[meteorite-list] Dave Shiflett-- no fan of the brenham
From: Dave Freeman mjwy <dfreeman_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Tue, 02 Jan 2007 21:55:18 -0700 Message-ID: <459B3736.2060502_at_fascination.com> "It won't bring as much as an earlier find: a 1,400-pound space rock that resembles a massive, slightly rotting yam. Ugly is only skin deep, however. This monstrosity sold for a cool million." So, I didn't know the "rotten yam" had sold, is that true? I like yams. Dave F. Meteorites Darren Garrison wrote: >"...a 1,400-pound space rock that resembles a massive, slightly rotting yam. >Ugly is only skin deep, however. This monstrosity sold for a cool million." > > >http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601088&sid=a.flI69Q4Dvg&refer=muse > >Pilot Science Show Features Meteorites, Stem Cells, Speedy Cars > >By Dave Shiflett > >Jan. 2 (Bloomberg) -- A new PBS show promises breaking news from the world of >science, a nice alternative to cable news alerts whenever the president stubs >his toe. > >``Wired Science,'' which debuts tomorrow at 8 p.m. New York time, is part of an >interesting contest in which viewers will help decide PBS's next weekly science >program. Two other pilots, ``Science Investigators'' (Jan. 10) and ``22nd >Century'' (Jan. 17), round out the competition. > >``Wired Science,'' a fast-paced, far-reaching collaboration between PBS and >Wired magazine, will be hard to beat. > >The hour-long show kicks off with a segment on professional meteorite hunters. >Viewers contemplating a career move should take note: Sometimes heaven rains far >more than pennies. > >Steve Arnold, a professional meteorite hunter, drags a jerry-built metal >detector through an otherwise nondescript Kansas field. Strange noises emanate >from the machine and fierce digging commences. Wired correspondent Adam Rogers >reaches down into the dirt and pulls out a meteorite the size of an anvil. > >It won't bring as much as an earlier find: a 1,400-pound space rock that >resembles a massive, slightly rotting yam. Ugly is only skin deep, however. This >monstrosity sold for a cool million. > >Meteorites > >Indeed, there's a competitive market for meteorites, which some people consider >art. At one ``meteorite gallery'' we see a fairly modest projectile on sale for >$89,000; the one unearthed earlier in the show is appraised at $12,000. > >In another segment, a plasma television is sawed in half, followed by a short >tutorial on how plasma works. We also learn that screens in the future will >likely be paper-thin. > >Later, we visit an underwater facility off the Florida coast where astronauts >prepare for life in the stars. Water is a ``close analogue'' to space and the >10-day, highly confining experience helps determine if would-be spacefolk can >hack life locked in an alien environment. > >The only touch of controversy comes in a segment on embryonic stem-cell >researcher Renee Reijo-Pera, who started her career as a bookkeeper in an >auto-repair shop. > >These cells, she explains, have no fixed identity and so can be used to repair >muscle, nerve, liver, skin and other damaged cells. As for suggestions that >embryos should be considered sacrosanct, she responds they have a great deal of >``potential'' but ``no potential if discarded.'' > >Electric Car > >On a lighter note, there's a look at those ``rocket packs'' made famous by James >Bond and once considered a possible weapons system. That project, known as >Operation Grasshopper, didn't return much on investment though there was intense >interest at high levels. > >Archived footage shows President John F. Kennedy at one flight demonstration. >This was neat stuff, but a rocketing soldier could easily be brought down by >even a slightly talented marksman. > >As the show winds down there's a brief interview with Elon Musk, former chief >executive officer of PayPal Inc. and now involved in higher-tech developments, >including an electric car that will go from zero to 60 in under four seconds. >That's faster than all Porsches and almost all Ferraris. > >`Good Viruses' > >The first model is scheduled to roll out in six or seven months, Musk says, >though where to drive these earth-bound rockets is a subject left untouched. > >The show ends with a look at ``good viruses'' found in the highly acidic thermal >fields of Yellowstone. So-called ``extremomphiles'' can be hollowed out and used >to transport chemotherapy directly into cancer cells. > >These microscopic multitaskers can also be used to produce hydrogen -- thus >helping us beat our addiction to foreign oil -- and develop hard drives with >storage capacity 10,000 times that of those currently available. > >Viewer response, augmented by market research, will determine if this show, or >one of its competitors, gets a 10-week gig starting next fall. The winner will >provide a viewing alternative to the presidential horserace, which will by then >be in full gallop. > >A no-brainer, no matter which show prevails. > >For more information, visit http://www.pbs.org . > >(Dave Shiflett is a critic for Bloomberg News. The opinions expressed are his >own.) > >To contact the writer of this story: Dave Shiflett at dshifl at aol.com . >______________________________________________ >Meteorite-list mailing list >Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com >http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list > > > Received on Tue 02 Jan 2007 11:55:18 PM PST |
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