San Diego Comic Con
Back safely from another successful year at SDCC! Great to see everyone as always. There weren’t a lot of panels and discussions I was interested in this year, so I mostly wandered the floor taking random photos. Some of the better ones are below.
Turns out 3 of the 4 things I bought were squirrel related, big surprise I know!
Congrats to Jamal Igle on his Ink Pot Award!
Stop by comicbloc.com and visit! See you next year.
3D puppies? Yes have some
Just received my Fuji FinePix Real3D W3 camera from amazon.
Fuji neglects to tell you that none of their 3D imaging software is mac compatible.
Buy a nifty W3 Fuji 3D camera for your mac and you get to not only manually get the files from the SD card, but you have to find other software to extract and create the anaglyph images. StereoSplicer seems to be the best one, and its free.
What a disappointment and hassle. Sure wish either site mentioned that it doesn’t work on a mac. I’d have bought the sony one.
Here is the first image I’ve been able to get to kinda work. So far tho, FUCK YOU Fuji.
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MINIs on the Dragon
Connie and I have returned safe and sound from our 3rd, and the 9th annual MINIs on the Dragon in the mountains of North Carolina/Tennessee. Pictures to come shortly, still decompressing and cleaning things up.
Connie was perfect the entire trip, from the 10 hour drive down, the high speed cornering on the dragon and the creeks in between.
Ready
Contrary to what a few may think, I am happy and proud of where I am.
This living is good.
There will be more when the time is right.
I am thankful and happy for my family. I am grateful for my diverse friends.
I look forward to many more of both.
Have I done what I need to do? Not yet. Not yet. Perhaps yet I will surprise you. But I live for myself.
I dreampt of the Pope recently, and his advice to me was “live for the world” vs live for the planet.
We shall not disappoint.
Happy Squirrel Appreciation Day!
January 21st is NATIONAL Squirrel Appreciation Day! Please celebrate by putting out lots and lots of Pecans for the squirrels!
Squirrel Articles:
Squirrels at the Smithsonian
UTAH – Canyonlands
UTAH! Holy crap, Canyonlands did NOT disappoint. What a spectacular trip! Had a blast hanging out with Paul, Jeff and Jim. Here are some photos. I’m ready to go back. I think an overnight in Zion is necessary soon.
October 2010
October.
Its October.
Do you know how close the moon is. Can you taste mercury? What is jupiter made of?
Blood, yes, gravity draws fire in the end
Time tastes heavily onto heads
waves of us destroy lies
fingers into flames
burn your only hopes
time wasted. burned dreams
free hope with ashes
wind saved
Red 5 – shinier
Added some more chrome to Red 5, and swapped out one of the skulls for the stock “5″ cover :) Good look at the new RSD Tracker exhaust and intake as well.
Red 5 Saddle Bags
Some images of the awesome saddle bags that Pete Jackson (www.xl1200.com) makes for the Nightster.
These are intended to show how they hit my fancy new RSD Tracker exhaust. There is only about 8 inches of vertical room on the pipe side, and the bottom of the bag would need to be quite narrow. Currently I just took of the straps and latching hardware and am letting the pipe burn the leather. Hoping this won’t cause any issues. Need to make sure it doesn’t discolor the pipe.
Time
So time always passes.
Always. What do you do with yours?
Mine? I fritter and waste it, as if some commodity like oil. “hey its sweet time, it wont matter, fish like it”
I know what I should be doing. Have for some long time. I did well with it for a moment. And now it is gone again.
Can we get it back? Nope. Move forward? Always. So now what do i do. i know what i should. im very very far away from where i know i need to be. and left to my own devices will slowly drift away further.
At some point, that should have occurred long ago, I needed to choose a direction for my life and run with it. I know people that did, and they are very successful. Happy? Sometimes. Same as me. But the one thing i take away from all of it, is a quote from a woman that dresses as Wonder Woman. (paraphrasing)
“It doesn’t matter if i make it, what’s important, is that I’m doing what I love”
And the circumstances of that quote make it even better. Live your life now, while you have life. Do well NOW while you have life. It doesn’t matter after this. Nothing is known. Do it now. Do it right. Do it well.
This is what I am not doing. At all yet.
Time and Place
This time and place
seem to pass so transiently
a tiny target. something so small. what if you are aiming at it all along?
Squirrels have the best tails in the entire animal kingdom.
Sound is nesessary
Two things on my mind;
A. no matter where You go, there You are.
2. while You Are there, be aware of who is watching you.
iii. current human perception of time is only comprehensible in a single direction
at the end of time, the light is the dark, the end is the beginning, the anti-christ is a black hole. invert.
Black Hole wormholes to other universes?
http://ow.ly/1yxR6
Really? Where are all the ‘white-holes’ shooting massive amounts of mass into our universe? Maybe black holes dont go anywhere. Maybe they all get bigger and bigger, and smash into each other until we get another big bang? Maybe?
I don’t want a pickle
Sorry Mom.
I decided to convert vegas into 2 wheels.
- Harley 2007 Nighster
Orange and black 2007 Harley Davidson Nighster.
Just got done with Harley dealer approved training class. 6 vs 20. Worth my extra pay. Plus they are pro Harley.
Now to ride my own machine.
Stay alive. Be good. Do well. Change all.
This is what you need to do.
always.
Squirrel Appreciation Day

Why is this the first I’ve heard of Squirrel Appreciation Day? (thanks Lee for your facebook post)
And it only seems very appropriate and a bit spooky that it falls on the 21st. :)
So Happy Squirrel Appreciation Day. Go give them some pecans.
Top 5 web squirrels
Squirrel Appreciation Day
Pants on the Ground – Why I don’t like American Idol
General Larry Platt was cut off WAY too soon by Simon on American Idol, depriving us all of the full version of his amazing song – “Pants on the Ground”. Brilliant in every way.
This guy should win the whole thing.

Mustachio!
Pay no attention to the man in front of the scroll. The great Oz has spoken!

Squirrel Tattoo
The waves are finally healed enough to get a good picture:
Life, the universe and everything. As represented by squirrel family tree, water, and a squirrel respectively.
Had the squirrel, chakik updated, added the tree (scientific squirrel family tree) and waves. :) Waves are a complete band around my arm, representing the circle of life/infinity and cyclical nature of being.
Since I cannot find it online again, here is the sciuridae tree:
LHC total waste
Ha. I knew it was a waste of money even if it ran. The Large Hadron Collider cost $10 BILLION and will never give the results they want:
Particle collider: Black hole or crucial machine?
08/09/2009 When launched to great fanfare nearly a year ago, some feared the Large Hadron Collider would create a black hole that would suck in the world. It turns out the Hadron may be the black hole.
The world’s largest scientific machine has cost $10 billion, has worked only nine days and has yet to smash an atom. The unique equipment in a 17-mile (27-kilometer) circular tunnel with cathedral-sized detectors deep beneath the Swiss-French border has been assembled by specialists in many countries, with 8,970 physicists eagerly awaiting the startup.
But despite the expense, thousands of physicists around the world, many of whom hope to conduct experiments here, insist that it will work and that it is crucial to mankind’s understanding of the universe.
The European Organization for Nuclear Research, known as CERN, said Friday it would restart the collider in November at half power under pressure from scientists eager to conduct experiments to unlock secrets of the universe.
But spokesman James Gillies told The Associated Press they would have to shut down yet again next year to finish repairs so that the Large Hadron Collider can operate at full energy of 7 trillion electron volts _ seven times higher than any other machine in the world.
CERN has been working since late last year to repair the damage caused by a faulty electrical joint. The breakdown occurred nine days after the spectacular start up of the $10 billion machine last Sept. 10 when beams of subatomic particles were sent around the accelerator in opposite directions.
Fifty-three massive electrical magnets had to be cleaned and repaired after the failure. Tons of supercold liquid helium spilled out of the system, and a sooty residue had to be cleared from the tubes that are meant to be pristine, holding a vacuum in which subatomic particles can whiz around the tunnel at near the speed of light at temperatures colder than outer space.
Michio Kaku, a physics professor at City University of New York who is an outspoken critic of waste in big science projects, defends the CERN collider as a crucial investment.
“The Europeans and the Americans are not throwing $10 billion down this gigantic tube for nothing,” Kaku said. “We’re exploring the very forefront of physics and cosmology with the Large Hadron Collider because we want to have a window on creation, we want to recreate a tiny piece of Genesis to unlock some of the greatest secrets of the universe.”
He said the biggest cause of the “bad accident” last year was “probably due to human error caused by rushing the project.”
“But I view it as a temporary black eye. We’ll get it up and running,” Kaku said.
CERN expects repairs and additional safety systems to cost about 40 million Swiss francs ($37 million) over the course of several years, covered by the 20-nation organization’s budget.
The collider emerged as the world’s largest after the U.S. canceled the Superconducting Super Collider being built in Texas in 1993. Congress pulled the plug after costs soared, and questions were raised about the value of the science it could produce.
Gillies says all 20 of CERN’s member nations have remained supportive and that four other countries _ Cyprus, Israel, Serbia and Turkey _ have asked to join. A fifth country _ Slovenia _ has expressed interest.
Japan, India, Russia and the U.S. are observer countries that have made sizable contributions to the CERN project.
CERN is now aiming to restart the machine in November with beams of subatomic particles initially running at 3.5 trillion electron volts, or TeV. That’s only half the level the machine was designed for, but it’s still 3 1/2 times higher than the second most powerful accelerator, the Tevatron at Fermilab outside Chicago. During last year’s brief startup phase, the CERN collider only operated at half the Fermilab level.
Even as the machine is being calibrated this winter, scientists will be able to conduct experiments, collecting data on the collisions of protons and lead ions in the accelerator.
They hope the higher energy will enable them to see particles so far undetected, such as the elusive Higgs boson, which in theory gives mass to other particles _ and objects and creatures _ in the universe.
Physicists have used smaller, room-temperature colliders for decades to study the atom. They once thought protons and neutrons were the smallest components of the atom’s nucleus, but the colliders showed that they are made of quarks and gluons and that there are other forces and particles. And they still have other questions about antimatter, dark matter and particle mass they want to answer with CERN’s new collider.
They hope the fragments that come off the collisions will show on a tiny scale what happened one-trillionth of a second after the so-called Big Bang, which many scientists theorize was the massive explosion that formed the universe. The theory holds that the universe was rapidly cooling at that stage and matter was changing quickly.
Some skeptics have expressed fears the high-energy collision of protons could imperil the Earth by creating micro black holes _ subatomic versions of collapsed stars whose gravity is so strong they can suck in planets and other stars.
CERN and leading physicists dismiss the fears and maintain the project is safe.
The collider’s teething problems are typical of complicated accelerators, but it has been especially frustrating to physicists from around the world, who already have been waiting for years to conduct their experiments on the machine.
“But the LHC is an example of an enormously complicated machine that is pushing the edge of accelerator technology, and it is not surprising that it has had some unanticipated problems,” Neal Lane, former President Bill Clinton’s science adviser and former director of the National Science Foundation.
If the collider can be started soon, it will produce valuable results, said Lane, now a a physicist and public policy professor at Rice University.
But, he added, “If there are many more surprises, further delays, failure to meet design specifications over the next few years, then the field of experimental particle physics, worldwide, could be set back for a decade or more. The stakes are very high!”
Gillies told the AP that CERN management decided at the beginning of the year that it would not try to repair all parts of the collider this year.
“Otherwise, we would never have had a beam before halfway through next year,” he said.
Gillies said CERN experts have examined every one of the 1,600 superconducting magnets and each of the 10,000 electrical splices as well as copper protection to carry away any spillover current to prevent damage to the magnets if they heat up as happened Sept. 19.
They decided some of the splices need to be repaired before the collider goes to full power, but that they can operate safely up to 5 TeV without further repairs now.
That has been set as the highest energy for the collider before its next shutdown for maintenance, probably in November 2010. Then the further repairs will be made so that the energy level can be ramped up.
Rolf Heuer, who has taken over as CERN’s director-general since the failure, said the collider has been studied very carefully and is much better understood than a year ago.
“We can look forward with confidence and excitement to a good run through the winter and into next year,” Heuer said.
Graviton? WTF An open letter to Particle Physicists
Dear Particle Physicists;
Can I use your theories on my day to day job? That would be awesome;
Client: “Josh we hired you to make this website, but some of the sections are missing?”
Josh: “Oh, lets see, what happened? Oh yeah, some invisible things that you can’t see or measure took the missing sections into another dimension.”
Client: “Excuse me?”
Josh: “Yeah. And I have nothing to prove it by. You can’t prove it, because they aren’t there. If you devise a way to see into these other made up universes, your sections are there..”
Essentially this is the bullshit being passed off with “gravitons” and the other made up crap that modern day physicists are theorizing. Higgs field? Really? Here’s a thought. What if the theory you are trying to plug holes up on is fundamentally wrong? What if you are over complicating something that is already so over complicated that you can get away with spending millions of dollars trying to prove the existence of things that admittedly don’t exist?
Try looking at the fundamental problems again. And take a step back. Is there REALLY a problem with the gravitational theory as Einstein proposed? Or is it the math itself that is wrong?
Please email me to discuss further.
Higgs Boson does not exist
I can’t believe we are spending millions of dollars to make a super collider to try and find a made up particle to plug a hole in a theory that is wrong.
Maybe instead of trying to pin our hopes of understanding the beginnings of the universe and how particles get mass we should make a new theory.
All particles have mass. Even photons. Its just too small to measure by us. Larger particles gain their mass when small ones coalesce and collide. Black hole anyone?
All this effort is only focusing on one part of the equation. E. They think if they have enough energy it will generate the mass they are looking for. The beginning of the universe was also under immense, unmeasurable pressure as well as heat. Leaving these out of the experiment render its results useless.

A decent link: Large Hadron Collider startup/
small
how narrow does the path need to get?
no, really?
how tiny does it have to be? the funnel ends.
we know this.
energy never stops.










































