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November 21, 2004
Irrespective of the disclaimer at the top of this page, I have decided to make a note regarding the dearth of posts. I have not been posting. That should clear things up. I am starting to feel a bit guilty since I now have a couple more sites linking to me. That's kind of cool since I write nothing worth reading. I really am working myself up to writing more often. Also, as an learning exercise in PHP/mySQL web development, I am creating a minimal blog system. More on that later. Thanks for the links you guys August 14, 2004
You're I, Robot! August 14, 2004
You're I, Robot! Thursday, April 1, 2004
This is not a joke. This bill, House Bill 175 from the 2003 Geogia Legislature, started as one to " provide for the crime of smoking in a motor vehicle while a child is restrained in a child passenger restraining system " and progressed to "to provide that a person may consume and possess bottled water in a public transit bus, rapid rail car, or rapid rail station". How does that happen? It is really interesting to combine the legislative history with the history in the press: Fox News AJC No Smoking Org Decatur Daily
Press for 'Bottled Water' version (I tried several searches) Monday, February 2, 2004
Someone linked to my Weblog! I didn't know about it until I happened to execute that Google search. The website appears to have gone on permanent hiatus in March 2003. He considered me an 'Educator'. Hey, a link is a link... Update: since moving to my own domain the Google search is: different Thursday, January 28, 2004
At some point in the near future, fuel cell technology being developed for automobiles could be used to power our homes. Another possibility that comes from such a system is the homeowner's ability to power the house from a fuel-cell vehicle. The fuel cell in a typical fuel-cell vehicle would have an output power from 25 kW to more than 100 kW. Because the average home only uses between 2 and 10 kW of electricity, it would be possible to "plug" the car into the home to provide power from the fuel cell using the hydrogen stored on the vehicle. According to this NYTimes article, I might now have scientific support for kitchen-cleaning procrastination: Chuck Gerba, a professor of environmental microbiology at the University of Arizona who has studied bacteria in home kitchens, said that he found that people who had the cleanest-looking kitchens were often the dirtiest. Because "clean" people wipe up so much, they often end up spreading bacteria all over the place. The cleanest kitchens, he said, were in the homes of bachelors, who never wiped up and just put their dirty dishes in the sink.Link Via: Crescat Sententia |
Copyright © 2004 Kenneth R. Howard Jr.