Something Else

"I am the AUTHOR. I OUTRANK you." -- Franz Liebkind

Posts tagged Technology

Nov 20 '12
newyorker:


Twitter has been instrumental during past moments of political upheaval, typically as a means for citizens to communicate outside the wrath of oppressive states (such as in the Arab Spring). But news, and precedent, were broken here: this is a narration of real, physical violence by the agents of violence, all as the violence is being wrought. And this raises a number of questions for the start-up giants who founded the various platforms…

Emily Greenhouse writes “The Tweets of War,” on Israel’s and Hamas’s recent use of Twitter: http://nyr.kr/UDWiWL

newyorker:

Twitter has been instrumental during past moments of political upheaval, typically as a means for citizens to communicate outside the wrath of oppressive states (such as in the Arab Spring). But news, and precedent, were broken here: this is a narration of real, physical violence by the agents of violence, all as the violence is being wrought. And this raises a number of questions for the start-up giants who founded the various platforms…

Emily Greenhouse writes “The Tweets of War,” on Israel’s and Hamas’s recent use of Twitter: http://nyr.kr/UDWiWL

48 notes (via newyorker)Tags: Israel Gaza Hamas News Twitter Technology War Social Media

Oct 17 '12

35 notes (via nbcparksandrec)Tags: Huffington Post NBC Television Comedy Parks and Rec Tom Haverford Technology Hashtag

Oct 3 '12

discoverynews:

humanity’s reach for space took a major leap sixty years ago today.

unhistorical:

October 3, 1942: The V-2 rocket becomes the first man-made object to reach space. 

At the time of this launch, the V-2 was called the A-4 (Aggregat-4), the fourth and most successful design of Nazi Germany’s “Aggregate” set of rockets. All of this - the V-2 and Germany’s rocket program - was largely the creation of one Wernher von Braun, who, like many other German scientists, made enormous and indispensable contributions to the United States’s own space program. Although von Braun later stated that he had been “interested solely in exploring outer space”, the V-2’s intended purpose by his higher-ups was destruction (later in the war, it was renamed “V-2”, for “Vengeance Weapon 2”). A missile that could reach space could also potentially reach a city like London, which it eventually did, although the rocket’s potential for destruction was severely limited by its inaccuracy and unreliability.

Three test launches of the V-2 failed before the successful fourth, which was conducted at the Test Stand VII facility along the Baltic Sea. The rocket reached a height of around 90 to 100 km, or just enough to cross the boundary of the Earth’s atmosphere into outer space. Dr. Walter Dornberger, another leading figure in Germany’s rocket program, called that day “the first of a new era in transportation, that of space travel…”. Perhaps he was correct in saying so, but the rocket was to fulfill its role as a weapon of war first. As a weapon, it was incredibly inefficient, despite the fact that its supersonic speed and high trajectory made it almost impossible to touch. In fact, more people were killed building the rockets than by any bombings conducted with them. For this reason and because these bombings began in the summer of 1944, this purported “miracle weapon” had a negligible effect on the actual course of the war.

After the war, the Allies (mostly the United States and Soviet Union) absorbed German rocket technology as well as the scientists who had developed it, and based much of their own rocket technology on the V-2. For this reason, the V-2 can be described as “the progenitor of all modern rockets”, serving as the model upon which the Redstone rockets (which took Alan Shepard into space) were based. 

462 notes (via discoverynews & unhistorical)Tags: space science technology tech wwII war 40s military

Jul 29 '12
zolotoivek:

Members of the Smolensk GPU (State Political Directorate), 1920’s.

zolotoivek:

Members of the Smolensk GPU (State Political Directorate), 1920’s.

16 notes (via zolotoivek)Tags: Russia Russian USSR Soviet Union Smolensk 1920's 20's GPU People Photography Technology Invention Automobiles

Jul 26 '12
cabbagingcove:

Household Utensils
Bread Cutter
Coffee Roaster
Carpet Sweeper
Wringer and Mangle
Knife Cleaner
Spice Box
Mrs. Beeton’s Book of Household Management; A Guide to Cookery in All its Branches. Mrs. Beeton, 1907.

cabbagingcove:

Household Utensils

  1. Bread Cutter
  2. Coffee Roaster
  3. Carpet Sweeper
  4. Wringer and Mangle
  5. Knife Cleaner
  6. Spice Box

Mrs. Beeton’s Book of Household Management; A Guide to Cookery in All its Branches. Mrs. Beeton, 1907.

58 notes (via vintagevision & cabbagingcove)Tags: edwardian Illustration laundry technology

Jul 20 '12
scanzen:

Szkafanderba öltöztetett bábu A szovjet tudomány és technika 50 éve kiállításon. Bojtár Ottó felvétele. Élet És Tudomány, 1967. IX. 15.Dummy wearing space suit at the exhibition “50 years of the soviet science and technology”, Budapest, 1967. (Cover of hungarian monthly magazine “Life And Science”)

scanzen:

Szkafanderba öltöztetett bábu A szovjet tudomány és technika 50 éve kiállításon. Bojtár Ottó felvétele. Élet És Tudomány, 1967. IX. 15.

Dummy wearing space suit at the exhibition “50 years of the soviet science and technology”, Budapest, 1967. (Cover of hungarian monthly magazine “Life And Science”)

38 notes (via scanzen)Tags: scan cover cosmonaut space suit soviet exhibition science technology

Jul 19 '12
If this country is to continue leading the world both economically and technologically, then someone has to be willing to spend money on silly risks. Someone has to fund a production line for the integrated circuit computers that T.I. can’t see a use for. Someone has to send rockets into space for no other reason than because we can, and because we should see what happens after that. It’s the American way.
— Alex Koppelman on what Mitt Romney doesn’t understand about America and its innovators: http://nyr.kr/LZ0Rxa (via newyorker)

217 notes (via newyorker)Tags: Innovators America History Tech Technology Romney Obama Inventors Business News Politics Government