Tag Archives: Old West

Graffiti force closure of Joshua Tree park sites

Acts of graffiti have become so pervasive at Joshua Tree National Park’s most popular hiking spots that officials have had to close them to the public, and they blame the big bump in vandalism on social media.

Rangers said they’ve found graffiti spray painted on 17 sites, including the famous rock formations and historic Native American sites, at the Southern California park’s Rattlesnake Canyon. They put historic Barker Dam off limits after vandals carved their names into the cement of the Old West landmark.

National Parks officials said the graffiti started with just a few markings, but quickly spread. They blame vandals who posted pictures of their handiwork on social media sites such as Facebook, which enticed others to the same spot and leave their own illicit marks.

“I’ve worked at six national parks, and this is the most extensive I’ve seen in 20 years,” ranger Pat Pilcher told reporters this week during a tour of some of the damage.

For visitors who cherish the isolation of this harsh desert terrain about 140 miles east of downtown Los Angeles, the graffiti are an unwelcome reminder of city blight.

“You kind of feel like you’re alone. In ancient times. There’s nothing like this place,” Butch Wood, 51, a visitor from North Aurora, Ill. Told the Los Angeles Times (http://lat.ms/12TCNU8). “You don’t like to see the modern world intruding on history. It’s a shame.”

Pilcher said park service law enforcement officers are investigating the vandalism. If caught and convicted, vandals could face up to $5,000 in fines and six months in jail. He said the penalty could be stiffer for those convicted of defacing a historic Native American site.

Meanwhile, the San Bernardino County Sun reports (http://bit.ly/ZTjZN6 ) that officials are closing 308 acres of the canyon until April 30 while volunteers from the Urban School of San Francisco help scrub the graffiti off the giant granite boulders.

It wasn’t clear how the park service will repair the damage at Barker Dam.

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/national/~3/hz8NBGlq7HM/

Holey Moses! My Fleeting Meeting With Charlton Heston

By Larry Bell, Contributor

Comedian Jim Carrey’s new video disrespectfully portraying the late NRA President Charlton Heston as lead vocalist singing “Cold Dead Hand” on an Old West– style variety show didn’t win him many friends among strong Second Amendment defenders. Taking the song’s title and punch-line from Heston’s declaration that gun control advocates would have to pry his firearms “from my cold, dead hands”, the chorus sings: “The angles couldn’t take him up to heaven like he planned… because they couldn’t pry that gun from his cold dead hand.” …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

The Next Computing Revolution Will Take Us Beyond the Screen, but in Which Direction?

By Alex Planes, The Motley Fool

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There’s a war going on out there. It’s not the war for mobile between Apple and Google , with everyone else launching half-hearted sallies at an occasional exposed flank. No, this war may have more far-reaching implications: It’s over the delivery of your digital experience. Will the future be spread out before you in full 3-D like the iconic Star Trek holodeck, or embedded with your inner life, unique and unseen to anyone else? Let’s see where the major players stand on this battlefield, and what their stances might mean for the future of computing.

Open immersion: the holodeck approach
The holodeck was one of Star Trek‘s favorite plot-filling devices across multiple series after its introduction in the Patrick Stewart-led Next Generation. It’s easy to see why. When you can create virtually any environment, with nearly any possible cast of characters, a trek through the final frontier can easily become a musing on loyalty in the Old West, or the nature of artificial intelligence, or a way to get your favorite android to play poker with historical intellectuals — or anything else you can imagine, really. We’re nowhere near the total immersion experienced by Star Trek‘s characters on the matter-manipulating holodeck, but we do have the early underpinnings of immersion already in place.

Microsoft has been an early proponent of the projected display, which resulted in the OmniTouch project in 2011, and, more recently, the IllumiRoom, which is the closest thing to a “holodeck” our 21st-century technology can come to Star Trek‘s 24th-century wizardry. Here’s a video of the IllumiRoom in action:

Other tech companies are hard at work on ways to create holograms, which would help expand IllumiRoom beyond the wall and into the room itself. Hewlett-Packard , for example, unveiled a 3-D display technology from its HP Labs that attempts to create holograms with LCD technologies already available. It’s not quite as exciting as Microsoft’s project, and it appears further away from commercialization (to say nothing of video production values), but you can see a video of HP‘s display in action as well:

Apple has apparently been working on a less-immersive form of projection that simply links devices to a projector, for which it received a patent in 2011. Apple has the resources and the technical expertise to pursue either a room-projection or a 3-D holographic projection system — or both. The question is: Does anyone at Apple really want to?

Inner experience: the wearable approach
If Microsoft is leading the charge on projected immersion, Google is taking the opposite path and has staked out a claim as the undisputed early leader of wearable displays with Project Glass. Google recently began accepting a small group of people into what amounts to a highly public beta test for the devices. Will their experiences look anything like this early Project Glass concept video?

Or are its first public users more likely to experience …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

No-kill wolf ban spurs nonlethal options

As long as wolves have been making their comeback, biologists and ranchers have had a decidedly Old West option for dealing with those that develop a taste for beef: Shoot to kill.

Due to a temporary court order, Oregon has been a “wolf-safe” zone for the past year, creating a kind of accidental experiment that is challenging the idea that the way to lower livestock attacks by wolves is to kill more wolves.

In Oregon, while the number of wolves roaming the state has gone up, livestock kills haven’t. And in Idaho, 2012 saw the number of livestock attacks increase even as more wolves were killed.

That has conservation groups hoping Oregon can serve as a model for other Western states working to return the predator to the wild.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News