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July 16, 2011

Ra is an Asgard in Stargate Film

Filed under: Observations — Tyler @ 11:37 pm
Asgard Ra

Ra is an Asgard (IMO)

In the Stargate film that came out in 1994, there was the primary villain character named, Ra. This article is not about the Real Life Mythological Being named Ra. This article is only about the fictional character in the Stargate film. Anyways, the movie always stuck out in my mind as an excellent one. But after seeing all of Stargate SG-1 and then recently re-watching the 1994 film…I noticed something. There was a scene where Ra was laying down in what I’m guessing was a sarcophagus. But when he was laying there, chilling, I realized he looked familiar.

In fact, he looked strikingly similar to an Asgard from Stargate SG-1.

Then it all hit me. We know that Ra was a Goa’uld because he could use the naquadah technology. So that means he must have definitely been the parasite inside the host. But what I’m guessing is that Ra, being the most powerful of the system lords, must have had an extremely powerful host body. And that host body was an Asgard. That would make sense why Ra was the most powerful, an Asgard host body and mental capabilities would give Ra access to tremendous technology and knowledge. It would make him the most likely candidate for being the strongest of the system lords. But of course the only catch is that Asgard bodies are generally weaker and harder to repair than human bodies.

That being said, there were some difference in physique between my alleged Ra in Asgard form and the Asgards from the TV series. The most note-able differences are that Ra has small teeth and no visible nose. But I think that maybe Ra got some plastic surgery before entering his flying pyramid.

-Tyler

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June 27, 2011

Lost and Found

Filed under: Observations — Tyler @ 11:28 pm

I’m looking at Craigslist.org’s Lost and Found section. It is really weird how many people are missing, #1 – their pets, and #2 their phones. I remember when my neighbors put up signs saying, “Please help. Lost turtle.” How do you loose a turtle? By the time you noticed the turtle was missing it could only have walked about 10 feet. Check the street-corner or farmer’s market. Maybe it was pickup up some lettuce.

A few months ago I at a Carl’s Junior. I ate my burgers and then left. But then when I got in the car I noticed I lost my sunglasses. So I walked back into the restaurant and looked near my booth. A man turned to me and said, “Hey.” And I said, “You find some glasses?” And then he kind of was like, “Yeah…” and I said, “They are held together with tape.” A moment later the man laughed and said, “Ha, ha, yeah it looks like they are held together with tape.” Then he handed them back to me and said, “Here you go, hehe.”

After hearing that I realized that the man must have had two laughs that day. The second laugh was that my sunglasses were held together with tape. And the first laugh was that the economy was doing very poorly so not everyone can run out and get new sunglasses all the time. One big, laughy-laugh comedy day for you sir.

One guy posted a couple days ago that he lost some designer brown glasses in Laguna. He says there is a reward. Well, first of all, I hope it was an overcast day in Laguna. Because since you’re a beach town, most people who find glasses will probably just use them. And second of all, I hope the reward is better than the selling price.

Someone seriously just posted that they are missing their microchipped dog. What’s up? Don’t they know that you can GPS the dog if they have that? I can GPS my phone and it has microchips. Get with the program.

Another person said they found some eye glasses at a garage sale and they want to return them to the owner. I bet the garage sale proprietors didn’t realize that people sometimes just want to get involved in businesses any way they can. The person probably really liked the garage sale and how it was handled. So he or she put the glasses down as a way to be part of the fun.

One person put up pictures of their lost cat and their house looked so messy that it is doubtful that anyone is going to contact the original owners besides the producer from, “Hoarders.”

This is unbelievable. Somone put on Craigslist that they found a wallet with over 1-grand in cash in it. Didn’t you see Edwards Scissorhands? You’re supposed to give the wallet to the police. Cops need wallets too bro.

-Tyler

 

June 21, 2011

Evolution of External Hard Drives

Filed under: Observations — Tyler @ 11:43 pm
Hard Drive

Hard Drive

External Hard Drives for computers have undergone a tremendous amount of evolution over the past 13 years. In the mid-late 1990’s, the hip thing was to use Zip Disks. These disks were very similar to 3 and 1/2 inch floppies, but they had around 80 times the storage space. The zip disks needed a special reader that plugged into the computer via parallel port. Before zip disks, people needed to have large boxes full of floppy disks. We would use WinZip to make backups of files that were larger than 1.44 megabytes. I remember having to “recurse subdirectories” in order for the backups to work correctly for folders with subfolders.

Zip Disks could sometimes hold up to 100 megabytes and so one of my custom built machines actually had a zip drive built in. Nowadays, some computers don’t even come with floppy ports.

As databases for business and space requirements for video and gaming grew, so did interest in hard drive technology. And as hard drives gained in capacity, so did their external counterparts.

The first large external hard drives for consumer use were bulky and expensive. They required their own power sources and were noisy and also generated a significant amount of heat. Since they were heavy, they were highly susceptible to damage from falling.

Before USB 2.0 came along. External Hard Drives used different connectors. Depending on the year they were made and their intended purpose, external hard drives used everything from parallel ports, custom proprietary ports, USB 1.1, or even FireWire.

FireWire was a huge breath of fresh air over USB 1.1 especially when massive amounts of data and throughput was required for video editing and other demanding tasks. USB 1.1 was great for connecting peripherals, but the hard drive storage capacity potential exceeded 1.1’s transfer rates during the early 2000’s. Although one could use 1.1 for transferring data, it was a migraine for power users. FireWire and USB 2.0 did a great job of coping with the new size of hard drives and the demands of users.

The advent of USB 2.0 made it so large external hard drives could be powered by the USB port of the laptop or desktop that they were connected to. This was a huge boon to professionals and consumers hobbyists alike, because it meant more portability, and the need for one less electrical socket at a meeting or in an apartment. But the external hard drive evolution didn’t stop there.

Around the same time in the middle of the 2000’s, two important things happened. The explosion of capacity for large external hard drives took place in he hundreds of gigabytes. Every six months, someone could look at the newspaper and try and find a large Fry’s advertisement on the back page. We would be astonished by the rapid rate of capacity for internal and external hard drives. This contrasted with he seemingly less impressive growth in CPU speed. CPU speed used to be the talked about number in he 86 years o the DX’s and the DX2 all the way up to the advent of Pentium and AMD cores. But eventually hard drive space, and especially portable hard drive space became the hot discussion.

The second major thing hat happened during he mid 2000’s was the miniaturization of external hard drives. For those needing large amounts of space, the drives became less bulky. Today, external hard drives continue on that trend and the last drive I purchased was a USB 3.0 external hard drive with a capacity of 500 gigabytes. The drive is a quarter of the physical size of one of my old Seagates and it is a third as heavy. Yet the hard drive evolution took a proverbial mutation detour, when hard drive technology learned a thing or two from Random Access Memory.

Random Access Memory or RAM as we all know it now, is quite different from conventional hard drives that used magnets to store and write data. RAM was designed to temporarily store program data so it can be executed by the computer and eventually displayed on the screen and made so users can interact with the programs. That is a very rough description of the process but a quick analogy could be to think of a Hard Drive as a human’s long term memory where important information is stored for long period of time. But the RAM is like our short term memory where we hold information about the cheese we need to purchase for today’s omelet and how much change we got back from the cashier. That information is only needed for each moment of the day.

Well, RAM and External Hard Drives had a strange love child which is what we call the new style Flash Drives. Flash Drives use chipsets that are slightly similar to RAM, but these Flash Drives have long term storage capacity like Hard Drives. These Flash Drives have grown in capacity and decreased in size so fast that we have seen drives become smaller than the USB interfaces that connect them to the computers. This type of technology makes it so someone can hold a 10 gigabyte flash drive in his or her pocket that has the capacity of more than 6,900 old-school floppy disks. Imagine bringing 6,900 three and-a-half inch floppy disks to a business meeting in order to demonstrate a video presentation. You would need an entire team of people to just get your presentation into the room, and then what happens if one disk got misplaced?

The evolution continues to grow and the camera and photography industry did an excellent job of developing small SD cards to store data. These SD cards began as things that only held a couple hundred of megabytes of data. But eventually they became so advanced as to being able to store gigs on a little piece of plastic that is no bigger than an adult man’s big toenail. This revolution was made even more popular by the Sony Playstation Portable’s use of SD cards for originally storing game data, and then transitioning to storing the actual games themselves.

Today, External Hard Drives are becoming ever more relevant despite the cloud computing craze. External Hard Drives are become integrated parts of wireless devices like iPhones and iPads, and how these hard drives connect and communicate is getting quite interesting. There is software apps such as, “Bump” that allows people to share data from these hard drives within portable devices wirelessly. This completely bypasses needs for USB connectors, but it can raise some security concerns as well. As innovation continues to grow the bottom line is that information storage and the ability to keep it secure and portable will be a primary concern for developers, artists, gamers and consumers alike. This evolution will not stop because the size of files are not getting any smaller, and people’s thirst for information these days is completely insatiable.

In conclusion, the evolution of External Hard Drives started as a necessity for the portability of information. But now it has become a convenience and form of social interaction through the popularity of information sharing. This is so much so, that having the ability to quickly give someone your latest song that you wrote or action film that your friend is trying to promote has become a status-symbol and fashion statement. As this technology becomes more efficient, so will the transmission of our creative information, and thus…our very lives.

-Tyler

June 20, 2011

Gym Determination and Courtesy

Filed under: Observations — Tyler @ 11:45 pm
gym determination

gym determination

At the gym lately something has been changing. It was subtle at first, but now it is more clear than ever before. People are determined. This may seem obvious, this is a Gym we’re talking about after all. But this is beyond simple summer buffing up and puffing out. This is more than firming muscles and leaning down specific physical areas. I’m seeing people taking control of their lives in a conscientious and productive way, day by day. And despite how busy the gym has gotten even during non-peak hours, people are extremely kind and courteous and respectful at every turn. I’m seeing it from the staff to totally buff strong dudes who you would expect to be macho. These guys are usually the ones who have the best attitudes are go out of their way to share the gym environment.

The strange thing is that during times like these, where things are uncertain, one might expect that people would hole up and isolate themselves. And I’m sure that’s happening…but not at our gym. I’m seeing less idle conversations and people are exchanging nods of respect and getting serious workouts completed. I see friends from Facebook and the neighborhood all the time, but I try to keep the conversation and pleasantries to a minimum. The reason for this, is because we are trying to do something. What that something is, I’m not completely sure yet.

Of course, this is Orange County, and people usually try to look their best here. But what’s been happening lately is not indicative of vanity. The feeling I get when I’m at the gym, is that we are all preparing.

Some of us may be preparing for the next day of work, others prepare for the dating scene or family, and others still prepare for the unknown, that distant event that the newspapers keep pointing at without actually saying it. I find myself preparing to become a better human battery, a better source of energy to be utilized when the time is right.

Today I was going to use a leg exercise machine, and a gentleman who was about 30 or 40 years older than I am obviously was interested in using it. I yielded to machine to him without a moments hesitation. It had nothing to do with honor or chivalry, it just felt right and I wanted to pass on the same courtesy that so many others have shown me.

When I sit back and think about what the future holds for us. I seriously come up with a blank. I just finished with a degree in International Relations and I should have some predictions…or something. But the more I learn, the more preparation instead of prediction seems to be the sturdier path. A bridge made of a million wires can support more than a bridge made of two beams of the strongest steel.

We all have busy lives, and busier minds. But at the gym, we slow things down. There will always be someone who is faster, stronger or tougher. Being at the gym is less about competition and more about showing up and making some progress. With every step on the StairMaster, and every crunch on the sit-up table, we add a small weight on the scale…and we will eventually tip it in our favor.

-Tyler

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