27 septiembre 2011

Blacktip sharks attack shoal of fish ~ Tiburones punta negra atacan un cardumen

The video taken at the Kuredu Island resort in the Maldives in the Indian Ocean. The way the fish move as a collective is mesmerizing.

About the sharks: Blacktip sharks are generally shy and rarely attack humans. Their average length is 1.5m. Blacktip sharks are known to leap out of the water and spin 3-4 times at the end of feeding runs. During these jumps they can attain speeds of 6.3 m/s.

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El video fue tomado en un resort en la isla Kuredu en las Maldivas situado en el oceano Índico. Es impresionante cómo se mueven los peces en relación a los tiburones.

Acerca de los tiburones del video: Los tiburones punta negra son tímidos y rara vez atacan a los seres humanos. Miden un promedio de 1.5m. Se ha observado a los tiburones punta negra realizando saltos fuera del agua en donde giran su cuerpo 3 o 4 veces al cabo de una cacería. En estos saltos logran velocidades de 6.3 m/s.

Sources ~ Fuentes:
Video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zvfY8-3ktNA&
Blacktip Shark. Wikipedia. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blacktip_shark

24 septiembre 2011

In an Age of Fops and Toys

by Ralph Waldo Emerson In an age of fops and toys, Wanting wisdom, void of right, Who shall nerve heroic boys To hazard all in Freedom’s fight,— Break sharply off their jolly games, Forsake their comrades gay And quit proud homes and youthful dames For famine, toil and fray? Yet on the nimble air benign Speed nimbler messages, That waft the breath of grace divine To hearts in sloth and ease. So nigh is grandeur to our dust, So near is God to man, When Duty whispers low, Thou must,The youth replies, I can.

12 septiembre 2011

WAR AGAINST THE GATEKEEPERS OF EDUCATION

A call to arms!

College students: Get a textbook for your class, put it up online and share it with your classmates for free.

Public education is becoming too expensive for students. It's time students fought back!

Keep your methods on the DL, don't get caught, don't be stupid, don't use public file sharing networks.

Don't buy books you don't need to buy!

Students of the world unite!

Manul Chao

Pallas's Cat or Manul

This feline is the size of an average domestic cat and lives in the grasslands common to India, Pakistan, western China, Mongolia, Afghanistan and Turkmenistan. Its habitat comprises a large area, yet the manul is a threatened animal because people hunt it for its fur. The manul eats small rodents, and is a solitary creature. It owes its unique appearance to a relatively undisturbed evolution. Notice its round pupils and thick hair. It is also very stocky compared to other felines. This cat is a window in time: the geography of its habitat has allowed it to exist as it has for 12 million years. In other words, you're looking at a cat that looks the same now as it did 12 million years ago.

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El gato de Pallas o el gato manúl

Este felino es del tamaño de un gato doméstico típico y vive en los llanos de la India, Pakistán, China occidental, Mongolia, Afganistán y Turkmenistán. Aunque el hábitat del manul cubre un gran área, el manul está amenazado como especie ya que la gente lo caza por su pelaje. El manul come pequeños roedores y es una criatura solitaria. Debe su apariencia a una evolución sin mayores disturbios. Note sus pupilas redondas y su pelo grueso. También es fornido en comparación con otros felinos. Hace 12 millones de años el manul mantenía la misma forma. La geografía de su hábitat ha permitido al manul mantener su forma de vida por 12 millones de años. A través de este gato podemos ver a través del tiempo hacia nuestro pasado.

Photos: Tambako the Jaguar
Source: Manul – the Cat that Time Forgot. The Ark In Space. 20 April 2011.

11 septiembre 2011

San Clemente 7/24/09 ~ South Swell 8-10+ ft.

Modern Samurai Cuts BB Gun Pellet in Air

The samurai, Isao Machii, displays unbelievable accuracy.

10 septiembre 2011

Imagine being fired for telling your colleagues what the rules are at work

A Wisconsin Department of Transportation worker was fired when he informed his colleagues about a policy on giving out free ID cards for voting. Wisconsin law requires voters to show photo ID at the voting booth, and the photo ID is free... if you ask for it. Otherwise, it's $28. A memo was previously sent out to DMV workers instructing them not to offer the ID card free of charge to customers unless they specifically requested it.

The body of the worker's email is below:

"Do you know someone who votes that does not have a State ID that meets requirements to vote? Tell them they can go to the DMV/DOT and get a free ID card. However they must ask for the free ID. a memo was sent out by the 3rd in command of the DMV/DOT. The memo specifically told the employees at the DMV/DOT not to inform individuals that the ID’s are free. So if the individuals seeking to get the free ID does not ask for a free ID, they will have to pay for it!!

"Just wanted everyone to be informed!! REMEMBER TO TELL ANYONE YOU KNOW!! ANYONE!! EVEN IF THEY DON’T NEED THE FREE ID, THEY MAY KNOW SOMEONE THAT DOES!! SO TELL EVERYONE YOU KNOW!!"

Source:
Patrick Marley
Milwaukee-Wisconsin Journal Sentinel
Link: http://www.jsonline.com/blogs/news/129469023.html

Somewhere Over the Rainbow

08 septiembre 2011

Patients Deserve to Know What Drug Companies Pay Their Doctor

by Tracy Weber and Charles Ornstein
ProPublica, Sep. 7, 2011, 9 p.m.
Original source

Your doctor gives you an expensive new drug to control your cholesterol, or recommends a certain brand of artificial hip, or says you need a stent to open a clogged artery.

He's the expert. But how do you know his expertise is untainted? The makers of the drug, the replacement hip or the stent may have paid your doctor to deliver promotional talks extolling the virtues of the product. Or they could be paying him, or her, to consult on marketing plans.

It doesn't necessarily follow, of course, that this kind of moonlighting influences the treatment you receive. And many doctors don't accept these kinds of payments. But if yours does, wouldn't you like to know that?

As it stands, doctors don't have to tell you if they're working with the makers of the products they're prescribing you. They don't have to tell you whether they own stock in those companies or do research on their behalf.

There's no place for you -- the patient -- to find out whether your doctor is prescribing more drugs or medical devices made by companies with whom he has a relationship.

Understanding such ties can be important. Many brand-name drugs are wildly expensive, and some carry an array of dangerous side effects. Sometimes similar drugs, either those made by competitors or generics, are cheaper or have fewer risks.

Patients largely trust their doctors to do what's right for them. But a recent string of scandals has raised questions about whether patients need to know more. Pharmaceutical and medical device makers have paid billions of dollars to settle accusations of kickbacks to doctors and improper marketing of their products.

Many physicians say the close ties between drug and device firms and doctors lead to new and more effective medications, life-saving innovations and a better-educated profession. Although this is certainly true, the relationships also can cause physicians to -- consciously or not -- downplay side effects and poor research outcomes, studies show.

Earlier this summer, for example, the Spine Journal devoted an entire issue to repudiating the research of several spine experts that supported the widespread use of a Medtronic bone growth product used in spinal fusions. The articles charged that the researchers, who had substantial financial ties to Medtronic, overstated the benefits of the product, Infuse, and ignored its risks.

Only recently have some tools become available to help patients learn about their doctors' financial ties before they are in the exam room.

Several companies, pressured by Congress or required by legal settlements, have started to reveal the names of the doctors they've paid to deliver promotional talks or serve as consultants.

By 2013, every drug and device company operating in the United States will have to do the same, under the health-care reform law passed last year. They'll also have to say if they've paid doctors for consulting, research, even a dinner.

We've looked at the data from 12 companies, which make up 40 percent of U.S. drug sales, and found some surprises among pharma's favored speakers and consultants.

Many of the doctors who received the most money hadn't published much in the way of research, and many didn't have associations with academic medical centers. Some had no credentials beyond a medical license. And some had been sanctioned for misconduct by their home state medical boards.

Among the top-paid speakers from that sampling was Santa Monica pain physician Gerald Sacks. Since 2009, he has earned at least $522,113 giving promotional talks and consulting for four companies, according to the data.

Sacks, an anesthesiologist, isn't a leader in prominent pain medicine societies, and several top pain physicians told us they hadn't heard of him. He doesn't work in an academic medical center such as UCLA or USC. He hasn't published much research. We tried to talk to him about what he was paid for, but he didn't return numerous messages.

Sacks' slides from a 2008 educational talk and 2009 presentation before the U.S. Food and Drug Administration describe him as the director of pain management at St. John's Health Center in Santa Monica. A hospital spokesman said Sacks has never held that title and that his pain clinic is not part of the hospital. He does have the ability to admit and treat patients at St. John's.

Drug firms have a pretty fair idea of whether their investment in doctors like Sacks pays off. They pay millions to researchers who buy data from pharmacies and track the prescribing habits of doctors. Pfizer, which gave Sacks at least $318,250 for speaking in 2009 and 2010, according to its data, could find out if and how often he gave patients Lyrica and Celebrex, two of the company's pain medications. Firms can also track whether and how often the people who attended such talks prescribed the drugs that were discussed.

But not everyone who would like to examine the data is allowed to. The middlemen who collect this information refused to sell the data to us.

That leaves it up to patients. ProPublica has created a database, Dollars for Docs, which allows you to check whether your doctor is being paid by any of the 12 companies currently disclosing this information.

Because all companies won't reveal their payments until 2013, you might also want to ask your doctor directly about them. It's worth inquiring whether cheaper versions are available, perhaps older or generic drugs. Does the drug have more side effects than competitors' drugs? In some situations, it might be worth asking whether non-drug solutions should be tried first.

Of course, checking the rolls of paid promotional speakers is just one consideration when picking or assessing your doctor. You can also look at your state's medical board website to see if a doctor has been disciplined or criminally convicted. You can talk to other patients about the thoroughness of the doctor's exams and openness to questions.

If you have a smartphone, you can access our database from anywhere -- even while sitting in your doctor's waiting room.

05 septiembre 2011

The Strange Man with the Strange Bird

There once was a strange man with an even stranger bird who moved to little Billy's apartment complex. The man and his bird lived deep inside the underbelly of Billy's apartment complex. Sometimes you could see the man walking about his apartment, but only sometimes. But the man's bird you could always see. Always.

It stared and stared from the window. The instance you tried staring at the bird, you would have found that the bird was already ready and staring back at you. That frightened people and made them look away. They knew the bird was always watching. It was always watching. Always.

It wasn't all bad When the man and his bird arrived: there were fewer rats and pigeons in the apartment complex, and the raccoons that made a lot of noise eating things in the garbage quickly learned to stay away, all because of the man's bird. And so, everybody began to think that the man's bird was a hunting bird. But things changed.

The man's bird didn't stop with rats or pigeons. Every now and then someone's pet cat appeared dead with its belly cut open and its heart missing from its chest. No one could prove that it had been the bird, but nothing like that had ever happened before, and so the man and his bird were suspected by the neighbors of doing awful things. Neither the man nor his bird cared to defend themselves from these accusations, and everyone thought they were all the more stranger for it.

One late afternoon, little Billy and his sister were playing in the parking lot of the apartment complex. The man's bird was staring, as usual, from the second story window into the parking lot. Little Billy noticed that the bird's window was open. Suddenly, a great shadow appeared. Little Billy's sister was gone! The man's bird was gone too! Then Little Billy heard his sister scream a bone-chilling scream. Little Billy was scared, but he followed the noise. As he hurried, he thought he saw some blood on the apartment's white stucco walls. Little Billy's parents and neighbors also ran out of the apartment building toward the noise. They found the strange bird perched on top of a dead man. His eyes had been clawed out and eaten, and his throat had been ripped out. They found his pants around his ankles and he had no underwear on. Between his legs was just a bloody hole. Billy's sister was shaking and crying, but she was otherwise unharmed. The bird had wasted no time.

The strange man appeared among the crowd and the strange bird flew from the dead man's body to perch on the strange man's shoulder. Then the strange man appeared to give the bird a small meaty treat that the bird gobbled immediately. The neighbors couldn't find anything to say, so they said nothing. The strange man nodded at the silence and went back up to his apartment. The police later came and cleaned up the mess.

The strange man and the strange bird continued to live as they had. Every now and then, mean and scary people from around the neighborhood appeared dead with their eyes clawed out and their throats ripped open, and every now and then, the police would come by and clean the mess. Nobody bothered the strange man nor his bird, but sometimes the neighbors left them food, for thanks. Because they knew that the bird was always watching. It was always watching. Always.


Chalk drawing on black paper by Chrys Rorigue

03 septiembre 2011

Sunbeam - Rayo de sol

One of the great things about publishing on the Internet is the affordable informality of the medium. There is an identifiable capacity for a publication to engage in self-reflection. And so I'll take this advantage.

Calypso is named after the ship belonging to the excellent ocean explorer Jacques Cousteau. It is from this ship that Cousteau and his men dived into the world beneath the surface. And so, on this blog we navigate oceans of time and space and explore our reality's surface. With another vehicle, the SP-350 Julie, we dive into the worlds beyond that singular surface.

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Una ventaja de publicar en la Web es que la Web se presta a la informalidad. Además hay una capacidad identificable para que una publicación pueda tomar y expresar consciencia de sí mismo. Y por tanto aprovecho de esta oportunidad.

Calypso se llama así como la nave del supremo explorador oceánico Jacques Cousteau. Desde esta nave Cousteau y sus hombres buceaban en un mundo que se halla por debajo de la superficie. Y así, desde este blog navegaremos oceanos de tiempo y espacio explorando la bella superficie única de nuestra realidad. Con otro vehículo, el SP-350 Julie, miraremos más allá de esta superficie.