Michael Behar | Writer & Editor | Boulder, Colorado

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December 1, 2002 by Michael Behar

Smithsonian | December 2002

Like a Rowing Stone Download PDF

An unusual canoe competition in Madison, Wisconsin, floats the notion that concrete waives the rules

It’s barely daybreak in Madison, Wisconsin, but John Gilbert has already worked up a sweat. The 54-year-old, self-described concrete connoisseur is pacing the southern shore of Lake Mendota, which borders the sprawling University of Wisconsin campus. On this summer weekend, the university is hosting the 15th Annual National Concrete Canoe Competition, a collegiate event Gilbert hasn’t missed since 1990. At the moment, he’s inspecting 25 slender canoes—one from each contending school—neatly aligned at the water’s edge. Continue reading →

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September 19, 2002 by admin

The Economist | September 2002

Color BarsGoodbye to the Video Store Download PDF

For too long, “video-on-demand” has promised more than it could deliver. But new ways are emerging for shrink-wrapping massive video files for delivery over the Internet.

It sounds like the movie addict’s ultimate fantasy: a TV-mounted set-top box that taps the film libraries of Hollywood’s big studios. A film buff could peruse thousands of titles spanning dozens of genres, from enduring classics to the latest blockbuster releases. After deciding what to watch, viewers would enter a password, confirm credit-card details, and then sit back as 5.1-channel surround-sound video streams from a remote web server into a home-theatre system in their living room.

Too good to be true? For the moment, yes. Bespoke video-on-demand is at least three years away. But the difference now is that Movielink—a recently formed joint venture between MGM, Paramount, Sony, Universal and Warner Bros—is preparing a collective library for just such a service. The venture intends to serve up an almost unlimited selection of films over the Internet and, eventually, through a web-connected set-top box. Continue reading →

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July 19, 2002 by admin

Wired | July 2002

Cold Rush Download PDF

Long hours. Subfreezing winds. Months of absolute darkness. Welcome to the South Pole, where the coolest science outpost on earth is being built atop 9,000 feet of solid ice.

After a grueling 18 hours on the ice, Jerry Marty wanders into the communications center at Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station and collapses on a tattered sofa. It’s midnight and the place is quiet. As the National Science Foundation’s representative for the station, Marty is, in effect, the mayor of the South Pole. A lanky 55-year-old with fair hair and a broad mustache, he is overseeing construction of a $153 million research facility that will replace the Pole’s current structure—a 27-year-old geodesic dome that is slowly being buried under mounting ice and snow. The sleek new station will have it all: from private rooms outfitted with Ethernet and telephone hookups to modern labs and medical facilities—plus a cozy bar where researchers can host their time-honored Slushy Night in style. By 2006, after 15 years of planning, design, and construction, South Pole scientists and support staff will have a home fit for the 21st century.

But building the new station is a tremendously complex endeavor that demands precision choreography among 85 onsite construction workers, contractors in Denver, architects in Honolulu, administrators in Washington, DC, and a 10,000-mile supply chain that begins aboard a cargo ship in Port Hueneme, California, and culminates at the Pole six weeks later with the daily arrival of up to seven ski-equipped cargo planes. Hence, Marty sleeps by the radio in the “comm center”—if any one of these variables goes awry, he needs to be the first to know. Continue reading →

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July 11, 2002 by admin

Business 2.0 | July 2002

metal faceComputer, Heal Thyself Download PDF

IBM is developing computer systems that monitor themselves and repair glitches as they arise—which could dramatically cut the cost of network maintenance.

Computer networks are fragile and temperamental creatures. They’re prone to unpredictable software glitches and mechanical failures. They’re vulnerable to traffic bottlenecks and hostile intrusions. They’re difficult to diagnose when things go wrong. They’re also extremely expensive, because it takes a lot of people to keep all those finicky machines humming. According to the Standish Group, tech department salaries account for as much as 45 percent of the total cost of running large computing clusters—the labyrinth of application servers, workstations, storage systems, and peripherals that lies at the heart of all networked businesses.

Researchers at IBM think there’s a better way to keep these systems running. “If the demand for IT management continues at the current rate, soon everyone will be a systems administrator,” jokes Robert Morris, director of IBM’s Almaden Research Center in San Jose. Morris believes that tedious, labor-intensive tasks such as updating software, modifying settings, formatting drives, recovering lost data, and optimizing network traffic should take place automatically, behind the scenes, in much the same way that the human autonomic nervous system monitors and adjusts the activity of the heart, lungs, and circulatory system without any conscious effort. With that idea in mind, IBM has launched an ambitious initiative to develop hardware and software systems that can take care of themselves. Continue reading →

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May 24, 2002 by admin

WIRED | MAY 2002

The New Mobile Infantry Download PDF

Battle-ready robots are rolling out of the research lab and into harm’s way.

Lieutenant Colonel John Blitch retired from the Army last fall, filling out the paperwork in an out-processing office of the Pentagon on the morning of September 10, 2001. In his three years at the helm of the Defense Department’s Tactical Mobile Robots Program, Blitch had funded nearly a dozen academic and corporate research efforts. Their goal: building bots to replace human soldiers and rescue workers in dangerous situations. Barrel-chested and brawny, the 43-year-old Special Forces officer was leaving to direct the Center for Intelligent Robotics and Unmanned Systems at the Science Applications International Corporation, an engineering outfit and defense contractor in Littleton, Colorado. He planned to start the 1,500-mile drive the following day.

With news of the terrorist attacks, though, Blitch scrapped the trip. He removed his belongings from the flatbed trailer hitched to his pickup, loaded up a set of tactical mobile robots, or TMRs-most about the size of a football and fitted with rugged treads and an assortment of sensors—and headed for New York. On the road, Blitch donned his fatigues, dug out his military ID, and worked his cell phone, summoning colleagues from Florida to Boston to pack up their finest tactical robots and rendezvous at Ground Zero. “When I arrived, we passed through 32 checkpoints,” he recalls. “People were asking, ‘Who is this guy in camouflage running around with grad students and robots?'” Continue reading →

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March 31, 2002 by admin

SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN | MARCH 2002

Defying Gravity Download PDF

A small Swiss firm develops an innovative G suit for fighter pilots.

Col. Hank Morrow, commander of the 149th Fighter Wing of the Texas Air National Guard, has been flying for more than two decades. In that time, he has seen aircraft push the high-performance envelope: planes today are so fast and nimble that standard evasive maneuvers can add nine times the weight of gravity, or nine g’s, to the mass of a pilot’s body. That amount of force causes fatigue, blackouts, even death as gravity drives blood and oxygen from the brain, lungs and heart. G suits are supposed to protect pilots by filling with compressed air and squeezing the lower extremities to shove bodily fluids upward. Yet G-suit technology has stagnated for almost half a century, while rapid innovations in aircraft design have put many pilots at the mercy of their machines. All that could change if the air force chooses to outfit its aviators with a revolutionary liquid-filled G suit called the Libelle.

The suit is the brainchild of Andreas Reinhard, a former Swiss Air Force fighter pilot turned inventor and founder of Life Support Systems, a company he launched in 1996 to develop the Libelle. Instead of using air, the Libelle forms a liquid barrier around the pilot, much like a baby is protected in the womb. Morrow recently tested the suit at Edwards Air Force Base in California and was so ecstatic with the results that he told the members of the Libelle team he would write them a personal check on the spot if they would sell him one. Continue reading →

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March 24, 2002 by admin

THE ECONOMIST | MARCH 2002

Heavenly Music Download PDF

A handful of satellite start-ups are hoping to deliver global digital audio to the last analogue holdout: radio. Meanwhile, conventional AM and FM broadcasters are responding with their own digital scheme.

The launch of America’s first satellite-radio service was not without its hitches. XM Satellite Radio, the first firm to go live in the United States, began broadcasting late last year. But its start had already been postponed following September 11th. Eventually, when Hugh Panero, XM Radio’s chief executive, was able to flip the switch, the company’s two geostationary satellites began beaming 100 channels of CD-quality music and talk to listeners in San Diego and Dallas—the two first test markets.

But no sooner had the trials started than another problem emerged. The solar arrays on both of XM’s Boeing 702 satellites were found to be degrading faster than expected. The estimated 15-year lifespan of the $150m satellites was suddenly cut in half. It is a good thing that XM keeps a spare. Continue reading →

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March 2, 2002 by admin

THE WASHINGTON MONTHLY | MARCH 2002

The Broadband Militia Download PDF

A new breed of underground Internet entrepreneurs could end the recession. If only Washington would let them.  

On a recent crisp sunny day in Manhattan, I strolled up to a faded wrought-iron bench in Tompkins Square Park, flipped open my new Sony Vaio laptop, and as I sipped a cappuccino, began downloading my email. While new messages zipped into my PC at speeds many times faster than a dial-up connection, I scanned the day’s headlines on CNN.com, then clicked over to E*TRADE to eye the market. In a handful of New York City’s parks, coffeehouses, and other public areas, many are doing the same: getting online, surfing the Web, and checking email. And, like me, they’re doing it wirelessly. What’s more, they’re avoiding the aggravations typically associated with getting high-speed Internet: no more waiting months for DSL providers to switch on service or for cable providers to upgrade your building. Wireless broadband is happening now, and best of all, it’s free. Continue reading →

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