Showing posts with label record. Show all posts
Showing posts with label record. Show all posts

Saturday, 21 September 2013

Ear Wax From Whales Keeps Record Of Ocean Contaminants

A blue whale (and human diver) swimming off the coast of Trincomalee, Sri Lanka, in April 2011.

A blue whale (and human diver) swimming off the coast of Trincomalee, Sri Lanka, in April 2011.

Amos Nachoun/Barcroft Media/Landov

How often do whales clean their ears? Well, never. And so, year after year, their ear wax builds up, layer upon layer. According to a study published Monday, these columns of ear wax contain a record of chemical pollution in the oceans.

The study used the ear wax extracted from the carcass of a blue whale that washed ashore on a California beach back in 2007. Scientists at the Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History collected the wax from inside the skull of the dead whale and preserved it. The column of wax was almost a foot long.

"It's kind of got that icky look to it," says Sascha Usenko, an environmental scientist at Baylor University who was involved in the study. "It looks kind of like a candle that's been roughed up a bit. It looks waxy and has got fibers. But it's pretty rigid — a lot stronger and a lot more stable than one would think."

There are light and dark layers within the column, each layer corresponding to six months of the whale's life, Usenko says. Historically the rings have been used to estimate the age of the whale, he says, "very similar to counting tree rings."

But age is not what Usenko was after. He studies how chemical pollutants like DDT and flame retardants are affecting whales. These pollutants get deposited in fatty tissues, such as whale blubber. And scientists often analyze blubber to see what whales are eating.

But analyzing blubber has a limitation, Usenko says.

"I would only know that organism — that [particular] animal was exposed to those contaminants," he says. "I wouldn't know when."

And so he thought, why not look at ear wax, which is also a fatty material that accumulates toxic chemicals.

Because each layer of wax corresponds to six months of a whale's life, by working through a plug of wax, Usenko could figure out when the animal was exposed to a particular chemical.

In this case, Usenko and his colleagues found that the whale had been exposed to worrisome pollutants throughout its lifetime.

He says the high levels of DDT surprised him.

"It's been 30-plus years since we've stopped using this compound," he says, "but to still see it showing up at such high concentrations — one of the dominant chemicals we see — was surprising."

Usenko and his team also determined that "a significant percentage of the exposure occurred in the first, early stages of the animal's life," when it was still nursing, and perhaps especially vulnerable. At that point, the pollutants came from the mother, through her milk, the scientist says.

Usenko says he can't tell just from looking at the wax whether these chemicals are hurting the development of young blue whales. He studied only one animal, and the ear wax alone can't reveal whether the chemicals caused harm.

But the ear wax also contained a record of fluctuations in stress hormones throughout the animal's life. And that, in combination with the chemical pollution data, may in the future provide better insight into the potential impacts of these chemicals on whales, Usenko says.

His current findings appear in the latest issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

But he needs more data, he says, so he has requested that scientists start collecting ear wax from dead beached whales the world over and mail the samples to him.


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Tuesday, 20 August 2013

Can you record a Netflix stream for offline viewing?

Reader Thom wrote in with this question:

Is there a way to download the movies from Netflix permanently to my hard drive?

Sometimes the transmission suffers in my area and it would be advantageous to download them and then play them from my hard drive offline.

That's what I call a loaded question, Thom! But it's a good one, because I'm sure there are many people in your same boat: wanting to watch a Netflix movie, but unable to because of a slow or intermittent connection.

netflix-logo

Unfortunately, Netflix does not allow for downloading in any way, shape, or form. I can understand why (there are copyrights to protect, after all), but it would be nice if the service offered users the option to download, say, one movie at a time for offline viewing.

Indeed, for anyone who's a frequent flyer, it would be great to be able to cache a movie in advance, as in-flight Wi-Fi doesn't allow for Netflix streaming. And surely Netflix's mobile apps could allow for a download-and-go option that would let users save a movie via Wi-Fi instead of eating into their data allowance while on the go.

No such luck. Ah, but where there's a will, there's a way. I've played with a few video-capture utilities that promise to work with "any" streaming souce, and while they don't usually name Netflix (or Amazon, HBO Go, or others) for fear of litigation, they do work. Audials Moviebox 10 is one of them.

However, most of them record the streaming content in real-time, so you have to wait for the entire movie to play before you've got your "download." And if you have an inconsistent connection, you'll have the same problems you do watching a live stream.

What's more, using such a utility definitely violates Netflix's terms of service. Whether or not the company can detect your usage of a recording tool, I don't know. But there's always the risk you might get found out and have your account terminated.

A better bet is to try something like manually lowering Netflix's streaming rate, which might help overcome the problems with your slow connection. And, failing that, consider downloading movies from services that allow it, like Amazon and iTunes. You may end up having to connect your PC to your TV if you want big-screen viewing, but sometimes you have to jump through a few hoops to get technology to work the way you need it to.

Contributing Editor Rick Broida writes about business and consumer technology. Ask for help with your PC hassles at hasslefree@pcworld.com. Sign up to have the Hassle-Free PC newsletter e-mailed to you each week.

For more than 20 years, Rick Broida has written about all manner of technology, from Amigas to business servers to PalmPilots. His credits include dozens of books, blogs, and magazines. He sleeps with an iPad under his pillow.
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Saturday, 17 August 2013

Ubuntu Edge campaign shatters the crowdfunding record, likely for naught

It’s official: The audacious Ubuntu Edge smartphone-slash­-PC is the most successful crowdfunding campaign in history. Canonical currently sits atop a pledged cash horde of $10,420,890, a pile of dough bigger than the $10,266,845 raised for the Pebble Watch, the previous crowdfunding record holder.

Too bad it’s all for naught.

With just six days left in the campaign, Canonical is still roughly $21.5 million short of the utterly ridonkulous $32 million goal set for the Ubuntu Edge. If the campaign doesn’t hit the magic $32 million number, the Ubuntu Edge remains a dream, and all pledges will be returned to people who donated to the campaign. Frankly, it’s not looking like that goal’s going to be met.

That’s right—the most successful crowdfunding campaign in history is shaping up to be a resounding failure.

CanonicalThe Ubuntu Edge dual-boots Android and Ubuntu’s mobile OS, then launches the full-fledged Ubuntu desktop OS distribution when connected to a monitor via HDMI.

Or is it? As I’ve argued before, I don’t believe that actually creating the Ubuntu Edge was Canonical’s true goal with this campaign. Between the sky-high campaign goal, the sky-high $695 pledge (or more!) required to claim a phone, and several comments made by Canonical honcho Mark Shuttleworth, the entire project seems to have been both doomed to fail and designed to convince third-party manufacturers that there is indeed a market for Ubuntu on mobile phones. You can read my reasoning right here.

With more than $10 million pledged for 2690 phones currently—including a massive $80,000 “Enterprise 115 bundle” investment by Bloomberg—the Ubuntu Edge may well succeed on that front, even if the actual Ubuntu Edge falls short of its $32 million goal. Thanks for taking the bullet, little buddy.

There’s no denying that the Edge looks mighty slick, though. If you want to breathe life into the dream at the 11th hour, head over to the Ubuntu Edge Indiegogo campaign page. As it stands, however, it’s looking like crowdfunding’s biggest success will also be its most high-profile failure—at least on paper.

Brad Chacos spends the days jamming to Spotify, digging through desktop PCs and covering everything from BYOD tablets to DIY tesla coils.
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