Monday, February 12, 2007

Event for geeks and tech lovers

Geek and tech lovers unite!

Ignite Seattle is a geek event that combines on-site geekery, sharing, and innovation (and drinking). The next one will be held upstairs at the CHAC on Tuesday, February 13th. The Make Contest will begin at 6:30; the Ask Later talks will begin at 8:30.

First Set of Talks (8:30 PM)
Second Set of Talks (9:30 PM)
  • Hans Omli (Shoestring Ventures)- Elevator Pitches and Parallel Entrepreneurship
  • Sarah Davies (Freedom For IP) - Share and share alike: GPL, Creative Commons, and the future of digital freedom
  • Lars Liden (Teachtown) - Utilizing Web Technology to Help Children with Autism
  • Kurt Brockett (Identity Mine) - A Look at Windows Presentation Foundation
  • Marcelo Calbucci (Sampa) - Dr. Watson for AJAX
  • Lee Lefever (The World Is Not Flat) - Adventures from a Year of Multimedia Travel Blogging: A few inspiring stories from a year of travel blogging across 29 countries that produced 500+ blog posts, 24 original videos and 14,000 photos.
  • Barry Brumitt (Google) - MapReduce: Simplified Data Processing on Large Clusters
Third Set of Talks (10:30 PM)
  • Ellie Lum (R.E.Load Bags) - “How R.E.Load Makes Their Bags”
  • Leo Dirac (Rhapsody) - Transhuman technology trends and their implications for a theory of morality
  • Deepak Singh (business|bytes|genes|molecules) - An Open Scientific Future
  • Mike Acuri (Ontela) - Escaping the Empire: how to leave a big company
  • Heater Ralph - Art or science? A multi-person pogo stick
  • Jordan Mitchell (CEO, OthersOnline) - Distributed Social Networking and a New Metaphor for Search
  • Corprew Reed (American Society for Information Science & Technology) - What the heck is the Pacific Northwest Chapter of ASIS&T?For more into check outIgnite Seattle's website, here
For more information about Ignite Seattle or their events, visit www.igniteseattle.com.

Sunday, February 11, 2007

Seattle role in astronaut toilet technology?

From the L.A. Times:

The sordid saga of a love-struck, diaper-clad astronaut has transformed a somewhat obscure NASA undergarment into a cultural phenomenon. 
...
According to a 1998 Associated Press article, astronauts were outfitted with Depend adult diapers and an inserted pad called Rejoice, made by a Seattlecompany. 
But a spokesman for Kimberly-Clark, which makes Depends, insisted the product isn't used in space. And the Seattlecompany apparently went out of business. 
... 
A NASA spokeswoman said the official brand used now is Absorbencies, manufactured by a company that has folded. 
Fortunately, NASA owns a huge stockpile. The agency snapped up 3,200 of the diapers about 15 years ago, the spokeswoman said, and "we still have about a third of the supply left." 
On space shuttle missions, each crew member receives three diapers — for launch, reentry and a spare in case reentry has to be waved off and tried later.