4.17.2007
Cognitive Labs Blog post on Coast to Coast
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What's America's most popular radio show?
Our Google Maps post is linked up at "news" section on the site of North America's most popular radio show - Coast to Coast AM, which has something like 40,000,000 nightly listeners in the U.S. and Canada.The show's guests think big, typically people such as cosmologist (not cosmetologist) Michio Kaku, SETI's Seth Shostak, hotel-in-space billionaire Robert Bigelow (fascinating) and blockbuster author/screenwriter/creative talent Whitley Strieber. If it was on in the 19th century, they would have had Theodore Judah, the individual who dreamed up the Transcontinental Railroad - on as a guest. Today, it's a flying car (not George Lucas). Thanks for sharing the love, guys. Good Karma.
Our Google Maps post is linked up at "news" section on the site of North America's most popular radio show - Coast to Coast AM, which has something like 40,000,000 nightly listeners in the U.S. and Canada.The show's guests think big, typically people such as cosmologist (not cosmetologist) Michio Kaku, SETI's Seth Shostak, hotel-in-space billionaire Robert Bigelow (fascinating) and blockbuster author/screenwriter/creative talent Whitley Strieber. If it was on in the 19th century, they would have had Theodore Judah, the individual who dreamed up the Transcontinental Railroad - on as a guest. Today, it's a flying car (not George Lucas). Thanks for sharing the love, guys. Good Karma.
Labels: bigelow, coasttocoast, Google, googlemaps, michiokaku, shostak, strieber, transcontinental

2.22.2007
Laptop Phones Home: SETI saves a lost computer
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Maybe no conventional broadcast signals of intelligent origin have been heard yet, but SETI@home, the number crunching peer service from UC-Berkeley, has played a role in recovering a lost computer. Keep in mind that SETI@home is distinct from SETI.
Stolen laptop recovered thanks to SETI@home software
Kimberly Melin got her stolen laptop back after police traced the IP address her computer was using to send SETI@home data to the Space Sciences Laboratory at the University of California, Berkeley.
SETI@home is a program that analyzes deep space radio wave data collected by the Arecibo radio observatory in Puerto Rico. Kimberly's husband, James, installed the program on her computer. He's one of over a million people who have SETI@home running on their computers in the hopes of finding non-human intelligent life in the universe. SETI stands for "Search for Extra Terrestrial Intelligence."
Melin monitored the SETI(at)home database to see if the stolen laptop would "talk" to the Berkeley servers. Indeed, the laptop checked in three times within a week, and Melin sent the IP addresses to the Minneapolis Police Department.
After a subpoena to a local Internet provider, police determined the real-world address where the stolen laptop was logging on. Within days, officers seized the computer and returned it. No one had been arrested as of Wednesday and the case remains under investigation, said Lt. Amelia Huffman of the Minneapolis Police Department.
Kimberly's writings were safe, and the thieves didn't appear to have broken into her e-mail or other personal folders. But the returned computer contained 20 tracks of rap music with unintelligible lyrics, possibly from the person who stole the computer or bought it on the underground.
"It's really, really horrid rap," Melin said. "It makes Ludacris look like Pavarotti."
Link (Thanks, Jay!)
Fascinating, courtesy boing-boing


