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Discoblog

Posts Tagged ‘internet’

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Momma Bear Will Give Birth to Cubs Live on the Internet

Black_Bear-27527“The internet is not something you just dump something on. It’s not a big truck. It’s a series of tubes,” former Republican Senator Ted Stevens explained back in 2006.

And now, thanks to that series of tubes, you can watch a bear give birth. We don’t know what Stevens would make of this, but here comes the bear-cam.

The BBC reports that for the very first time, a webcam has been placed inside the den belonging to a pregnant wild black bear named Lily, and the “bear-cam” will stream live images to the web as she gives birth.

(more…)

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January 19th, 2010 Tags: bearcam, bears, internet, Live bear birth
by Smriti Rao in Sex & Mating, The Wide (& Strange) World of Animals, Uncategorized | No comments | RSS feed | Trackback >

Beware! Prolonged Internet Use May Cause Psychotic Episodes

net-addictThere might just be some truth to the notion that excessive indulgence in the “interweb” makes people a tad–just a wee bit–cuckoo.

Research being conducted by the Clalit Health Maintenance Organization, Israel’s largest HMO, points to a possible connection between unrestricted Internet use and the occurrence of psychotic episodes.

According to the Israeli paper Haaretz, researchers presented three cases of individuals who experienced psychotic episodes in the wake of intensive, prolonged Web surfing that included the development of a close online relationship with another person. All the three subjects were women between the ages of 30 and 50 with no significant psychiatric history. Two of them had no previous history of mental problems, although one had been treated for anxiety in the past.

Each of the three ladies had experienced an unsatisfactory intimate relationship in the past, and developed a dependent relationship with a man over the Internet without ever meeting him face-to-face.

As Haaretz explains:

The subjects’ psychoses included a total disconnection from reality, and in the case of one of the women also involved tactile hallucinations; she imagined that she could feel the man with whom she was having a “virtual relationship” touching her.

(more…)

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January 18th, 2010 Tags: dating, internet, internet addiction, mental health, psychosis
by Smriti Rao in Diseases, Injuries, & Other Ailments, Technology Attacks!, What’s Inside Your Brain? | 10 Comments | RSS feed | Trackback >

Who Says Being Snowed in Is No Fun? There’s Always Online Adultery

snowedInIt snowed and snowed and snowed in Britain this week, enough that many people in the country got stuck at home. But some of those people still had a good time. A Web site intended to help restless married people meet one another called IllicitEncounters.com reports a surge in new members over the last few days—more than 2,500 in the last six days—particularly from areas hit hard by the wintry weather, like Hampshire and Berkshire. From Reuters:

“In light of these figures, I’d be interested to see how much work those ‘working from home’ have actually done,” IlicitEncounters.com spokeswoman Sara Hartley said in a statement.

(more…)

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January 8th, 2010 Tags: internet, Sex & Mating, snow
by Andrew Moseman in Sex & Mating | 2 Comments | RSS feed | Trackback >

Social Network for Beautiful People Kicks Out 5,000 “Fatties”

beautiful-people-webThe elite online dating club BeautifulPeople.com (yes, this is a real Web site), trimmed 5,000 members from its service because they appear to have indulged in too much Christmas ham.

Feast your eyes on this excerpt from the company’s statement, via CNN:

“As a business, we mourn the loss of any member, but the fact remains that our members demand the high standard of beauty be upheld,” said Robert Hintze, founder of BeautifulPeople.com. “Letting fatties roam the site is a direct threat to our business model and the very concept for which BeautifulPeople.com was founded.”

Publicity stunt? Probably. Shocking? Hardly. When vain folks sign up for a service so they can be rated by a group of narcissistic pretty people this is bound to happen.

If you’re one of the expelled 5,000, don’t let this get you down. The company says you’re welcome to reapply—after the love handles are gone, of course.

Related Content:
Discoblog: New Theory: Plastic Can Make You Fat?
Discoblog: Fighting Child Obesity, One Bake Sale at a Time
Discoblog: Researchers Discover How Ice Cream Controls Your Brain

Image: Beautifulpeople.com

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January 5th, 2010 Tags: fat, holidays, internet
by Brett Israel in Food, Nutrition, & More Food, Technology Attacks! | 6 Comments | RSS feed | Trackback >

Are Happy Facebook Pics Proof That You Aren’t Depressed?

Facebook-picConsider this post to be your daily reminder to check your social network privacy settings–too much transparency could cost you your insurance benefits, according to the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation:

Nathalie Blanchard, a Granby resident, says she’s suffering from severe depression that has made it impossible for her to work full-time for the past 18-months.

She says her sick leave payments were cut after insurance giant Manulife obtained profile pictures on Facebook showing her at bars, whooping it up during her birthday and on a beach holiday.

Blanchard, who lives in Quebec province, said her doctor told her to go have some fun, but apparently her insurer thought she was having too much to be depressed. According to another CBC article, the moments of revelry didn’t cure her condition:

“In the moment I’m happy, but before and after I have the same problems” as before, she said.

She’s taking them to court, in what should be an interesting case to test social media’s reach into the real world. The case suggests a host of other difficult questions: Can insurance companies raise your premiums if they see a picture of you smoking a cigarette on the internet? Will the court decide you can make a medical diagnosis from a Facebook picture? What about a weekend’s worth of happy tweets?

Another take home lesson, kids, is that should you make headlines, for whatever dubious reason, your Facebook pics will also be on the news. However in this case, Blanchard offered up her photos to get her story to the media. ABC News has a short video interview with Blanchard on their site.

Related Content:
Discoblog: Desperate For Facebook Friends? Buy Some!
Discoblog: Computer Program Can “Out” Gay Facebook Users
Reality Base: Charged With a Crime? Better Check Your Facebook Pictures

Image: Facebook

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November 24th, 2009 Tags: depression, facebook, health policy, internet, mental health, Twitter
by Brett Israel in Technology Attacks! | 8 Comments | RSS feed | Trackback >

How Much Does the Internet Really Weigh?

serverTechnology writer Chris Stevens calculated the weight of the Internet by adding up all the computers, iphones, blackberries, servers, cables –  and just for fun, viruses and websites. The damage comes to 498,438,559,990 kilograms, which Wolfram|Alpha tells us is 1.7 times the mass of all humans currently alive.

CNET tries to help readers imagine this bulk:

There you have it, ladies and gentlemen. The Internet is very heavy indeed. To give you some idea of just how heavy the internet is, imagine an absolutely enormous tower of computers and servers and cables reaching up into the sky like the evil fingers of some apocalyptic demon. Now imagine sparks, thunder, electrical storms. And, on top of it all, an otter screaming pointlessly. That is the closest you are likely to come to visualising the Internet.

The author claims that “for the first time in the world, we have precisely and scientifically calculated the weight of the Internet.”

Well that’s interesting, considering that Stephen Cass, writing for DISCOVER, calculated the weight of the Internet back in 2007 and came to a very different answer. Cass ignored the hardware, and instead calculated the weight of  online information by taking the total estimated Web traffic of 40 petabytes (40 x 1015 bytes: a 4 followed by 16 zeros) and figuring out the weight of the electrons required to store that information. His total?

The weight of the Internet adds up to just about 0.2 millionths of an ounce.

However, a year before that, in 2006, Russell Seitz, calculated the weight of the internet to be 2 ounces. You can read more about his calculations on his blog.

So which is it, readers? Weigh in on whose calculation is closest to the truth.

Related Content:
DISCOVER: How Much Does The Internet Weigh?
Discoblog: Will Swine Flu Take Down the Internet?
Discoblog: Typo Brings Down the Internet In Sweden

Image: flickr / sugree

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November 23rd, 2009 Tags: internet, iPhone
by Brett Israel in Technology Attacks! | 5 Comments | RSS feed | Trackback >

Will Swine Flu Take Down the Internet?

swine fluSwine flu has returned, just as predicted, and is getting the better of us—46 states have reported cases of the flu already. And even if you want to take precautions by getting vaccinated, there aren’t enough vaccines to go around.

In any case, when you take sick days to recover, the last thing you’d want to do is be at home without access to the Internet. The Washington Post brings up a good point: If the flu truly becomes a pandemic, then the sick will begin accessing their Internet from home en masse. Such an increase in traffic might overwhelm the system and clog networks run by Comcast, AT&T, Cox, and Verizon. The Post reports:

The Department of Homeland Security is in charge of communications networks during times of national emergency. But it doesn’t have a strategy to deal with overloaded Internet networks—an essential resource to keep the economy humming, and residents informed and connected during a pandemic, the GAO said. Furthermore, the DHS hasn’t coordinated with agencies such as the Federal Communications Commission to create guidelines for how telecom, cable and satellite providers can minimize congestion.

There are solutions, but each has its downsides. Adding bandwidth capacity would be a little too late, and cost too much. Slowing connections to some ‘hoods would violate service agreements to those customers. And blocking traffic to Web sites would require government approval.

Related Content:
Discoblog: Michael Jackson’s Death Causes Internet to Slow
DISCOVER: Swine Flu Has a Warning Shot

Image: flickr/ hitthatswitch

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October 29th, 2009 Tags: connections, internet, swine flu, vaccine
by Boonsri Dickinson in Diseases, Injuries, & Other Ailments | 5 Comments | RSS feed | Trackback >

Balloon Boy Video Games Already Available on Web

balloonboygameWebNot even one week after the Balloon Boy hoax that riveted cable networks and American audiences, two video games have already been rolled out based onb Falcon Heene’s fake-out journey. The first, called the Balloon Boy Game, is distributed by Web start-up Heyzap. The second, Balloon Boy Adventure, is hosted on Newgrounds.com. Here’s a review from the Christian Science Monitor:

Both games are pretty straightforward. In the Balloon Boy Game, seen in the image at right, the user pilots young Falcon Heene across an urban cityscape. Falcon hangs haplessly onto the balloon; there is an option to shoot at seagulls, or grab free power-ups. In Balloon Boy Adventure, neither Falcon nor his father, Richard Heene are present – there’s only that big tinfoil muffin of a balloon.

Anecdotally, the games are enjoying a good deal of success… But for tech junkies, the most interesting part about the Balloon Boy games is that they exist at all.

Yup, it took developers all of half a day to come up with a concept and execute it into a workable game. Even more impressive would be gaming that’s simultaneous with the cable news coverage.

Related Content:
Discoblog: Shooting Your Boss: Encouraged in Video Games, Less So in Real Life
Discoblog: Beware Playstation-itis! Video Gaming Results in Rare, Nasty Rash
Discoblog: “Air Guitar Hero” Helps Amputees Test Out New Arms

Image: Courtesy of Heyzap

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October 22nd, 2009 Tags: internet, video games
by Melissa Lafsky in Technology Attacks! | 3 Comments | RSS feed | Trackback >

Typo Brings Down the Internet In Sweden

internetOops. It appears that a computer coding error introduced during routine maintenance brought down Sweden’s entire Internet. For an hour and a half last Monday night, Sweden’s top level domain, .se, experienced a blackout —meaning that access to any Web site or email ending in .se was crippled. Nearly a million domains were affected.

Computerworld reports:

“The .SE registry used an incorrectly configured script to update the .se zone, which introduced an error to every single .se domain name,” [Web monitoring company] Pingdom says. “We have spoken to a number of industry insiders and what happened is that when updating the data, the script did not add a terminating ‘.’ to the DNS records in the .se zone. That trailing dot is necessary in the settings for DNS to understand that ‘.se” is the top-level domain.”

If you’re getting worried, relax: The likelihood of such an error taking down all 80 million .com sites in its entirety is very very small, according to Pingdom—usually such an error affects only individual sites. Of course, a recent bill did grant the president permission to shut down the Internet here in the States if need be.

Related Content:
Discoblog: Internet Addiction
Discoblog: How Slow is South Africa’s Internet?

Image: flickr/ Leia

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October 20th, 2009 Tags: domain, internet, sweden
by Boonsri Dickinson in Technology Attacks! | 3 Comments | RSS feed | Trackback >

Too Busy to Go to the Doctor? Just Visit Her Online

That’s right—now you can get a diagnosis and a prescription by turning on your Web cam. Telemedicine has created virtual house calls for patients willing to give up face time with doctors. CNN Senior Medical Correspondent Elizabeth Cohen wanted to check out a “funky, little red mole” that worried her, so she went online and paid a doctor $40 for a ten minute session.

Watch a video of her visit here:

There are several states that are testing out the virtual program. Hawaii has launched America Well, in which residents can use a phone or computer to visit their choice of dermatologist, internist, or specialist anytime of the day. And for record-keeping sake, a transcript or stream of the video session is sent to the patient after the “visit.” Texas also offers a similar virtual consultation through My Healthy Access, but patients would have to visit a clinic set up at a Wal-Mart in order to use the service.

Related Content:
DISCOVER: Second Life Training For Doctors
DISCOVER: Surgeries in Cyberspace

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September 23rd, 2009 Tags: healthcare, internet, medicine, technology
by Boonsri Dickinson in Diseases, Injuries, & Other Ailments | 2 Comments | RSS feed | Trackback >

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