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Earth

Breaking the Squid Barrier 126

An anonymous reader writes "Dr. Steve O'Shea of Auckland, New Zealand is attempting to break the record for keeping deep sea squid alive in captivity, with the goal of being able to raise a giant squid one day. Right now, he's raising the broad squid, sepioteuthis australis, from egg masses found in seaweed. This is a lot harder than it sounds, because the squid he's studying grow rapidly and eat only live prey, making it hard for them to keep the squid from becoming prey themselves. If his research works out, you might one day be able to visit an aquarium and see giant squid."
Games

The Murky Origins of Zork's Name 70

mjn writes "Computational media researcher Nick Montfort traces the murky origins of Zork's name. It's well known that the word was used in MIT hacker jargon around that time, but how did it get there? Candidates are the term 'zorch' from late 1950s DIY electronics slang, the use of the term as a placeholder in some early 1970s textbooks, the typo a QWERTY user would get if he typed 'work' on an AZERTY keyboard, and several uses in obscure sci-fi. No solid answers so far, though, as there are problems with many of the possible explanations that would have made MIT hackers unlikely to have run across them at the right time."

Comment Re:Just off the top of my head (Score 1) 211

Do they pay attention to temperature with any granularity? "Cold aisle temperature" is not a single number; it varies. If it *doesn't* vary, they're either REALLY good (unlikely) or spending too much on cooling and charging you too much. Field Guide to Datacenter Temperature Monitoring: http://www.sensatronics.com/index.php/support/library/265.html 5% off from the Engineering department, use this code: ENG09 (expires Jan 1 2010)

Comment Temperature monitors (Score 1) 152

I'm a design engineer at a temperature monitoring company (not a sales guy, I asked 'em not to bug you) and could probably give you a suggestion or two for your wiring etc. (A sales guy saw your post and asked me "how Slashdot worked" so I told him I'd contact you.)

Of course, I think in terms of our devices - we have a 16-channel monitor that's rated for installation down to -40 C (-40 F) and isn't terribly expensive ($499, I think, but since I'm a tech guy I don't know for sure) plus $50 per probe. Max run on a probe is half a mile (2600' or so) over cat5 (or you can buy more expensive long probes.) If you use someone else's hardware, look for industrial-temperature rated hardware if the PCB is going to be inside the cooled area. Mechanical parts (e.g. hard drives) should be avoided at all costs.

If you have any more specific questions I'd be happy to answer, even if you don't use our hardware. Our stuff is all Ethernet interfaced, for an example look at:

For humans:
http://em1.sensatronics.com/

For computers:
http://em1.sensatronics.com/config/
http://em1.sensatronics.com/data/

XML for computers:
http://em1.sensatronics.com/xmlconfig/
http://em1.sensatronics.com/xmldata/

Perl scripts are available that grab data from the devices. Note that they don't log data (normally... there's an HTTP POST feature that does log up to 18 hours of data) but are designed to get the data into PC-land as quickly as possible. They run a tiny embedded OS, Linux is a bit heavyweight for cheap 256K flash hardware. (uCOS/2, not that it matters.)

--Drew Van Zandt
    Hardware Engineer
    Sensatronics LLC
    http://sensatronics.com/

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