Archive for the 'Technology' Category

It Brings an Entire New Meaning to “The Evil Eye”

June 11th, 2006 by xformed

Well, the boys at the lab have been at work, and this is one of the “fruits” of the fertile minds of our engineers. Boeing just pulled in a contract for $86M to make lots of these….

The pilot just stares at the target and the data is fed to the aircrafts weapon systems. Now any yahoo with eyes and no ADD/ADHD might be able to become aces…

I really think it adds much to the old saying of “giving them the ‘evil eye.'”

Thanks to Mudville Gazette for the Open Post!

Category: Military, Technology | Comments Off on It Brings an Entire New Meaning to “The Evil Eye”

Valour-IT has a Shortfall. Got some spare bucks?

June 9th, 2006 by xformed

I picked this up on Milblogs.

Valour-IT is a charity that funds laptop computers for wounded service members. These laptops are equipped with voice recognition software, provided by Dragon Software, and it turns the lives around that have been turned upside down.

Check my tab above for “Charities” and not Valour-IT is the top one. A simple click takes you to the Soldier’s Angels Valour-IT donation page. There’s plenty of info there to brief you in.

More detailed info on the work is found at the Project’s website….

I know it’s not Veteran’s Day, but this is a project worthy of regular donations to help those who have given so much to keep us safe.

PS: Hey, all you Milbloggers: How about get this word out? Get a blogburst going….

Cross posted at: It’s That Time Again, Boys And Girls – OTA
Stuck on Stupid Weekend Open Post
Point Five Weekend Open Trackback
Outside the Beltway – Beltway Traffic Jam
TMH’s Bacon Bits – Bacon Break Full Moon Weekend
The Right Nation
Church and State
The Bullwinkle Blog
Common Folks Using Common Sense
Stingray – A Blog for Salty Christians
Mudville Gazette Open Posts

Category: Military, Supporting the Troops, Technology | 1 Comment »

Technology Break

June 1st, 2006 by xformed

How about a computer that fits into a standard electical wall socket form factor?

JackPC from Chip PC Technologies

With a monitor and a keyboard mouse, you’re all set….More news here about this new “toy” on ZDNet.

Virtual Keyboard

Toss one of these in your compter bag (also available from ThinkGeeks.com) and then it’s the choice of monitor that will ultimately determine how mobile you can get…oh, yeah, you’ll need your humongous USB drive with your own data, coupled with web based applications,/a>….Think about it….

H/T: Gulf Coast Pundit

Maybe you have a hard time keeping your laptop plugged into a wall socket due to cord length:

Wireless Extension Cord - Up to 300'!

Not too shabby for $34.99 to get 300′ feet of extra reach without the liabillity of someone tripping over your cord at Borders…..Details on ThinkGeek.com here.

H/T: CPU Magazine.

Thanks to Mudville Gazette for the Open Post!

Category: Technology | Comments Off on Technology Break

Sun ‘n Fun 2006 Heritage Flight

April 14th, 2006 by xformed

My video was no where near this good, but here’s one to follow up on my earlier post

Bonus video of an F-117 flying by..

Category: Air Force, History, Military, Technology | Comments Off on Sun ‘n Fun 2006 Heritage Flight

Sun ‘n Fun 2006 – After Action Report

April 10th, 2006 by xformed

Well, it’s over today. Yep, the 2006 Sun n’ Fun Fly In is seeing the last people leave today.

Here’s a quick outbrief, but not with pictures of the actual event…those come tonight.

On Thursday evening, I drove Jim, Sr. (Valiant Glider Pilot of who flew under the Eiffel Tower fame) (the link is to part 1 of three…links to all parts of the antics of Jim and his glider buddies contained therein), to have dinner with those of the Stinson aircraft type (for he flew a Stinson L-5 under the tower).

They were not only gracious, and, having established earlier contact, had name tags for the two of us, and then proceeded to eat BBQ, and listen to Jim’s tales of days gone by with great interest.

Due to other scheduling issues, we didn’t get back to the Fly In until Sunday afternoon. We wandered about, found an SNV aircraft, which Jim referred to as the Vultee “Vibrator.” They went from 120 HP Stearman trainers, to the 450HP Vultees.

I went off to see the F-22 Raptors and Jim got talking to another gentleman, who turns out, flew from the same field as Jim, only a year apart. They did a little reminiscing.

I got my 6 o’clock shot (yep, static, but I can’t afford the gas bill to chase one) of the F-22, as a follow on to this post over at Neptunus Lex.

We wandered among the many palnes of various ages, me finding a Twin Beech, with a passenger door, which conjured up memories of jumping at Covington, LA in 1980 from said equipped aircraft. It’s amazing how 10 people could actually build formations from those without being spread across two counties on exit. I got my SCR, with the jumpers there building an “8 Way” around me. Saw a C-47 (jumped one of those at Perris Valley), and then a few T-34Bs.

The “Legacy Fly By” was to be a TF-51, and F-15, and the F-22. I got a good spot by the fence and waited for the take off. Due to low clouds, they could only hot dog so much, but the F-22 didn’t use a lot of runway. Next the F-15 made a bunch of passes, having to go to burner a lot, but a great low altitude presentation. To the south, the F-22 played about, just under the clouds about 2000′, doing Cobra manevuers, until the TF-51 joined with him. Then the fun began.

The two aircraft commenced to do a little “DACT” (dis-similar air combat training). The F-51 turned some tight circles, with the F-22 matching him in speed and turn diameter. Impressive for a large jet to do that. The, the LtCol must have gotten bored, for on about the 10th circle, he vetored thrust and functionally cut across the circle on a spoke thru the middle and quickly joined on the wing of the TF-51, while the prop plane was still in the same turn. That’s impressive to watch!

The F-15 finished it’s passes and then joined the two other aircraft to make a three ship formation. From there, they conducted two “Heritage” passes, the TF-51 in the lead, the Eagle to port and Raptor to starboard. I did get a vido of the first fly by, without framing my subjects well….gotta love new equipment.

Next the Raptor pilot did his passes, most of the time without his afterburners on, and was just as impressive as the Eagle. Then he came in low and vectored the thrust to begin a vertical climb. It looked like someone grabbed the nose and shoved the tail underneath to get vertical. I’d not like to be on the business end of that maneuver.

Ok, I’ll try to get the pictures up tonight.

Category: Air Force, History, Military, Technology | Comments Off on Sun ‘n Fun 2006 – After Action Report

The Day has Arrived – April 4th, 2006

April 6th, 2006 by xformed

Every since the introduction of Mac OS 10, I predicted the day would come when the morning headline, above the fold, in large print, would read:

“MAC RUNS EVERYTHING”

The day was 4/4/2006, and it’s been a long time coming. The OS 10 operating system, being built on a UNIX base, runs UNIX programs. It (obviously) runs Mac programs, (which is an interesting story about backwards compatability the Apple always supported – but that’s another post). Now, with the Intel based Mac computers, Boot Camp (oh, btw, a free beta!)…”we” have arrived.

A pox on the houses of all of you die hard, brainwashed PC-ites, who, having never laid a hand on the mouse of a Mac, could, with a straight face, tell me “Macs are no good!”

The same to you who proclaimed “We have 25,000 programs, you only have 2,500!” Now we own all of yours and all of ours….

One comment (as Chapomatic likes to say): Heh!

Yep, I have a PC now, but you’ll have to wait until Oct this year before I lay out my hobby equipment “ownership” post.

And if you think it’s no big news, check Apple’s stock. As of a few mintues ago, it had gone from $60 (yesterday) to $71 today. The Dow is presently “taking a dump” my investor friend tells me….hmmmmmmm…..

Update: 4/7/2006: The 2 Steves Who Changed the World from CNN. How true…

Category: Technology | Comments Off on The Day has Arrived – April 4th, 2006

Got the “Need for Speed”â„¢ on the Surface?

April 4th, 2006 by xformed

Do we call it the “Flyak” or “Foil Kayak?”

In any case, who thought “up on the foils” was reserved for powered vessels?

Maybe I can find one of these to crash, too!

Category: Technology | Comments Off on Got the “Need for Speed”â„¢ on the Surface?

Why UXO Makes Bad Paperweights

April 4th, 2006 by xformed

Even if it looks really cool and has the possibility of being a great babe magnet, even before this incident, I have always declined to have percussion fired ordnance as paperweights on any of my desks…stick with electically primed is my advice. A 5″54 cal round will do nicely and can also be used as an anchor if you live in New Orleans and the hurricanes come.

The explosion also destroyed a computer keyboard, scattering some of the keys around Colla’s desk.

So even if his fingers come out of this OK, he’ll be having a hard time typing whole words from now on, too…

Category: Humor, Technology | Comments Off on Why UXO Makes Bad Paperweights

The Army Armor Ban and Standards

March 31st, 2006 by xformed

One of Matt’s guest bloggers, Laughing Wolf, has a post about the Army banning the use of personally purchased body armor. Admittedly, this has to have been a tough call for the chain of command and I’m sure there will be some backlash from parents, spouses and the media, claiming the Army really wants the tropps to die. Not true at all, but it’s a hard thing to comprehend.

An example I ran across back in the late 80s had to do with blankets (like the kind you use on your bed blankets). I was XO on a ship and had to put the word that all personal blankets were to be removed from the ship and henceforth only the Navy issue wool blankets were authorized. As cold hearted as that sounds, it was actually a way to preserve the lives of the sailors aboard the ships. Here’s why:

Essentially all blankets you can buy at the store on the beach, short of ones of natural fibers, use some sort of synthetic material for the fabric. This is fine in the house, but not on a ship because, when the “civilian” blanket burns, it produces toxic fumes. So, you retort: “Yeah? SO?, here are fires in houses, too!” Yes, there are. I reply: “And when your house is burning down, you run outside and get away, which puts you in an area of lots and lots of fresh air, which would dilute the toxic fumes. When your ship is burning, you have to attack the fire (enter the berthing space) and therefore go into an enclosed space, where the heated fumes boil down from the overhead, along with the smoke.”

By getting the blankets off the ship, we decreased the risk of serious lung injury to our men. That’s all about protecting the crew from harm.

Add to that discussion of blankets to the situation where a sailor dies in a shipboard fire, but from burns, but suffocation, and the autopsy showed the death was due to toxic fumes in the atmosphere? When that happens, the law suits will make the $400 hammers and toilets seats of days gone by like an a walk in the park. The public would be outraged, and I would submit, rightfully so, for the chain of command didn’t make sure the sailors were safe.

All manner of things are tested extensively, before being allowed for use in the Fleet or field, such as such simple things as ear plugs. Stuff bought off the shelf may or may not help keep your hearing intact, and it would be nice to know. The testing required by the Armed Forces is to make sure we are getting our money’s worth, and the new item is capable of doing the job we asked it to. But, even more important than the research to make sure the product work, is the sacred trust the service members have in their Government to take care of them.

One only has to look at the fallout of such issues as the use of Agent Orange without proper precautions to realize how vital this ban is, until the civilian companies equipment is proven to be effective. It may even come to pass that the civilian items of a particular manufacturer are better than the stock items, which will then get that manufacturer on the list to buy from at the Federal Government level. Back in the late 80s, my Commodore went from his staff job to being the assistant to N6 (the office in charge of all the Navy’s computers. Wes Jordan was instumental in running tests that showed that the extra cost of verifying Commercial Off The Shelf (COTS) computers was a waste of the taxpayers money. I saw a video tape that was done where they put an HP-9020 computer and monitor in a 19″ rackmount and proceeded to run the Grade A shock test (considered a replication of the force of a nuclear blast), with a modification. They raised the hammer to it’s maximum height, not just (I think) 8 feet high. On the 20th drop of the hammer, the monitor flicked off and the equipment, which had already exceeded qualification for Grade A worthiness (I think it was three drops to qualify – and from 8 feet, not higher), appeared to have been bested. Upon examination, the power switch for the monitor had been damaged, and upon replacement, the unit came up and the computer display was still there. THE HP-9020 itself took the licking and kept on ticking.

The analysis was that even commerical clients were demanding computers and peripherials to be built to survive some rough handling, and HP, for one, was putting a product off the end of the assembly line that met MILSPEC standards, without each unit having to receive extra testing. Net result: We (the Fleet) got good COTS stuff for use in all sorts of tactical applications and the taxpayers reaped the benefits in big dollar numbers. The boost in our ability to detect and identify hostile targets, and then engage them with confidence in our targeting, was dematically changed, as our detect to engage times went from hours to minutes in one particular system I directly worked with.

With luck, our groud troops will be benefactors of such an investigation, and we, as taxpayers will also see savings.

Category: Military, Technology | Comments Off on The Army Armor Ban and Standards

Need 2M Internet in the Middle of Nowhere?

March 9th, 2006 by

Just a thought…if you have about $80-100K in spare change, and a need, then this just might do the trick.

The best part (besides service in a serene place, far from the maddening crowds, is it’s “parachutable.”

Category: Technology | Comments Off on Need 2M Internet in the Middle of Nowhere?

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