Explore the universe with NASA Images

The NASA Images site is so full of awesome that I think I’m going to bust.

Really, it is. Positively overflowing with awesome!

NASA Images is a service of Internet Archive ( www.archive.org ), a non-profit library, to offer public access to NASA’s images, videos and audio collections. NASA Images is constantly growing with the addition of current media from NASA as well as newly digitized media from the archives of the NASA Centers.

The timeline on the home page is pretty slick, taking you from 1968 all the way up to 2008 with little thumbnails of significant items that pop up as you go from year to year. You can select a keyword to browse through (Gemini, Skylab, Apollo, etc) or choose from one of the four main categories above (Universe, Solar System, Earth, Astronauts) to start your journey. You can also search keywords on your own.

Browsing the images is pretty easy. On the left side are lists of keywords that you can click to narrow the selection of images displayed. Click another keyword and it’s added to the search criteria list. Click an image and you’re taken to a page that shows the image along with a bunch of meta-information about the image. Scrolling the mouse wheel while the cursor is on the image zooms in and out (or use the zoom selector placed over the image).

Panning around a zoomed image is as simple as clicking and moving the cursor around. The box with the image meta-data can be expanded or collapsed when you’re finished reading.

A potentially very cool feature is the ability to create your own media groups and presentations, allowing you to collect, share and show off your favourite images. You can also explore media groups and presentations that other people have created too.

Yeah, this is going to be a fun site to explore.

Found via Slashdot.

Water + PDA = Hosed

After wondering where my PDA had wandered off to, I found it in my pants pocket.
The pants that I pulled out of the washing machine and was about to toss in the dryer.

Oh. Crap.

This is what it looked like when I put it on the cradle.

Waterlogged Tungsten T3 sitting in the cradle
Waterlogged Tungsten T3

See the pretty cloud background? That’s not a background image.

Waterlogged Tungsten T3 sitting in the cradle
Waterlogged Tungsten T3

I was actually quite surprised it even turned on. Then it did this

Malfunctioning waterlogged Tungsten T3
Malfunctioning waterlogged Tungsten T3

The T3 only has power when it’s on the cradle, so I suppose that means it’s pretty much dead.

I guess this will be my chance to ugprade. It’s too bad Palm doesn’t have anything I want to upgrade to. Guess I’ll be surfing the internets looking for a used T3.

New laptop time?

The power connector on the motherboard side of my Dell laptop is starting to flake out. More often than not now, the laptop ends up running on battery power even though it’s plugged into the wall. After a quick perusal of the Dell support forums, it seems to be a fairly common problem requiring a motherboard replacement.
So, do I see if I can get it repaired, or try to convince the higher-ups that I need a new laptop…

Movable Type 4.2RC3 note 1

If you’re messing with the Movable Type release candidates, the Comments template will need to be edited because the CommentReplyLink tag has apparently been renamed to CommentReplyToLink between RC2 and RC3.

Linux users unite!

Went to my first meeting of the new Charleston SC Linux Users Group today (join the mailing list if you want to participate and learn more). It was a small group with 8 people at the meeting (3 I know already). On the agenda were a group mission statement, what to do with the website, commercial ideas for raising awareness and a couple of short presentations on Ubuntu Studio and PGP/GPG.
Seems like a good group of people enthusiastic about getting the Linux/FOSS word out to people.

You don’t have to be a total Linux/computer geek to join. Even if you’re just interested in finding out more about FOSS (Free/Open Source Software) feel free to join us at the next meeting!