John Farrier's Blog Posts

Chess Played on a Cylinder

In February, the US Patent Office granted Craig Wallace Coulter rights for this design for a unique version of the classic game. It consists of two 8x8 boards next to each other and wrapped around a cylinder. Four complete sets of pieces are necessary, possibly for four different simultaneous players. The pieces are attached to the cylinder with either velcro or magnets.

Coulter proposes, if I understand his application correctly, adding additional 8x8 boards to the cylinder, allowing for an even larger playing space, as well as additional players to the same game. At this point, like Risk or Succession Wars, diplomacy and treachery are likely components of the game.

Previously on Neatorama: 12 Bizarre Chess Variants

-via Weird Universe


Firefighting in Antarctica

Antarctica doesn't get a lot of fires, but it's the windiest and driest continent in the world and thus fires are always a potential source of danger. Given the extreme weather conditions of the place, it's necessary that any potential fire sources be addressed immediately.

Haikai Magazine talked to Nicki Schauman, the senior firefighter at the America's Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station, where 7 firefighters and 2 dispatchers respond to fire threats. Most of their work consists of responding to medical emergencies (they are also EMTs), but fire risks are especially acute when planes land and take off at Amundsen-Scott.

Schauman and his colleagues have specialized gear adapted to function in the extreme cold. When it's busy, they often spend half the day in vans near the runway, ready to respond the moment that an aircraft accident happens.

-via Nag on the Lake | Photo: Antarctic Fire Department


Scientists Find Something Deep Inside Uranus

Scientists have long been fully aware that Uranus is filled with gas -- a lot of gas. But exploring deeper inside reveals more. Live Science reports that a recently published study describes a mushy substance deep in the interior of Uranus.

If we could actually get close enough, we might be able to smell this substance: semi-frozen methane. This conclusion departs from previous assessments of Uranus which concluded that the planet consists of mostly water and ammonia.

We will, though, have to wait for more advanced probes to deeply penetrate Uranus instead of relying only on data gathered by flybys, such as that procured by Voyager 2.

-via Dave Barry | Photo: NASA


Car Jitsu Is Jujitsu That Takes Place inside a Car

Normally competitive jujitsu takes place in a gym on a mat or an otherwise fairly open space. But car jitsu contests take place entirely within the confines of a car. One competitor must compel the other to submit. There's a world-level championship program in addition to local events.

This is a great idea for practical training in the martial arts. The karate that I study practices self-defense techniques for specific scenarios (e.g. while seated, from behind, or when lying down). But not for while in a car.

This combat sport could be further improved by placing it inside a self-driving car in motion to add to the chaotic ambiance.

-via Born in Space


Desert Island Castaways Spell "HELP" to Get Rescued

Writing out HELP or SOS while stranded on a desert island is such a cliche that it has its own TV Tropes page. The US Coast Guard says that it actually happened when, on Tuesday, it rescued three men who became stranded on the island of Pikelot in Micronesia. This 31-acre island is 100 miles away from the nearest settlement.

When a relative of the three men, who had set out across the sea on a 20-foot boat with an outboard motor, reported them missing, the Coast Guard launched a search and rescue mission. A US Navy aircraft spotted them and snapped this image. Then the cutter Oliver Henry picked them up.

It's a good thing that they spelled HELP correctly, as The Far Side warned us many years ago.

-via Kottke


Teacher Meets with Students after 46 Years to Watch the Eclipse Together

In 1978, Patrick Moriarty was in his first year of teaching science to ninth graders. He told them that there would be a solar eclipse across their location in Upstate New York on April 8, 2024. Moriarty proposed that they reunite at that time to watch the event together and renewed that invitation for his new students for the next 16 years.

Now, 46 years later, about 100 of these now-adults gathered together at Moriarty's home to get reacquainted, remember old times, and enjoy the celestial mystery unfold in the daytime sky. You can see photos of this gathering at the Democrat & Chronicle.

-via My Modern Met


Death Comes Lifting -- A Horror-Themed Gym

Death Comes Lifting is a unique gym in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The decor, ambiance, and even the fitness routines reflect a fascination with the macabre. People don't so much join as members so much as enlist in an army of the undead who improve their health through online and in-person classes and weightlifting.

Continue reading

Japanese Prime Minister Toasts with Star Trek at White House Event

Fumio Kishida, the Prime Minister of Japan, attended a dinner at the White House yesterday. During this event, the Associated Press reports, offered a toast by quoting the most famous line from Star Trek.

Mr. Kishida is a native of Hiroshima and, at the end of his toast, noted the connection between his city and that of Japanese-American Star Trek actor George Takei.

Perhaps someday a US President will visit Japan and offer a similar toast quoting, say Space Battleship Yamato.


Single Higgs Boson Particle Authenticated by Peter Higgs

Peter Higgs, the physicist who proposed the existence of the Higgs boson subatomic particle, passed away on Tuesday at the age of 94. The Associated Press informs us that in 2012, the scientists at CERN used the Large Hadron Collider to confirm the existence of it. This work led to Higgs and the Belgian physicist Francois Englert earning the Nobel Prize in Physics for this discovery.

On Twitter, Dara Ó Briain, an Irish comedian, shares this gag that he made with Higgs's help.


12-Year Old Physics Podcast Fan Launches Career in Physics

Daniel Whiteson is a particle physicist at the University of California at Irvine. Along with Jorge Cham, the cartoonist behind PHD Comics, he hosts the podcast Daniel and Jorge Explain the Universe. This podcast makes the field of particle physics accessible to those of us who lack the necessary academic preparation.

On Twitter, Whiteson shares the journey of one of his younger fans who started her path into applied physics by listening to the podcast and is now ready for the next step in his classroom at UC Irvine.

One of the highest aspirations of a teacher is to make a difference to his students. It looks like Dr. Whiteson has succeeded.


Solar Eclipse Boston Cream Pie

I've been following the Twitter user and Substack writer Old Hollow Tree for a few months. He has an interesting life story about his return to the Vermont woods of his youth and writes about his quest to find meaning in family and a newfound rural lifestyle.

What is his authentic way to experience today's solar eclipse? With pie, of course. His mother prepared this Boston cream pie to show the path of the moon across the sun.


EMP-Proof Tents for Cars

In 1859, a huge solar storm called the Carrington Event damaged what little electrical infrastructure existed in the world at the time. If a similar storm happened now, the damage to our electricity-dependent modern world be severe.

Nuclear weapons detonated high in the atmosphere could have the same effect. This type of attack is called an electromagnetic pulse (EMP) attack and national security agencies have considered how to prepare for and mitigate against such destruction.

What would you, as an individual, do in order to prepare for life after an EMP attack? Some preppers and the companies that sell products to them consider options. MOS Equipment is a firm that specializes in protective gear, including a tent that can shield a car's sensitive electronics from an EMP. It's basically a huge Faraday cage.

-via David Thompson


Thousands of Live Fish Luckily Crash into a Stream and Survive

A tractor trailer operated by the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife (ODFW) on March 29 crashed near the town of La Grande. The trailer contained approximately 102,000 live salmon smolt. KOIN News reports that the driver suffered only minor injuries.

What about the baby salmon? About 26,000 of the fish, sadly, died. But the ODFW says trailer conveniently crashed next to and then flipped over into Lookingglass Creek, so approximately 77,000 survived and are now in the wild in a suitable habitat. Experts estimate that about 350-700 are likely to survive to adulthood to spawn in that creek and its watershed.

-via Kale Williams | Photo: ODFW


A Man Built His Daughter a Treehouse with B-2 Spirit Bomber Windshields

The Northrop Grumman B-2 Spirit was, until last year, the world's most advanced stealth strategic bomber aircraft in the world. It's gradually being replaced by the B-21 Raider, but the B-2 is still a technological marvel.

The B-2 has been out of production since 2000, so parts can be hard to find. Aviation Geek Club shares a story from Brian Edwards, a technician who worked on the B-2 while serving in the Air Force. Years ago, a B-2 needed, for the first time, a replacement windshield. The manufacturer had none and couldn't make new ones without extraordinary expense.

But the company had sold a surplus of the windshields to a private citizen. The Air Force reached out to this man and, for an undisclosed sum, purchased them. He had been using the windshields for his daughter's treehouse.

-via Ace of Spades HQ


By 3310, Everyone in Japan Will Be Named Sato

Mainichi (Google Translate version in English) reports that Professor Hiroshi Yoshida of Tohuku University in Sendai, Japan argues that the most common surname, Sato, will be come universal by the year 2531. Because married couples adopt the same surname, Sato, which currently constitutes 1.529% of the population, will only increase over time.

Professor Yoshida urges that couples keep distinct surnames in order to stave off the coming Satopocalypse. But he also notes that due to declining population, although everyone in Japan will be a Sato by 3310, that's only 22 people total.

-via Spoon & Tamago


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