted in Britain, where he would face a less severe sentence. But the Crown Prosecution Service ruled in February that the case was best brought in the .

(c) 2009 AFP


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Think These Are Photoshopped? Guess again!

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Browse > Home / Art and Design / Think These Are Photoshopped? Guess again
Think These Are Photoshopped? Guess again

Think These Are Photoshopped? Guess again

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I know you’ll think that these amazing images are photoshopped. It happens for time to time that life is even stranger than anything you can photoshop.

Look again at these REAL images, and read about the most amazing things from around the world!

A Glitch in the Matrix

real 01 in Think These Are Photoshopped? Think Again

That car rendered from what looks like vector graphics from an old-school arcade game is a wire-frame sculpture by artist Benedict Radcliffe. And we mean an actual frame made of wires.

real 02 in Think These Are Photoshopped? Think Again

Reportedly, it received a ticket for being illegally parked, though if we had been there we’d have quickly gotten another ticket for climbing inside, picking it up and running down the street making engine sounds.

And in Season 6 of Lost, They Reveal That the Island is Actually an Ocean

real 03 in Think These Are Photoshopped? Think Again

What appears to be the background for a cheesy 80s album cover is actually an untouched photo from Salar de Uyuni in Bolivia, the largest salt flat in the world.

It frequently floods with a shallow layer of water, allowing that dude pull off the Jesus move in the picture. Apparently it’s a popular tourist site for the natural beauty, leading to construction of a salt hotel, which we suppose makes it the worst vacation destination in the world if you’re a slug.

God’s Sand Art

real 04 in Think These Are Photoshopped? Think Again

Take the people out of this photo, and it looks like a bad painting. It’s the wave rock formation in Arizona, formed out of ancient sand dunes and creating that crazy depth perception-destroying optical illusion.

We’re not kidding, every damned picture of this thing looks fake. Including some that look like freaking finger paint.

real 05 in Think These Are Photoshopped? Think Again

“But This Store Goes to 11…”

real 06 in Think These Are Photoshopped? Think Again

There are marketing geniuses, and then there are the kind of visionaries who look at the ugly security fence on their storefront and decide it sort of looks like a guitar amp. Thus the Guitar Store in Southampton just went all the way with that idea, complete with big knobs and everything. We want to hire that guy to decorate our adult book store.

The Large Hadron Collider’s First Victim

real 07 in Think These Are Photoshopped? Think Again>

The lady whose midsection appears to be in the process of getting sucked into a black hole is Cathie Jung, who, as you can see, has an entire website based around the fact that her body is terrifying to look at.

Thanks to a lifetime of wearing increasingly smaller and more ridiculous corsets, she has a 15-inch waist and presumably a liver that’s been flattened to the thickness of a Fruit Roll-up.

And Its Second Victim…

real 08 in Think These Are Photoshopped? Think Again

If you’re not clear what’s so remarkable about this triangle sculpture thing, look closer and follow the surfaces from one angle to the next. That’s right, it’s utterly impossible, with its MC Escher design that seems to break all laws of the known universe.

When this sculpture–located in Perth, Australia–is viewed from another angle you can see the complicated way it manipulates perspective to get the effect…

real 09 in Think These Are Photoshopped? Think Again

…but what we love about it is there’s no plaque explaining what the sculpture is all about either, so nobody knows what the f**k it’s supposed to be unless they’re standing in exactly the right spot.

If There’s One Sport You Just Have to Try In Your Life…

real 39 in Think These Are Photoshopped? Think Again

Once more we are presented with a photo that not only appear to be a Photoshop, but a bad one.

But, no, Ostrich racing is an all too real sport in several countries, though we admit these photos seem to portray frat guys enjoying the sport ironically.

real 40 in Think These Are Photoshopped? Think Again

Ostriches have a reputation for being ornery sons of bitches, so we’re guessing that half of the excitement is watching to see which jockey gets his eyes pecked out mid-race.

Scientists Combine Human and Slinky DNA

real 41 in Think These Are Photoshopped? Think Again

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Monsters of the deep revealed in sea census

Monday, November 23, 2009

Monsters of the deep revealed in sea census

November 23, 2009 5:25 PM
275x250.jpgBizarre sea creatures including an octopod dubbed Dumbo because of his giant ear-like fins, have been found as part of a deep sea census.

The previously unseen creatures live more than a mile beneath the ocean in pitch black conditions.

A total of 5,722 odd species were discovered as part of the Census of Marine Life - which used deep-towed cameras to give us a better picture of what lives in our oceans.

One such critter was the elephant-eared octopod (pictured) which was dubbed Dumbo of the deep - it is a six-foot-long cirrate octopod which was found on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge.

Another was the sea cucumber (below) whcih was found at 2,750 metres in the Northern Gulf of Mexico - I think looking at them we can see why they live in pitch black conditions.

275x250.jpgA spokesperson said: "Census of Marine Life scientists have inventoried an astonishing abundance, diversity and distribution of deep sea species that have never known sunlight – creatures that somehow manage a living in a frigid black world down to 5,000 meters (~3 miles) below the ocean waves.

"Revealed via deep-towed cameras, sonar and other vanguard technologies, animals known to thrive in an eternal watery darkness now number 17,650, a diverse collection of species ranging from crabs to shrimp to worms.

"Most have adapted to diets based on meager droppings from the sunlit layer above, others to diets of bacteria that break down oil, sulfur and methane, the sunken bones of dead whales and other implausible foods."

LINKS
Census of Marine Life   

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- "Monsters of the deep revealed in sea census" - from @newslite

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