Archive for October 31st, 2005

A phrase you don’t hear enough

October 31st, 2005

 I am posting this for one reason and one reason only.

When people Google "Infected Canadian Ducks" I want them to find this site.

I will now proceed to giggle continuously for the rest of the day. 

Infected Canadian ducks unlikley to have H5N1 virus (Reuters)

File photo shows members of the Canadian Food and Inspection Agency return to a chicken barn near Abbotsford British Columbia April 6, 2004 following an outbreak of avian influenza. Around three dozen birds found to be carrying a kind of bird flu are unlikely to be suffering from the H5N1 killer strain, a top Canadian health official said on Monday. REUTERS/Lyle StaffordReuters – Canada has discovered a strain of H5 avian flu in 33 wild migratory ducks but it is unlikely to be the killer H5N1 strain which has spread from Southeast Asia to Europe, a top health official said on Monday.

(Via Yahoo! Top Stories)

CMU develops a prototype in-mouth “babelfish”

October 31st, 2005

When life begins to mimic the Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy, beware.  Having said that, this looks like a really remarkable technology.  Only in its infancy it still hold a world of promise.  I would imagine that there will be myriad other applications for this technology.

CMU develops a prototype in-mouth "babelfish"CMU translation goggles

It kind of freaks us out that the interACT program (International Center for Advanced Communication Technologies), a joint venture of Carnegie Mellon and the University of Karlsruhe, unveiled a system consisting of 11 electrodes that detect mouth muscle movements, translates that to a spoken language, and then re-translates that into other languages. But what really freaks us out about the interACT “babelfish” prototypes they’re developing, more than the in-mouth/throat electrode translation system they’ve theorized, were the “translation goggles” that lipread other languages and subtitle your field of vision with translated text, or focused-sound translation “beams” that can make a room of internationals like a wireless, computerized session of the UN. The system and its underlying concepts are still far from perfect, but for as much as we whine about not living in the future ideal as much as we wished we were, this is a pretty decent start.

(Via Engadget)

Bash is back

October 31st, 2005

Since I know you all care deeply, I thought I’d let you know that Bash.org is back in business.  At the moment the RSS feeds don’t seem to be parsing correctly but I will keep at it.

 

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