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Medicine

Who's In Charge During the Ebola Crisis? 279

Lasrick writes: Epidemics test the leadership skills of politicians and medical infrastructures, which is clear as this article goes through the different ways West African countries have dealt with the Ebola crisis. Now that fears are spreading about a U.S. outbreak (highly unlikely, as this article points out), it may be time to look at the U.S. medical infrastructure, which, of course, in many ways is far superior to those West African countries where the virus has spread. But there is an interesting twist to how disease outbreaks are handled in the U.S.: "The U.S. Constitution—written approximately 100 years before the germ theory of disease was proven by French chemist Louis Pasteur and German physician Robert Koch — places responsibility for public health squarely on the shoulders of local and state political leaders ... one could argue that the United States is hobbled by an outdated constitution in responding to epidemics. State and local jurisdictions vary tremendously in their public health capabilities."

Submission + - Coalition accused of 'bullying' ANU after criticism of divestment (theguardian.com)

mdsolar writes: The government has been accused of bullying the Australian National University, after Joe Hockey criticised it for divesting from a number of fossil fuel companies.

In highly unusual remarks about a business’s investment decisions, the treasurer said ANU should reconsider its decision to jettison investment in seven firms – Santos, Iluka Resources, Independence Group, Newcrest Mining, Sandfire Resources, Oil Search and Sirius Resources.

“I would suggest they’re removed from the reality of what is helping to drive the Australian economy and create more employment,” Hockey told the Australian Financial Review.

“Sometimes the view looks different from the lofty rooms of a university.”

Hockey is one of several politicians to publicly rebuke ANU over its fossil fuel divestment. The assistant infrastructure minister, Jamie Briggs, said he would write to the ANU vice-chancellor, Ian Young, to ask him to reconsider the blacklisting of coal seam gas company Santos.

“To publicly denigrate the reputation of one of South Australia’s finest companies is a disgrace,” Briggs said. “This seems to be taking green activism to a new level where it is damaging Australian companies and potentially job creation in the country.”

Comment like the iwatch (Score 2) 100

LOL Microsoft developed an analog keyboard. OR they just remembered how their palm pilots worked and ported it to android..

my thought exactly, and then I recall how blackberry took a big chunk of the pda market from palm. perhaps the smaller form factor will make it compelling again.

on the otherhand apple watch already demoed transmitting drawn shapes on their watch presumably for the same rationale of input to a small form factor.

Comment Re:Our PC society will be our demise! (Score 1) 193

the news increasingly censors any opinion that would be against socialism or popular accepted opinions

I find it incredible that in the 21st century Internet-connected Scandinavia, there are no independent contrarian news outlets.

There are. Don't conflate Sweden with the rest of Scandinavia, and even if Sweden there are contrarian outlets, it is just that most Swedes pretend opions they don't like don't exits.

Earth

NASA Finds a Delaware-Sized Methane "Hot Spot" In the Southwest 213

merbs writes According to new satellite research from scientists at NASA and the University of Michigan this "hot spot" is "responsible for producing the largest concentration of the greenhouse gas methane seen over the United States—more than triple the standard ground-based estimate." It covers 2,500 square miles, about the size of Delaware. It is so big that scientists initially thought it was a mistake in their instruments. "We didn't focus on it because we weren't sure if it was a true signal or an instrument error," NASA's Christian Frankenberg said in a statement.

Comment Re:Well duh. (Score 1) 293

My office hosts a lot of visiting international workers. Mostly from China.

It's pretty clear after working with them for a while and listening to them talk that American = white to them.

It's very weird, because my cube-mate (right across from me) is black. They would say to us both... inappropriate things like: "Americans have such pale skin" and we would both just kind of look at each other in bafflement as to what to say to that.

Sam

Comment Re:Ion Thruster (Score 1) 48

JP Aerospace thought enough of the idea to study it and run computer simulations:
http://www.today.com/id/502538...

About 2/3 down the page under the heading "Getting to Orbit"

""What if you flatten it out and give it a little bit of aerodynamic shape, and point it up a little bit so you have some of that thrust turned into lift?" Powell asked. "As you climb up, your drag is dropping, and now you're accelerating. The question comes, can you get aerodynamically clean enough, while still supporting the lift enough to slowly get faster and faster ... to get all the way to orbit? Is there a drag-power combination to do that? We think there is. It looks like there's a wide margin.""

"To achieve orbital flight, the craft would require a spaceworthy propulsion system — something more substantial than helium and propellers. Powell would turn to the type of continuous-thrust ion propulsion system used on NASA's Deep Space 1 and the European Space Agency's SMART 1 moon probe. Based on computer simulations with different configurations, he contends that such engines could drive the mega-balloon to orbit in three to nine days."

Comment Re:MPG estimates based on driving like an idiot? (Score 1) 403

No, they're claiming that the UK test cycle is overly optimistic (which is very true!), the article with the original data is here, and contains a similar chart for the EPA cycle. Spoiler: it's dead-on accurate, most people do indeed drive like idiot jackrabbits:

http://emissionsanalytics.com/beware-the-danger-of-downsizing/

USA
Eng(L) Var    Real MPG
1-2    2%     34.0
2-3    -1%    28.2
3-4    0%     21.5
4-5    3%     20.1
5-6    -3%    17.5
6+     1%     16.9
Avg    0%     23.0

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