Hackaday Links: April 30, 2023

Cloudy with a chance of concrete? The âsuccessâ of last weekâs brief but eventful Starship launch has apparently raised some regulatory eyebrows, with the Federal Aviation Administration launching an investigation into the destruction wrought by the mighty rocket. And itâs not just the hapless Dodge Caravan that theyâre concerned with â although we found some fantastic POV footage that shows the kill shot as well as close-ups of the results â but also the damage rained down upon residents around the Boca Chica launch complex. Tons of concrete and rebar were excavated by the 33 Raptor engines during the launch and sent in all directions, reportedly landing up to 6 miles (10 kilometers) from the pad. Whatâs worse, a lot of debris ended up on beaches that are home to endangered species, which has the Sierra Club also taking an interest. The FAA has apparently nixed any launches from the Texas facility until they complete their investigation.
If youâre worried about â or praying for â an alien invasion, you can relax: the US government says UFOs arenât aliens. But that doesnât mean anyone knows what they actually are, at least according to Dr. Sean Kirkpatrick, who as the Pentagonâs Director of the All-Domain Anomaly Resolution Office has the coolest job title in government. His testimony before the Senate Armed Services Committee last week made it pretty clear that the vast majority of UFOs, or UAP as they prefer to call them â the âAâ is for âAnomolousâ rather than âAerial,â which covers the non-flying phenomena â can be boiled down to the usual âswamp gas and Venusâ explanations. But not all of them; he included an example in his testimony of a spherical UAP captured by âelectro-optical sensorsâ that defies analysis. A full report is due later in the summer, so weâll be keen to see what theyâve got to say.
Have you ever wondered who invented binary? Weâd always assumed it was someone with the misfortune to lose 80% of their fingers, but apparently not, according to this short paper. The author claims it was a fellow named Thomas Harriot, who left manuscripts in the early 1600s fiddling with binary notation with experiments on the specific gravity of various types of wine. As an alchemist, he used the troy system of measurements, which breaks an ounce down into 480 grains and has customary divisions of 1/2, 1/4, 1/8, and 1/16. He must have gotten interested in the whole powers-of-two thing, because he wrote out the first 16 binary numbers, and tried his hand at a couple of binary multiplication problems. Itâs kind of neat to think that the old-school ârods per hogsheadâ measuring system would do something that a decimal-based system couldnât, but there it is.
Apparently itâs festival season, specifically vintage computer festivals, which seem to be cropping up all over. Our own Tom Nardi had quite a time at VCF East a couple of weekends back, and now we hear of VCF Southwest, to be held June 23 to 25 in Dallas. Looks like itâll be a pretty cool show, so stop by if youâre in the area. And across the pond we have RetroTechUK coming up, on May 21 in Coventry. That also looks like a pretty big deal, so get your tickets early. And please report back if you go â we love hearing boots-on-the-ground reports from events like these.
Psst. Hey, kid â wanna try some Wagos? If youâve never tried these âEuro-styleâ lever lock connectors, Silver Cymbal over on YouTube says that nowâs your chance, because you can get a free sample right from the company. You just have to send fill out a form and fork over the usual information, and theyâll send you a small sample â probably one â of whichever type of the 221 Series connectors you want. Just remember, though â the first oneâs free, and then they jack up the price. Thatâs how they get you hooked.
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