Dahlonega, Ga - Un zedonk, una insólita cruza entre un burro y una cebra, está atrayendo la atención en la Reserva de Vida Silvestre en Chestatee Dahlonega después de haber nacido allí hace una semana. El animal, que tiene como padre una cebra y por madre una burra, tiene rayas negras en lugares bien visibles en las piernas y la cara. CW Wathen,el fundador y gerente general de la reserva, dijo que el potro tiene un instinto de cebra. Wathen dijo que se sienta en lugar de yacer de lado, como permaneciera alerta de la presencia de predadores. Los burros y cebras no suelen aparearse, pero de vez en cuando aparecen zedonks.
Ver tambien Zonkey: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zonkey
viernes, 30 de julio de 2010
martes, 27 de julio de 2010
Arthur Clarke
En agosto de 1956, Arthur C. Clarke escribió una carta a su amigo Andrew G. Haley. En esta carta, predijo con asombrosa exactitud, el GPS y los sistemas de televisión por satélite de hoy.
Transcripción:
Aug 56
Dear Andy,
Odd that we should have crossed in the post!
I am afraid that I am too much out of touch with current communication theory and technique to provide much of value for you. (In any event, all my war-time experience was in radar, not radio.)
As you may know, my main interest in this subject is in the use of satellite relays, which I think may revolutionise the pattern of world communications. To the best of my knowledge, I was the first to suggest this possibility (see "Extraterrestrial Relays", Wireless World, October 45). By another odd coincidence I've just sent my agent an article on these lines, entitled "The Billion Dollar Moon", giving my latest view on this subject. My general conclusions are that perhaps in 30 years the orbital relay system may take over all the functions of existing surface networks and provide others quite impossible today. For example, the three stations in the 24-hour orbit could provide not only an interference and censorship-free global TV service for the same power as a single modern transmitter, but could also make possible a position-finding grid whereby anyone on earth could locate himself by means of a couple of dials on an instrument about the size of a watch. (A development of Decca and transistorisation.) It might even make possible world-wide person-to-person radio with automatic dialling. Thus no-one on the planet need ever get lost or become out of touch with the community, unless he wanted to be. I'm still thinking about the social consequences of this!
But as for details of frequencies and powers, I'll have to leave that to the experts to work out; I'll get on with my science fiction and wait to say "I told you so!"
Sincerely,
(Signed, 'Arthur')
Arthur C Clarke
P.S. Any chance of seeing you in London? I leave for N.Y. on 28 August.
Transcripción:
Aug 56
Dear Andy,
Odd that we should have crossed in the post!
I am afraid that I am too much out of touch with current communication theory and technique to provide much of value for you. (In any event, all my war-time experience was in radar, not radio.)
As you may know, my main interest in this subject is in the use of satellite relays, which I think may revolutionise the pattern of world communications. To the best of my knowledge, I was the first to suggest this possibility (see "Extraterrestrial Relays", Wireless World, October 45). By another odd coincidence I've just sent my agent an article on these lines, entitled "The Billion Dollar Moon", giving my latest view on this subject. My general conclusions are that perhaps in 30 years the orbital relay system may take over all the functions of existing surface networks and provide others quite impossible today. For example, the three stations in the 24-hour orbit could provide not only an interference and censorship-free global TV service for the same power as a single modern transmitter, but could also make possible a position-finding grid whereby anyone on earth could locate himself by means of a couple of dials on an instrument about the size of a watch. (A development of Decca and transistorisation.) It might even make possible world-wide person-to-person radio with automatic dialling. Thus no-one on the planet need ever get lost or become out of touch with the community, unless he wanted to be. I'm still thinking about the social consequences of this!
But as for details of frequencies and powers, I'll have to leave that to the experts to work out; I'll get on with my science fiction and wait to say "I told you so!"
Sincerely,
(Signed, 'Arthur')
Arthur C Clarke
P.S. Any chance of seeing you in London? I leave for N.Y. on 28 August.
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