Saturday, November 22, 2008

Trust the French: Natural Recycling

Found on the internet ... it made me smile. I like the paradox of using the highest level of animation to produce a minimalist video with no real dialogue and simple plotlines. This reminded me of the Skrat clips from the Ice Age videos (which also made me smile) and the amazing introduction to Wall-E (which left me stunned with its brilliance).


The editors at Boing Boing make the excellent point that although Miniscule video clips are spread all over the internet the French animators are trying to make a living at this and we should feel motivated to purchase their products.

Thursday, November 13, 2008

OK, Now this Guy wins the Crystal Growing Competition

I am not a big fan of post-modernist art. I just don't get performance art and don't like dissonance and abstraction.

This I get.



This guy turned an entire apartment into a crystal growing experiment and called it "Seizure". A number of students at the end of the crystal growing competition looked at the bottom of their beakers and commented on the thick pad of well formed crystals that covered the bottom. Now imagene a whole apartment covered with those crystals.




I would have some concerns about exposure to the crystalline dust by going into the apartment and there is such a thing as copper poisoning but on a cool scale this is way cool.


Saturday, November 01, 2008

New Brunswick in the News: Tungsten


The CBC is reporting that a company in New Brunswick has found a mineable ore body that it proposes to work for tungsten. It would appear that the most important user for the product is the nation of China. In fact the company homepage has a Chinese language link about the project. I knew about zinc and copper (and in fact antimony but we don't mine it anymore) but this is the first that I had heard about tungsten in New Brunswick.


Tungsten has a number of uses that relate to its physical and chemical properties of high density, hardness and relative inertness. It seems to be an important component of speciality steels where performance at high temperatures is important. There is an alloy called high speed steel that can be up to 18% tungsten. Of course, the feasibility of the mine is related to the demand for the metal and the cost of mining in New Brunswick.
Once again we will need to carry out the dreadful algebra to determine if the upheaval of our environment (and probably public financial support) will equal 250 resource based jobs. just look at the GeoDex webpage picture of the mine sight and it just looks like New Brunswick. Of course you could argue that NB has lots of scrub forest and could easily live with a couple hundred acres less if it meant real jobs. I am glad however that a full environmental impact statement is going to be done. I would also like to know if this is simply an ore extraction or if there will be some processing of the ore before it leaves Canada.