A Lesson Learned From Gerald Bull

For those who do not know who he is, Gerald “Jerry” Bull was a Canadian born astrophysisist who had developed the capability to launch projectiles into the thermosphere. After working on projects funded by the US Military, Canadian Department of Defence, and McGill University, the funding he received was eventually pulled so Bull took his technology to the open market where nations such as Iraq and China wanted him to develop similar technology for them.

Bull ran his show out of the Barbados and was eventually found dead of drowning after falling overboard from his boat. Many believe his death was not an accident, but that he was killed to prevent his technology from being expanded and used by the Iraqis to launch artillery 1000s of miles without rocket propulsion. To put things into perspective, some of his tests had him launch projectiles in excess of 100 lbs over 180km into the atmosphere.

So why am I telling you about Jerry Bull? Well you see, I am an electronics technologist. When I was studying, my communications professeur was an engineer that had worked with Bull. He was the most fidgety, nervous man I had seen and rumour (amongst students) was that he had had a couple of nervous breakdowns. He took the time in one class to tell us about the danger of what we were learning and how the technologies we were learning could pose serious danger to us and to those around us, and that we should always use caution when making decisions on how to use this knowledge.

Many of us had a rough inkling of what he was talking about, but until I saw the pictures in today’s Ottawa Sun of the items seized in the terror suspect arrests in Toronto this weekend, I didn’t realize the full extent of what this professeur was trying to tell us.

There was a red Nokia cellphone wired to a circuit board sitting in a tackle box that appeared to be a jury-rigged triggering device.

There was camouflage hunting and camping gear, a pair of Sorel boots, a soldering iron and a battery case with eight D batteries inside.

Several large hunting knives and Exacto blades were in the bag, along with less ominous looking flashlights, a rusted BBQ gate, a 6-volt battery and a recharging unit for the walkie-talkies.

The bolded items can pretty easily be used to create a crude, yet effective, remote detonator. When it took me all of 5 seconds to piece together how the components could be used, I think I finally understood what this professeur was trying to tell us that day. The lesson was learned Professeur, the lesson was learned.

Ottawa Bloggers – And Then There Were Four

In an effort to keep things honest on the Ottawa Valley Blogroll, I have gone through the sites that were on the list and, with a heavy heart, removed those who have not chosen reciprocate by adding the roll to their sites.

Harsh? No. Just tough love. I still have many of those removed on my personal reading list. But in fairness to those who have put the link up, I have gone ahead and done the dirty deed.

If anyone out there in the Ottawa Valley wishes to be included (or readded), simply follow the link below for details on how to do so. I check my email regularly so it shouldn’t take more than 24 hours before you are added.

Instructions for joining Ottawa Valley Bloggers

I Love ATI But…

For the past few days I have been experiencing some really weird problems … errrrr … computer driver issues … errrrr … catastrophic crashes and blue screens. Yeah, that’s the ticket. Catastrophic crashes and blue screens.

Nowhere online have I found a good fix. (And believe me, I tried). I think I have rebooted or had to power down a blue screen at least 50 times the past 24 hours.

I gave up this morning. I uninstalled all the ATI software and drivers, rebooted in VGA mode (which sucks cuz I can’t use my dual screens) and I will have the beast in the shop for a fix tomorrow morning.

The ironic part is that I have sold semiconductors (and other components) to ATI and tons of other companies in Canada. I guess it’s true a mechanic’s car is always in awful shape.

All right. That’s it for my griping. The ATI Radeon has served me well and it will do so again. I am pretty sure I created havoc on the system myself somehow so I am pretty sure someone smarter than me can fix it.

Some Feats Deserve To Be Applauded

I must say, when I saw this picture in my email box I became very suspect about it being a hoax. So I did some digging.

Six years, 500 million euros, 918 meters long Now this is engineering!This is a channel-bridge over the River Elbe and joins the former East and West Germany, as part of the unification project. It is located in the city of Magdeburg, near Berlin. The photo was taken on the day of inauguration. To those who appreciate engineering projects.

Here is the original photo I saw.

wasserstrasse-magdeburg2.jpg

I typed the town name, Magdeburg, from the email into my Google Earth, and lo and behold, I saw channel after channel of waterways. So I looked at the likeliest direct crossing water and came up with this.

wasserstrasse-magdeburg.jpg

If you look carefully, you can see the crossing point going east west. It appears to be two white strips on either side as I believe this satellite photo was taken during the construction phase.

I then found some supporting maps on various German websites, including this one which exactly maps on to my Google Earth. Here is the clearest.
wasserstrasse-magdeburg3.jpg

For posterity, here is a side view of the bridge I found at a German waterway construction site.

wasserstrasse-magdeburg1.jpg

I was first amazed by German technology when a friend of mine had a piece of permanently shaped wire that you could bend and when heated with a match sized flame, returned to its’ original mold. I was about 9. Things like this bridge just reinstill my faith in the technology and interest in it that Germans have.

I just wanted to give some Kudo’s to our G8 partner. It is well deserved for this one.

Supporting links:

Waterway Cross Magdeburg – Wikipedia

WasserstraBenkreuz Magdeburg – Official Canal Site (I think)

Canal Bridge Magdeburg – dillinger.de website

RIM Fights Back – Creator Of Crackberry Blackberry Creates Workaround

And the scales tip…..

Research In Motion, the creator of the infamous Blackberry and supporting “always on” technologies has turned the tables on NTP, Inc.

Waterloo, ON – Research In Motion (RIM) (Nasdaq: RIMM; TSX: RIM) today provided an update in the patent litigation between RIM and NTP, Inc. (“NTP”). RIM has developed and tested software workaround designs for all BlackBerry® handsets operating on converged voice/data networks in the United States. Although there is no injunction order in place, and RIM believes it has strong legal and factual arguments opposing an injunction, RIM has developed these software workaround designs as a contingency to allow BlackBerry service to continue should the court implement an injunction in the current litigation involving the NTP patents.

This is exactly the way a perfect capitalist society should operate. RIM has built a new mousetrap to ensure customers are not let down and probably saved themselves Billions in royalty payments to NTP. Good old Canadian technology. You have to be proud of this company’s reputation in the world.

The whole article gets pretty legal and technical, but worth a gander for American Blackberry owners. There is no changes yet, but there is still some dispute over the transition period. NTP wants a 30 day one, and RIM has said this is too short. This may determine when users need to go get the latest software upload. You might want to bookmark the following link.

Blackberry Workaround Site

Nortels Woes Appear To Be Over After Out Of Court Settlements

(disclosure) I own some Nortel stock.

For those of you out there who own or have owned Nortel stock, I think the worst is finally over. The company has it’s books back on track, and today we find out they have settled the two class action lawsuits for the tidy sum of $2.5 Billion. This is a big hit to the telecom/datacom giant, but should finally end the non business related worries.

How the markets take them and their products is all up to them. At least now their value will be riding the supply demand curves and not the legal curve balls.