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Top Stories of the Week

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Top Stories of the Week

Top Stories of the WeekBugger | See how Hugh Grant turned the tables on the paparazzi

Top Stories of the WeekWhy Are So Many People Dancing in Apple Stores?

Yesterday, while cruising through my normal tour through the darkest, most bizarre corners of the internet, I came across a jarring (albeit established) little tech phenomenon. People love dancing in Apple Stores. Like, dancing like maniacs. Why? Why not? Brilliant. More »

Top Stories of the WeekI Sat on a $6,400 Toilet and It Changed My Life

Let's get one thing straight-Kohler's Numi toilet isn't for you. Unless you're a Saudi oil sheik, lottery winner, or generally filthy rich person, you won't consider a toilet that costs half a year's rent. But it's spectacular. More »

Top Stories of the WeekBlackBerry PlayBook Review

No, it's not bad, like you expected it to be. More »

Top Stories of the WeekBehind the Largest Counterfeit Audio Sting in History (Exclusive Photos)

Think you got a good deal on those Beats by Dre? Might've. Or maybe you paid too much for a knockoff. Thanks to easily accessed suckers like you, business in the world of phony high-end audio has never been better. More »

Top Stories of the WeekHow a Fukushima-Level Disaster Would Affect You In New York, LA or Chicago

The Japanese government has expanded the long-term evacuation radius around the Fukushima nuclear plant to 30 kilometers (18.6 miles). The United States government is still asking to all their citizens inside an 80-kilometer radius to leave. That's almost 50 miles. More »

Top Stories of the WeekExclusive Images of FlipLive, the Streaming Video Camera that Will Never Be

Here are the first photos of Flip's never-to-be launched FlipLive.
The FlipLive was supposed to be Flip's next-generation camcorder, one that could stream video to the cloud. But Cisco killed the brand the day before the Live was supposed to launch. More »

Top Stories of the WeekThe Flip Camera Is Finally Dead-Your Smartphone's Got Blood on Its Hands

Today, we pay our respects to an old, departed, obsolete, redundant friend. Here lie the remains of Flip, a product nobody needed anymore or cared about. So, its creator decided to destroy it. More »

Top Stories of the WeekWhy Everyone Loves Yuri Gagarin, the First Human to Reach Space

It happened when Earth was still in black and white: 50 years ago we stepped outside our home planet for the first time. This is the tale of the beginning of an adventure that hasn't ended yet, the biggest, most dangerous and rewarding quest ever embarked on by the human race-the fascinating story of two men who took us to a new level. More »

Top Stories of the WeekA Hacker's Shady Start: Geohot In Middle School

George "Geohot" Hotz wanted to crack the PS3-so he did, and infuriated Sony. He's become a target, globetrotter, and spectacle. But before? He was little tech-inept deviant. Gizmodo's got his yearbook, and two people who probably signed it. More »

Top Stories of the WeekThese Are the First Three Adobe Photoshop Touch Apps for iPad

Rejoice, Photoshop junkies of the world, because Adobe is jumping into the tablet world for real. And while this is not Photoshop for iPad (yet), my most precious body appendage is tingling with pleasant turgidity anyway. More »

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MY 511 Transit Update



MY 511 Transit Status for omsssignal
April 16, 2011 - 12:00 AM

Home to Work
(12th St. Oakland City Center)

24th St. Mission:  << No data available >>
Daly City:  << No data available >>
Dublin/Pleasanton:  << No data available >>
Fremont:  3, 23, 53 min
Millbrae:  << No data available >>
Montgomery:  << No data available >>
SF Airport:  << No data available >>
SF Airport then Millbrae:  <2, 22 min
Call 511 for ongoing updates.

Go to my home page.


ABC NewsMail - afternoon edition

ABC News

 

 Afternoon Edition. Sat 16 Apr 2011


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 Top StoriesMore Top Stories > 

There are no reports of damage so far.

Quake hits north Queensland
A 5.4 magnitude earthquake has hit north Queensland, with its impact felt in Mackay, Airlie Beach and other towns.

Simpson's Gallipoli gallantry considered for VC
Thirteen former Australian servicemen are to be considered for a posthumous Victoria Cross.

Massive budget cuts expected in May
Confidential Treasury figures showing a $13 billion fall in economic growth this financial year are expected to force drastic cuts to the Federal Government's May budget.

Man to be deported after 40 years in Australia
A British citizen who has lived in Australia for more than 40 years has lost a bid against being deported on character grounds.

NAB branches open after system glitch
More than 100 National Australia Bank branches have opened today to help customers affected by its latest computer glitch, which left large numbers of people without pay and affected a wide range of bank transactions.


 The DrumMore from The Drum > 

Defence Minister Stephen Smith (centre) and Air Chief Marshal Angus Houston (right) talk with Mentoring Task Force soldiers in the Uruzgan province of Afghanistan.

Carbon, pokies, deficit... now a fight with the army
Defence Minister Stephen Smith is wrestling with the leadership of Australia's Defence Force. The scale of the fight has one key principle: civilians control the military. That point seems to be lost on some commanders in the ADF, who apparently believe that the correct role for their Minister is compliant figurehead. Stephen Smith has picked a worthy fight. But maybe declaring war on the military is a fight too far for the Gillard Government.

Marching for Anzac in the 51st state
The insidious, merciless, life-long damage of war taught many of us to recognise the difference between the empty symbolism of war and the actual meaning.

Working towards a more productive society
Work matters, but there's more to life than work for work's sake, which gets overlooked when talk is about 'getting bludgers off the dole'.

Misogynistic schmuck week
Paul Sheehan and Bob Ellis elected themselves under the campaign slogan "women are a bunch of whingers and feminism has failed".

Green China? You'd better believe it
China's green energy is expected to generate 290 GW power in 2020, equivalent to 15 per cent of the country's total energy consumption. And Australia? By 2030 green energy will share 8 per cent of our total energy consumption. While Australian politicians are arguing what to do about climate change control, Chinese policy makers have moved quietly and leave us well behind.


 WorldMore World Stories > 

Strong quake shakes Tokyo buildings
A strong earthquake of magnitude 5.8 has hit central Japan, shaking buildings in the capital Tokyo.

Burkina Faso leader sacks government
The president of the West African state of Burkina Faso, Blaise Compaore, says he has sacked his government following a reported mutiny by members of his personal guard.

Gaddafi accused of using cluster bombs
Fighting is raging in the long-besieged rebel-held Libyan city of Misrata where a human rights group claims the Libyan army was using banned cluster bombs.


 Science & TechnologyMore Science & Technology Stories > 

Marine life discovered after iceberg moved
The removal of a massive iceberg from the Mertz glacier in East Antarctica has revealed a huge diversity of new life.

Researchers rally against major funding cuts
About 100 people have gathered in Darwin's CBD to protest against possible funding cuts by the Federal Government to medical research.

Funding on the table for science festival
Chief Minister Jon Stanhope says the Government is considering new organisations to take over running the Australian Science Festival.


 EnvironmentMore Environment Stories > 

Marine life discovered after iceberg moved
The removal of a massive iceberg from the Mertz glacier in East Antarctica has revealed a huge diversity of new life.

Squatters will fight to keep beach shacks
The owners of squatters shacks in the small coastal communities of Wedge and Grey say they will fight a State Government decision to remove them.

Drug labs creating toxic suburban hazard
New South Wales Police say illicit drug laboratories found in homes are posing a risk to the community, even after they are closed down.



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To ABC Online Home Page
© 2009 ABC | Privacy Policy

This service may include material from Agence France-Presse (AFP), APTN, Reuters, CNN and
the BBC World Service which is copyright and cannot be reproduced.

ABC NewsMail - morning edition

ABC News

 

 Morning Edition. Sat 16 Apr 2011


You are receiving this email because you are subscribed to ABC NewsMail. If you would like to change your preferences, please enter your email address and click 'Login' here.

 Top StoriesMore Top Stories > 

Teenagers are increasingly being reported for using their phones to create and distribute sexual images

Anti-sexting campaign branded dull, unrealistic
The Government is spending over $120 million to educate young people about the dangers of sexting in Australia, but the program has been labelled unrealistic.

Steelmaker echoes calls for carbon compo
One of Australia's largest steelmakers says jobs will be lost if the industry is not fully compensated for a carbon tax.

Obama renews pledge to oust Gaddafi
US president Barack Obama has acknowledged there is a "stalemate" on the ground in Libya, but says the "noose is tightening" on embattled dictator Moamar Gaddafi.

Massive budget cuts expected in May
Confidential Treasury figures showing a $13 billion fall in economic growth this financial year are expected to force drastic cuts to the Federal Government's May budget.

NAB branches to open after system glitch
Over 100 National Australia Bank branches will be opened today to help customers affected by its latest computer glitch, which left large numbers of people without pay and affected a wide range of bank transactions.


 The DrumMore from The Drum > 

Defence Minister Stephen Smith (centre) and Air Chief Marshal Angus Houston (right) talk with Mentoring Task Force soldiers in the Uruzgan province of Afghanistan.

Carbon, pokies, deficit... now a fight with the army
Defence Minister Stephen Smith is wrestling with the leadership of Australia's Defence Force. The scale of the fight has one key principle: civilians control the military. That point seems to be lost on some commanders in the ADF, who apparently believe that the correct role for their Minister is compliant figurehead. Stephen Smith has picked a worthy fight. But maybe declaring war on the military is a fight too far for the Gillard Government.

Marching for Anzac in the 51st state
The insidious, merciless, life-long damage of war taught many of us to recognise the difference between the empty symbolism of war and the actual meaning.

Working towards a more productive society
Work matters, but there's more to life than work for work's sake, which gets overlooked when talk is about 'getting bludgers off the dole'.

Misogynistic schmuck week
Paul Sheehan and Bob Ellis elected themselves under the campaign slogan "women are a bunch of whingers and feminism has failed".

Green China? You'd better believe it
China's green energy is expected to generate 290 GW power in 2020, equivalent to 15 per cent of the country's total energy consumption. And Australia? By 2030 green energy will share 8 per cent of our total energy consumption. While Australian politicians are arguing what to do about climate change control, Chinese policy makers have moved quietly and leave us well behind.


 WorldMore World Stories > 

Disgraced Galliano fired from own label: report
Scandal-tainted designer John Galliano has been fired from his own fashion label just weeks after an anti-Semitic outburst cost him his top job at Dior, according to reports in a fashion trade journal.

Deadly tornadoes rip across central US
At least nine people have been killed, including three young children, as a powerful storm whipped up tornadoes across the central United States.

Taliban claims Afghan bomb attack
The Taliban has claimed responsibility for a suicide attack that killed the police chief of Afghanistan's Kandahar province.


 Science & TechnologyMore Science & Technology Stories > 

Researchers rally against major funding cuts
About 100 people have gathered in Darwin's CBD to protest against possible funding cuts by the Federal Government to medical research.

Funding on the table for science festival
Chief Minister Jon Stanhope says the Government is considering new organisations to take over running the Australian Science Festival.

Scientists teleport Schrodinger's cat
Researchers from Australia and Japan have successfully teleported wave packets of light, potentially revolutionising quantum communications and computing.


 EnvironmentMore Environment Stories > 

Hunter mining jobs 'safe' under a carbon tax
The Federal Minister for Climate Change Greg Combet says jobs at Hunter Valley aluminium smelters will be supported with revenues from the carbon tax.

Steelmaker echoes calls for carbon compo
One of Australia's largest steelmakers says jobs will be lost if the industry is not fully compensated for a carbon tax.

Tarkine road revived
The Tasmanian Government's disputed plan to build a tourist road in the Tarkine is back in a new form, but one which remains unpalatable to people concerned about the plight of the threatened Tasmanian devil.



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the BBC World Service which is copyright and cannot be reproduced.

The Crazy Design of NASA's New Mars Rover

By Rachel Swaby

The Crazy Design of NASA's New Mars Rover

The Crazy Design of NASA's New Mars RoverNasa is getting ready to throw a Mini Cooper-sized mobile science lab up into space. Curiosity, as the rover is affectionately called, is headed toward Mars with a payload of lasers and mass spectrometers and multi-million dollar robotic drills—basically all the stuff needed to prove fourth planet conditions are capable of supporting microbial life… conditions depending, of course. But in order for Curiosity to even get the chance at an alien discovery, it can't show up dressed as a multi-million dollar fireball.

Nasa engineers started brainstorming how exactly to land their lab in 2003, and they quickly found themselves up against three big barriers to safe entry. The first: the rover's size. At nearly 2000 pounds, it is much bigger than any of Nasa's previous Mars-bound rovers. Second: Engineers know roughly where touchdown will take place, but they have no idea what kind of boulders, craters or other uneven ground is waiting there. An unexpected rock should make the mission, not tip the whole thing over. Third: Rovers typically land on a platform that they have to dismount upon arrival. If the egress is too steep due to a hill landing, for instance, the whole mobile lab could go wheels over instruments.

Proven technologies didn't stand up to the present challenge. They thought about landing the thing on a platform with legs—a technique that goes back to the Surveyor and Apollo programs in the 1960s. When the rover is ready to explore, all it has to do is navigate a ramp before driving away. The idea seemed pretty straightforward, but when they sat down to crunch the numbers, there was a high probability that a hillside landing could topple the whole mission. "You travel millions and millions of miles to get to Mars. Your rover's ready to start, but then it needs to get off of its own platform," explains Mars Laboratory lead engineer Tom Rivellini. "And that turns out to be just as risky as getting all the way to the surface."

The Crazy Design of NASA's New Mars RoverSecond generation systems in the Mars Exploration Rover and Mars Pathfinder missions used fixed-thrust solid rocket motors right before touchdown and an airbag to absorb the final impact. Unfortunately, neither would work here."We tried wrapping air bags around it, which had been very successful previously," says Rivellini, "but it was just too big." Legs and airbags were out.

After weeks of searching for a new strategy, they came up with an idea that Peter Theisinger, manager of the entire project, called crazy. (For a man who deals with spaceships and Mars and the search for alien life forms, the comment is significant.)

"Rover on a rope" came up in one of those brainstorming sessions where outlandish ideas are given play in order to rule them out. The idea was this: they would hang the rover on cables below a throttleable rocket, which would ease the rover down at ¾ meters per second to the ground. You get that? Like a helicopter lowering a secret agent down to a rooftop in an action movie, a computer controlled jet pack would lower Curiosity to the Mars surface.

 

Did I mention that the rover also lands blind? Oh yeah, the only thing making the decisions during the landing is a supercomputer on the hovercraft, which plummets to its electronic end (after flying away from the landing area) once changes in the up-force signal that the rover has touched down.

It certainly sounded crazy, but after a bit of thinking and modeling, the whole team fell in love with it. The sky crane landing system (the name that replaced "rover on a rope") allows the lab to hit the ground rolling. Eliminating the ramp descent gets rid of a huge percentage of the tipping risk. When on the ground, Curiosity is hard to tip over; its six wheels are spread wide and have independent drive motors built for overtaking obstacles up to 30 inches high. The throttleable rocket-besides satisfying our love for all things jet pack-like—gives programmers more control over touchdown.

The Crazy Design of NASA's New Mars Rover

After lots of modeling and a very tough independent review board, the idea was given the green light. Years of work and testing and review have gone into perfecting the 115 feet before Curiosity touches down on Mars. (There are several other things that happen-like a parachute opening and the spacecraft splitting in two—before the rover finds itself hanging from a rope). As Rivellini wrote in a National Academy of Engineering piece, "It's not the fall that kills you, it's the landing."

Rachel Swaby is a freelance writer living in San Francisco.

Images and video courtesy NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

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