Archive for February, 2008

Texas (ERCOT) cuts 1100 MW of power to interruptible customers when the wind stopped blowing

Wednesday, February 27th, 2008

When the wind stopped blowing today, power grid operators in Texas were forced to cut power to many interruptible customers in the state. The state of Texas is the largest producer of wind energy in the United States.

Although wind power is very clean and very cost competitive with other sources of electrical power, the unpredictable and uncontrollable nature of the wind is its biggest drawback and prevents it from being more widely used.

Given that, I bet most people would be surprised to find out that environmentalists are the biggest enemies of wind farms. And you can’t really blame them either – according to a recently published report, at the Altamont Pass wind farm in California, the number of actual dead birds found among the four targeted species (burrowing owl, American kestrel, red-tailed hawk and golden eagle) increased nearly 90 percent from 2005-06 to 2006-07, which is between 1,839 and 2,906 bird deaths per year.

windmill

Below, an unidentified dead bird of prey found below the Altamont Pass wind turbines in the San Francisco Bay Area:

windkill

More from Wired.

Museum of Modern Ice

Sunday, February 24th, 2008

Speaking of exhibits in Chicago, you should stop by Millenium Park (just behind the bean) and check out the Museum of Modern Ice, featuring a fascinating display of cut ice titled Paintings Below Zero by Gordon Halloran. Check out some of the work:

night ice art day ice art

More pictures at the event blog.

Festival of Maps

Sunday, February 24th, 2008

I’d love to go see the Festival of Maps exhibits in Chicago. Events are scheduled through January 2009!

Excerpt from this Chicago Tribute article about the festival:

If you want to know how to get from Canal and Washington Streets to 5th and Jefferson Streets in Huron, Ill., the only map around to consult was drawn in 1836 by a young surveyor named Abraham Lincoln.

His plat map of a town that was never built will be available for reference starting Nov. 2 at the Field Museum as part of the city’s “Festival of Maps,” billed as the biggest show of rare and important maps ever assembled. Thousands of maps—among the rarest, most important and beautiful ever created—are to be featured in coming months at 30 institutions.

The unusual collaboration of so many cultural organizations around a single topic was the brainchild of the Field Museum, the Newberry Library and private collectors who for years had dreamed of launching an exhibition of history’s “100 most important maps,” said Chicago industrialist Barry MacLean, a map collector.

More on the festival in another Tribute article here.

map

Always doubt your GPS nagigator

Wednesday, February 20th, 2008

I’ve had the opportunity of using a GPS navigation unit on two trips in the last year or so and found that most of the time their directions were very helpful. However, here are plenty of humourous examples why you should always doubt your GPS aggravator (signs are already up warning motorists: “Ignore your Sat Nav”).

And here’s a word of advice to anyone using a GPS to find a quick meal near an airport – they obviously don’t filter the restaurants inside the airport terminal from the search results. Maybe they think you might need to use your GPS to navigate the airport to find the shortest route from concourse A to B via Chili’s? Our team in MN found that out when the GPS unit tried to steer us to the McDonald’s located inside the Minneapolis airport while we were driving around waiting to pick up a co-worker.

GPS

More on bad GPS directions at The Map Room.

Parliament House Hotel Implosion This Morning

Sunday, February 17th, 2008

in Birmingham, Alabama. Here it is on a map of downtown.

Unfortunately, I didn’t get up early enough to see it in person, but several of my friends did and they said it was awesome!

You can read more about it here.

Blu-ray gaining support vs. HD DVD

Tuesday, February 12th, 2008

Is the Blu-ray vs. HD DVD format war almost over?

Best Buy and Netflix have both just announced that they will be promoting Blu-ray over HD DVD.

hddvd

That comes on the heels of last month’s announcement by Warner Bros. that they will stop selling HD DVDs and sell only Blu-ray disks in the future. It just so happens that Warner Bros. is Hollywood’s biggest seller of DVDs. Blockbuster had already said that they would only rent Blu-ray disks in the brick-and-mortar stores, while making both formats available for their online customers.

It’s too bad format wars like this end with the early adopters of the losing format getting screwed and stuck with obsolete hardware and media. Hopefully the industry standardization will bring the prices of Blu-ray players down, as they are currently much higher than the HD DVD players from Toshiba. My brief price research shows that you can get a 1080p HD player for $200, while a 1080p Blu-ray player is $350-400. Also, with HD DVD you can opt for a 720p HD DVD player for around $150.

Time to get a PS3?

Update: Toshiba waves the white flag of surrender.

Airlines downsizing water

Monday, February 11th, 2008

While the world’s 3rd and 5th largest airlines (Delta & Northwest) are off discussing their grand merger plans to become #1, I’m left feeling a little insulted by being offered this tiny little 3 oz cup of water on Northwest’s Memphis-Birmingham flight.

water

At least they’ll let me double up if I’m really thirsty.

Finally, FREE Wi-Fi at Starbucks! …

Monday, February 11th, 2008

… but only if you have AT&T internet service.

Starbucks Corp. is teaming up with AT&T Inc. and will start offering a mix of free and paid wireless Internet service in more than 7,000 of its U.S. coffee shops beginning this spring.

The world’s largest specialty coffee retailer’s move ends a six-year partnership T-Mobile.

Starbucks said Monday it will give customers that use its Starbucks purchase card two hours of free wireless access per day. After that, it will cost $3.99 for a two-hour session. Monthly memberships will cost $19.99 and include access to any of AT&T’s 70,000 hot spots worldwide.

People who already use AT&T as their Internet service provider will have unlimited Wi-Fi access at Starbucks.

Arrived safely for the last week of classes & Minne-Etymology

Sunday, February 10th, 2008

-7 just doesn’t feel as cold as it used to (when the wind isn’t blowing). I saw lots of hard packed snow on a lot of the roads tonight. Expecting a couple more inches of snow tomorrow in addition to the inch of snow that fell over the weekend.

Did you know… the Memphis airport is the world’s busiest cargo airport. The airport owes it’s status to FedEx’s “world hub” in Memphis.

Minne-Etymology lesson:

The word Minnesota comes from the Dakota language name for the Minnesota River: Mnisota. The root Mni (also spelled mini or minne) means, “water”. Many locations in the state have similar names, such as:

  • Minnehaha Falls (“waterfall”, not “laughing waters” as is commonly thought)
  • Minneiska (“white water”)
  • Minnetonka (“big water”)
  • Minnetrista (“crooked water”)
  • Minneapolis (“water city”, polis is the Greek word for “city”)

Busy week; Wedding this weekend

Saturday, February 9th, 2008

After a busy week of classes and apartment hunting, I’m back in Birmingham for a friend’s wedding.