Sunday, April 29, 2012

Your Daily Posterous Spaces Update

Your daily Update April 29th, 2012

Neil deGrasse Tyson: Why has America stopped reaching for the stars?

Posted about 20 hours ago by W_thumb The Week to Holy Kaw!

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Stars
In the mid-'60s, 4 percent of tax revenue flowed to NASA. Today, that number is one-half of 1 percent. Space travel inspires us to dream about tomorrow, says Neil deGrasse Tyson. So why did we give up?

I study the universe for a living. I've served on two presidential commissions that studied space exploration, but at heart I'm an academic. Being an academic means I don't wield power over person, place, or thing. I don't command armies; I don't lead labor unions. All I have is the power of thought.

And here's my thought: As a nation, we need to keep reaching for the stars, to push back our boundaries and stake out new frontiers. Many will ask, "Why are we spending billions of dollars up there in space when we have pressing problems down here on Earth?"

Full essay at The Week.

Photo: NASA, ESA, and the Hubble Heritage Team

All the top stories from The Week.

Anatomy of a job interview [infographic]

Posted about 23 hours ago by Po-wed_006__2__thumb Kate Rinsema to Holy Kaw!

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Via Highest Paying Careers.

Acing the infographic.

小田原

Posted about 22 hours ago by Ls_3058_hoo_thumb Koichi Mitsui to s a s u r a u

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連休初日。

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27 ways to get people to tune you in

Posted about 16 hours ago by Po-wed_006__2__thumb Kate Rinsema to Holy Kaw!

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If you’ve already overcome the writer’s block, hit on some great content and run the gamut of ways to put your name out there, you may be left wondering why no one seems to be listening. Nick Thacker of livehacked.com has been there, done that and has a few great suggestions you may not have considered or may have just needed a push to try.

Consider this your well-intentioned push; we’re listening.

1. Ask

I can think of no better way, and no way that’s led to more open doors, than simply asking people to do something. Sure, it takes guts—but that’s why you’re different. You have the guts—go ask!

2. Advertise

If you want a measurable and controllable result, give advertising a shot. It may not be perfect for your niche, but chances are there’s at least something you can advertise in some way. Most pros say to give it at least six months, too, so if you don’t have the funds, this may not work. Check out Project Wonderful for dirt-cheap ads that have gotten me results in the past.

3. Guest post

We all know this one, so there’s no use recounting all of its benefits here. Suffice it to say there have been many successful blogs that have used this strategy almost exclusively to get attention.

4. Share

Almost anything can be shared—blog posts (as in guest posting), ideas, network leads, products, etc. Which leads me to:

5. Joint ventures

JVs are great for getting your message out to huge lists of people, for the price of sharing your profits with another marketer. Check out the Warrior Forum for an entire board dedicated to JV opportunities.

Full story at ProBlogger.

Let your voice be heard.

Photo credit: Fotolia

The Back to the Future timeline [infographic]

Posted about 16 hours ago by Po-wed_006__2__thumb Kate Rinsema to Holy Kaw!

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Via ~mushir @ DeviantArt.

Movie infographics.

Survivor of 2012 Full Crew Farallones Race tragedy speaks out

Posted about 15 hours ago by Po-wed_006__2__thumb Kate Rinsema to Holy Kaw!

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Even the wildlife around Farallon Island sounded mournful as a helicopter readied the ill-fated sailing boat, “Low Speed Chase,” to be lifted to Half Moon Bay Airport after what’s been called the worst sailing accident in recent memory, where one of the eight-man crew died and four are still missing.

Perhaps riding the ocean swells in a sailboat isn’t your idea of a relaxing day on the water, but as survivor Bryan Chong – who has bravely stepped forward to make sure the true story of what happened on April 14 is told – noted, danger doesn’t stop sports lovers from pursuing their healthy addiction to adventure. In the aftermath of the accident, though, he hopes that from now on, discussions of safety will feature more prominently in sailing circles everywhere.

The story of the Low Speed Chase actually started off at a frustratingly slow pace, the crew unable to catch enough wind to maneuver through the starting gate until plenty of other boats had passed them by. As Chong described the scene after they finally cleared the Golden Gate Bridge and headed toward the rocky Farallon Islands:

The mood on the boat is relaxed. We chat about which of our three kites will be safest for the ride home. We’ve accepted our place in the back of the pack now, so there is no need to risk equipment or safety. Our mindset is definitely not aggressive.

With their most highly skilled crew member on the wheel, the boat started encountering far rougher conditions, though, as they came around the islands. This video was taken in calmer conditions by Deception, another boat in the race that took a similar course to Low Speed Chase:

Embedded media -- click here to see it.

That’s when trouble hit, according to Chong:

I see another wave approaching in the distance. It’s coming from the same direction as the other swells but it’s massive. I’ve seen large waves before but this is unlike anything I’ve ever seen outside of big-wave surf videos.

As the wave approaches it begins to face up, its front flattening as it crests. By the time our boat meets it, there’s no escape route. Alan steers the boat into the wave and the bow of Low Speed Chase ascends the breaking wave, which seconds sooner would have been a giant swell and seconds later would have already broken. Instead, we’re heading into a crashing wall of water with 9-10 knots of boat-speed and it breaks directly on us. I lock my right arm to the bottom lifeline and brace for the impact. The last thing I see is the boat tipping toward vertical with a band of water still above it. A single thought races through my head: “This is going to be bad.”

Unfortunately, Chong was correct. A second wave ripped him off the boat, tossing him into the churning waters that eventually deposited him on low rocks with his two fellow survivors, Jay and Nick.

Nick, who broke his leg while it was wrapped around a stanchion and had a better view, tells me the boat surfed backwards with the wave for a stretch then rotated 90 degrees counter-clockwise before the wave finally barrel rolled it.

A memorial flotilla was launched by the sailing community to mourn its loss and Chong says that the most important lesson he takes away from this tragic experience is one of taking responsibility for his personal safety. Would they have been rescued had the tracking device’s batteries not been checked? Should they have been tethered to avoid being ripped from the boat even though conditions initially seemed calm?

Painful questions to ask, but food for thought.

Embedded media -- click here to see it.

Full story at Latitude 38.

A sad time for sailing.

Why you are always in the slow lane [comic]

Posted about 15 hours ago by Po-wed_006__2__thumb Kate Rinsema to Holy Kaw!

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Of course, you know what the only solution to this dilemma is? Crank that radio and dance like no one is watching!

Full story at The Doghouse Diaries via GraphJam.

All that is not funny about traffic.

Crank up the speakers to taste the live launch experience [video]

Posted about 11 hours ago by Po-wed_006__2__thumb Kate Rinsema to Holy Kaw!

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A well-chosen soundtrack is always a nice touch in Space Shuttle videos, but to get the real experience (well, as close as you can get now), YouTube user Indiegun remastered the sound on a launch of Discovery and encourages users to turn the speakers up and feel the power.

The video isn’t so shabby either.

Embedded media -- click here to see it.

Full story at YouTube via Geekosystem.

The sounds of NASA.

Fun with fallacies [infographic]

Posted about 9 hours ago by Po-wed_006__2__thumb Kate Rinsema to Holy Kaw!

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There’s no better time to brush up on your logical fallacy identification skills than during an election year, so David McCandless at Information is Beautiful has whipped up this handy infographic so you’ll be in top form for every political argument with something more substantial than “That doesn’t sound right.”

Heck, if you can convince a few intellectual friends to study with you, you’ll have a high-brow drinking game ready to go for the debates!

Full story at Information is Beautiful.

Name that logical fallacy.

O&A In Cleveland: 'Crowd Shots' [04-27-2012]

Posted about 6 hours ago by Missing-user-75 erockradio to erockradio's posterous

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O&A In Cleveland: 'Before O&A LIVE' [04-27-2012]

Posted about 6 hours ago by Missing-user-75 erockradio to erockradio's posterous

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