Tag Jamie Hyneman

Myth…Busted

Last week, Adam Savage and Jamie Hyneman, the stars of MythBusters, were in town to accept the 2008 Outstanding Lifetime Award in Cultural Humanism from the Harvard Humanist Society.

Adam, who is not only an atheist but, as he mentions, a fourth-generation atheist, delivered a wonderful acceptance speech that references Carlos Castaneda’s philosophical tome “The Eagle’s Gift” as his inspiration to expand his consciousness through science and reason. The folks at BoingBoing not only transcribed the speech, they made a cool looking webpage just to display it.

Jamie’s remarks haven’t been similarly posted yet, although one commenter at that link who was apparently there said that he started off by saying “What he said.”

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

Just Tell Them Adam And Jamie Did It

Oh those wacky MythBusters! They just can’t bear to go a single episode without an earth-shattering kaboom. Apparently, yesterday, Adam Savage, Jamie Hyneman and crew were just outside some sleepy little suburb east of their home base in San Francisco, blowing shit to smithereens as usual. This time, though, they got a little carried away and used enough explosives to shatter windows all over town. Oops.

Even though Adam and Jamie always tell you “Don’t try this at home…EVER!”, I am going to share with you this webpage which tells you how to make your own thermite. Thermite is a substance made up of iron oxide and, most commonly, aluminum that burns like a sonofabitch once you ignite it, and the MythBusters use it in stunts when they need something to reach a very high temperature in order to destroy it, or whenever they need something to make a really flashy display (thermite is often used in fireworks, for example). It doesn’t explode, but it can be used to make other things explode, and the military uses it for incendiary munitions when they want to set fire to buildings rather than cause explosions.

So you can imagine the sort of fun you could have with it. Just be prepared to tell the police and fire department that you were SURE you saw a red-headed guy and a walrus with a beret running in the other direction.

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

Myth: Busted

The other night I was watching a rerun of the Mythbusters episode where they attempt to debunk several elements of the persistent conspiracy theory talk that the moon landings were faked. Quite honestly, some of the ways they chose to debunk the claims were themselves a little less than convincing, as Phil Plait noted back when the episode first aired last August. But the most convincing one they did was a segment where they went to an observatory that has a laser which can pinpoint a series of reflectors placed on the moon by Apollo 17. The astronomer showed them how she aims the laser at known coordinates on the lunar surface, and measures the response — when the laser hits the reflectors (which are big prismic arrays about the size of a car door panel), it basically bounces back and is picked up by the observatory’s instruments. Thus, it is demonstrable that the astronauts did go to the moon and deliberately leave the reflectors in documented locations.

Works for me, since I have no doubt in my mind in the first place that we absolutely did send astronauts to the moon and bring them back again. But if you STILL need more hard evidence, well, maybe THIS will sell you:

India (yes, I said India) launched its first lunar probe, Chandrayaan, late last year. Apart from the bragging rights and the obvious technological benefits, the ostensible scientific mission of Chandrayaan is to produce a complete three-dimensional atlas of the lunar surface, including mapping the geological, mineralogical and chemical compositions of the surface.

Today, the Times Of India reports, a scientist involved in the project has told them that Chandrayaan has also mapped and photographed the landing sites of five of the six Apollo missions that landed on the moon (via slashdot). This would be the first direct photography of the sites other than the mission photography itself, and further proof of the reality of successful manned landings on the lunar surface.

Of course, this won’t deter the hardcore conspiracy loonies, but it might shut up the occasional asshole in a bar who won’t shut up about such nonsense.

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

Sci-Tech Link Dump

Time again to blow through a bunch of assorted but unconnected links to things I’ve read in the science and tech worlds recently:

Mother Jones magazine featured this quasi-interview with MythBuster Jamie Hyneman about alternative energy technologies. I say “quasi-interview” because his responses to their questions are so terse that it’s hard to tell if he actually said them or not, except that Jamie is rather short-spoken in the first place. The piece says that he’s really into alt-energy, and on the show the MythBusters have repeatedly demonstrated that most of the “free energy” stuff you see is total hogwash. Something to think about, since this morning everybody has a link to this “$1/gal Ethanol” story in Popular Mechanics.

RetroThing had me all nostalgic the other day for the very first computer I ever owned, the Sinclair ZX81. Mine was not a kit, it came fully-assembled. I bought it second-hand from my high-school best friend Andy, who had moved on to such cutting edge technology of the day as the TRS-80. It even came with the add-on 16K memory module. The post includes a link to this page which tells you how to build your own ZX80/81 with a couple dozen ICs and a circuit board, but if you don’t feel like building one, you can just download an emulator here.

The science journal Nature has this news article about understanding metabolism as a genetic condition. British researchers re-used some urine samples originally collected for another study and used a new form of spectroscopy to completely identify all the chemicals in the samples. They then identified the geographies of the test subjects and graphed specific metabolites and were able to determine that different populations have unique metabolic rates. People in Southern China, they conclude, have the best metabolisms in the world. People in South Texas have the worst metabolisms in the world. Yet more scientific evidence as to why one should stay away from Texas, if you ask me.

You knew I would have at least ONE nanotech link, right? Of course right! Today’s nano-news is this bulletin that tries to sex up the story with the headline “Nanotechnology paves way for super iPods”. Nice try. The underlying story is that a team at University of Glasgow have figured out how to make molecule-sized switches, which in turn will allow for as many as 1 billion transistors to fit on a single chip (up from 200 million today). That, in turn, would increase the density of electronic storage devices without increasing their physical size: 500 terabytes per square inch (compared to about 3 gigabytes now). No actual mention of iPods anywhere in the article. You just have to make the leap of assumption that someday this technology would be used in some future iPod so that you could store every song ever recorded.

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

MythBuster Tally

Though I’m not nearly as devoted to it as I am to “Dirty Jobs”, it’s safe to say that I am a fan of the Discovery Channel series “MythBusters”. In fact, in general, where I used to automatically default to the Food Network when I couldn’t find anything to watch on TV, I now gravitate immediately to Discovery Channel. And, since they LOVE to run their shows into the ground, it’s pretty likely I can catch either an episode of “Dirty Jobs” or “MythBusters” any time, day or night (in fact, Bridget woke up early this morning, turned on the television and watched “Dirty Jobs” at 5:30 a.m.).

For a while, I was making a point of recording the MythBuster episodes on the TiVo, but we rearranged our assorted home electronics earlier in the summer and in the process all of the programming we had set up on it was erased, so I’m a bit behind. I’ll catch up, no doubt, just by randomly tuning in, but in the meanwhile, I ran across this helpful website which keeps track of the results of each and every “myth” they test.

(If you’re a fan, you might also like to check out Jamie Hyneman’s no-nonsense website for his visual effects company, M5 Industries. Adam Savage has a website, too, but it’s a little stale)

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

All Original Content Copyright © BrianKaneOnline
All Other Content Copyright © Its Original Authors

Built on Notes Blog Core
Powered by WordPress

Switch to our mobile site