Ten things you never knew about stars

August 28th, 2007

I found this in a newspaper I was reading the other day. Credit goes to William Hartston for writing it.

The energy company npower is reported to have attatched its name to 328 stars to become the first brand to spell out its name in a constellation.

1) Anyone can buy a star. The International Star Registry will register a star under your name for only £49.95. (Details from www.starregistry.co.uk)
2) With approximately the same number of stars in the sky as grains of sand on Earth’s beaches, there are easily enough to go around.
3) When Dom Perigon invented champagne in 1693, he supposedly called his fellow monks by urging them, ‘Come quickly, brothers, I am tasting the stars’.
4) The nursery rhyme Twinkle twinkle little star was written by Jane Taylor in 1806 and called The Star.
5) US President Dwight Eisenhower had two pairs of pyjamas bearing the five stars of an army general.
6) The nearest star to Earth (apart from the Sun) is Proxima centauri.
7) Despite being the nearest star, its light still takes 4.3 years to reach us.
8) It is estimated that 80 per cent of the stars in the universe are red dwarfs - less than half the size of the sun and much cooler.
9) The 328 npower stars are all in the constellation of Hercules.
10) The Greek astronomer Ptolemy divided the stars into 48 constellations. There are now 88 recognised.

Detailed Future Timeline

August 25th, 2007

In contrast to the timeline I linked to previously, the following website offers an astonishingly detailed insight into the future. Page after page of information covers the technalogical advances of the 21st century, all the way to the end of the universe in the year 10(100).

There are two parts to the content - the timeline and the perspectives. This is explained in more detail on the website, but it basically separates fact from fiction. Political ideas and fantacy-like technologies are simply speculation, wheras colonising outerspace or developments such as AI are likely possibilities.

A lot of the content is cited from sources such as books and articles. This boosts the reliability to a further extent by taking into consideration different ideas and opinions.

Anyway, check it out - I’m sure it will keep you occupied for a while:

http://www.jrmooneyham.com/future_history_timeline.html

Space Halo & Google

August 19th, 2007

SpaceHalo is now officially ranked in Google! Unfortunately the term ‘SpaceHalo’ is an unlikely search criteria and has a total of only 500+ results. Hence, I have changed the name slightly - it is now known as ‘Space Halo’.

This website is actually doing very well with regards to search engine ranking, especially since I only released it two weeks ago. It is already starting to appear for search terms such as ‘philosophy’ and ‘futurology’. I have only noticed a slight increase in traffic since, but considering I have done nothing to promote this blog… Well, I’m pretty suprised to be honest.

The only drawback is that it clashes with the name of an Olivia Lufkin song, which in turn is commonly associated with anime and Final Fantacy. Not ideal to say the least. Fortunately with this name I can hit three birds with one stone: those who search those terms are either Olivia Lufkin fans, Halo fans or space enthusiasts. It also lists over two million results.

Why did I choose the name ‘Space Halo’ for this website? A long story cut short; it’s basically because it was the only decent domain name avaliable with the word ’space’. Almost every .com domain of this kind is taken (70% of them link farms). It took me weeks of research and determination to find this name. Think of it as generic - very much like ‘Space Spot’, ‘Space Cube’ or ‘Space Apple’.

I suppose you may be curious to hear the Space Halo song… You will either love it or hate it. To make sure you decide the latter, here is that Final Fantacy stereotype:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fMuVHzcn-6M

A Future Timeline?

August 19th, 2007

I was thinking of starting my own future timeline… Unfortunately I lack the scientific knowledge required to know what is and what is not possible. What I would predict is mere fantacy, not fact. I also stumbled upon other sources that have already done so, and with sufficient complexity.

I may, however, start a community-driven timeline once I have set up the forums, and gained a few more visitors. It would be great to compare the views expressed by different people.

For now you can ponder over the following page depicting a combination of opinion and fact as to how the future may unfold. A very interesting read:

http://humanknowledge.net/SocialScience/Futurology/Timeline.html

You must remember that this timeline is only fiction - while most of the predictions seem likely, nothing is true until it happens…

“Most of humanity is using a common currency descended from the American dollar.”

“English is the native language of 90% of humans.”

Something tells me that the author of this timeline is American.

Kennedy’s Moon Speech

August 18th, 2007

Part of the famous speech made by John F. Kennedy at Rice University in Texas on September 12th, 1962.

Moon Colonies - Virtual Tour

August 18th, 2007

A virtual representation of what our civilization on the moon might be like.

Colonizing The Moon

August 18th, 2007

This is the future we are likely to experience during the next few decades - the Moon is the first step to a new generation of living and exploration.

How do I see the future?

August 17th, 2007

That is a very good question. In fact, futurology thrives on that very prediction. For those of you unaware of what the term means, it is quite literally the study of the future.

Futurologists are commonly asked to predict the future based on current and historical events. Most of it, however, is simply a matter of opinion - this is what makes the subject of futurology so facinating. One may think the future as spaceships, nano technology and artificial inteligence; whereas another may only think there to be an advancement in material goods and technologies.

It depends entirely on the time span you analyse - the former possibility is likely to be a reality in say, a thousand years time. However, during my lifetime I would lean more towards the latter. Even still, nobody knows…

I will be taking this subject deeper in later blog posts - keep checking back for updates!

Blogging to Myself

August 17th, 2007

Ok, I confess, I’m talking blogging to myself. Time to face reality - nobody is reading this. The extra hit from that unknown source turned out to be GoogleBot. That makes a total of two unique hits: me being one of them.

Well, it’s not all that bad… I mean, most (if not all) philosophers talk to themselves on a regular basis. It’s natural, it keeps us as humans entertained. A mouth with thought is better than a mind without. Actually, that’s not a bad quote to have made up while writing a meaningless entry. Infact, that is precisely why life is meaningless - it invented the abbreviation ‘blog’.

Nah, I just need to announce it that’s all. Nobody except me even knows that this website exists. Apart from you. Yes, that’s right, you know who you are… How did you find this website? Why are you even reading this? Questions, questions… Philosophy! You see, it’s fool proof. It works for every potential individual reading this entry.

Wordpress is so easy!

August 17th, 2007

In all my experience of web development, I have never come accross a system as easy to use as WordPress. I’ve heard about it before, but never really thought much of it. A lot of people I know used it, along with thousands of others; but I always assumed it as ‘just another blog’. How wrong I was.

When compared with MovableType for ease of use, WordPress quite literally puts it to shame. I was ripping my hair out when trying to configure the previous system. For a start, it required a plugin in order to add plugins… What is the logic in that? Also, after reading an endless amount of articles on how to change the templates, I still could not get my head around how to do it. Putting the software aside, MT does not have the userbase that WP does: trying to find solutions for certain problems was near impossible.

I’m not sure how to explain this, but there is a certain positive vibe about this software. For some strange reason, configuring WordPress and adding plugins is quite exciting. I’m not sure why either. Maybe it’s because I don’t take easy for granted when it comes to the internet. Usually for something to work, a few hours of hard graft is required on my behalf. With this, everything just ‘works’, no fuss, it gets the job done without any need to worry.

This is the first time I have used WordPress; and as you can tell, it is certianly not my last.