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Insane. There no other adjective that can describe this mad project. A mad project that is perfectly doable: two 10-story Tesla Coil towers separated by 260 feet. They will be capable of unleashing the energy of natural lightnings. The Lightning Foundry is a project to re-create super-long discharge effects normally found only in lightning. Two 10-story Tesla Coil towers will fill an area the size of a football field with lightning-like discharges hundreds of feet in length. If we trigger super-long discharge effects the arcs could strike considerably further. These guys are
stanley termosky totally serious about this. They know what they are doing too. They have created a 1:12 model of this project already, and they have produced multiple Tesla coils, including the 130,000-watt Electrum, the largest in the world. Now they just need $348,000 you can check the cost breakdown here . It a lot of money, I know. But come on, don ;t you want to see a lightning covering an entire football feet 10 stories up in the air.
stanley us Of course you do. Please collaborate and pass it around to your fellow megalomaniac evil-villian-at-heart nerd. [Lightning On Demand via Kickstarter via BoingBo
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Medical technology is relying more and more heavily on computational power to streamline the healthcare process. But there a problem: computerized medical technology is increasingly vulnerable to malware infections, and nobody doing anything abo
stanley vaso ut it. In a recent government panel, experts explained how viruses and malware can clog medical devices and leave them inoperable. While no deaths or injuries have been specifically linked to the malware, the problem is apparently bad
stanley cup website and getting worse, reports Technology Review. The problem is that medical technology used in hospitals often uses Windows, but the install is locked down: device manufactures will not modify it, or even allow the hospital to update or upgrade it. Given that many of the devices are now networked across hospitals, and in turn connected to the internet, there no mechanism to avoid having new malware affecting th
stanley quencher e devices. Kevin Fu, a computer scientist at the University of Michigan and the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, explains to Technology Review: I find this mind-boggling. Conventional malware is rampant in hospitals because of medical devices using unpatched operating systems. There little recourse for hospitals when a manufacturer refuses to allow OS updates or security patches. The knock-on effect is that the devices stop working properly. While that a pain in the ass for your personal computer, it an altogether more serious issu