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Creative compassion

The collaboration of two men has resulted in new and inexpensive prosthetic hands for children.

The same technological innovation that brought the world the 3D “printable” gun is making 3-D prosthetic hands for children born without fingers.

As remarkable is the story, as told Tuesday on National Public Radio, of how a carpenter in South Africa who lost two fingers in a table saw accident collaborated with a theatrical prop designer in Bellingham, Wash., to create the design. They then turned it into printable parts and posted it online as open source software, free to anyone who can make use of it.

Continue reading this editorial.

Followers fighting crime

Virginia Tech,  Wikimedia Commons

Virginia Tech, Wikimedia Commons

Used properly, social media can better connect police departments and their communities.

The proliferation of social media has given law enforcement additional tools to enhance community policing and solve crimes. Savvy use of social media platforms can pack a big punch in college communities like Virginia Tech, where the police department is adeptly using Facebook and Twitter (@VaTechPolice) to expand its outreach and make the most of new crime-fighting technology.

As Roanoke Times reporter Tonia Moxley wrote on Sunday, Tech’s police department ramped up its social media presence at the same time it was installing a new video security system to better monitor public places around the Blacksburg campus.

Continue reading this editorial.

A judicial triumph for patients

A unanimous U.S. Supreme Court offers clarity and compassion on genetic research.

To say that the U.S. Sup­reme Court’s rejection of patents on human genes will save patients money by stimulating competition for costly medical tests is true, but vastly understates the full consequences of last week’s ruling.

Factor in the priceless peace of mind for women and men who now lack the ability to seek second opinions about their health. Then consider the metamorphosis of medical research that will be unleashed, saving countless lives with tests and treatment now unimagined.

Continue reading this editorial.

Googling ourselves to death

By Kathleen Parker

At a party a few years ago, a young reporter bounded over to my cluster of social nodders and, with the breathlessness of a born tweeter, chirped: “What’s the new hot thing?!”

Without disturbing my mascara, I replied: “Anonymity.”

She looked befuddled.

I continued: “To be Googled and to have nothing turn up. That’s hot.”

Too late, alas, even then.

In these post-Snowden days, the notion of anonymity is ludicrous. But so it has been for some time, though recent disclosures bring pause even to the habitually inured. It is one thing for Mrs. McQueen and Mrs. Harry G. Brown, my elderly dowager neighbors from childhood, to spy on each other through their porch screen doors. It is another for the National Security Agency to compile records of one’s phone calls.

Oh, for the days when Mrs. McQueen trumpeted gleefully: “I saw you eating that apple pie!”

While Americans bemoan their loss of privacy — and allow me to ululate right along with you — it is helpful to recall our own role in this gradual process of, shall we say, regurgitative knowingness.

That is, our apparent willingness to show-and-tell every little thing in the quest to be known. Fame and Celebrity are by comparison higher callings than whatever compels strangers to display, say, their tongues (or other points of anatomical interest) in the public forum of social media. These acts of baboonery, not so feigned after all, are unsubtly reminiscent of chimpanzees who, unconsciously aware of the camera’s hostile intrusion, try to offend it with grimaces, grins and lingual extrusions.

Now, suddenly we’re offended that national security operatives are following our behavior patterns? Cue Cheetah’s laugh track.

Whether Edward Snowden, the self-admiring 29-year-old who decided to save us from ourselves if not our enemies, is hero or villain will keep us amused until time tells. Most likely he’s a hybrid of the two, the heroic concentrated mostly in his having spawned an urgent and overdue debate about the costs of privacy in the service of security.

Meanwhile, Americans are scrambling to read Aldous Huxley’s “Brave New World,” the subject of my high school thesis. One of my more ironic literary friends called to recite Joseph Heller’s “Catch-22″ scene wherein another famous Snowden, mortally wounded, literally spills his guts.

Early infatuation with Huxley and other prescient writers — George Orwell’s Big Brother seems suddenly cuddly — made me rationally paranoid, yes, but mostly aware of the tyranny of caring. It comes gently at first — we only want to protect you — but soon-ish becomes oppressive.

Distracted by our gadgets, we hardly notice until a Snowden materializes. We love Google Earth because we can see our very own houses on our very own laptop screens. Wow. But who else is watching?

When I visited then-Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson at his post-9/11 “Command Center” — a vast room filled with gigantic plasma screens and computer arsenals manned by military personnel — he pointed to my South Carolina office building on one of the screens.

I asked Thompson if he could tell me whether my assistant was there. “Not yet, but soon,” he said.

Fast forward to the set of CNN’s “Parker Spitzer” a couple of years ago when I asked Google CEO Eric Schmidt what options were available to people (like me) who might find his “Street View” a little creepy.

“You can just move,” he said.

Well, no, you can’t.

There’s no habitable place left on the planet where one can move to escape the data stalkers. Speaking of which, a peeve more personally concerning than whether Edward Snowden discovers where I get my tasteful highlights — or, as the Obama campaign mastered, which candidate I might support given my proclivity for same.

Online shopping.

Take one little tiny peek at an item of even remote interest and you are owned by The Thing. Once I Googled a purse that, turned out, cost $1,200. I moved along.

Not so fast, hissed the serpent.

A full year later, I’m reading about immigration reform and suddenly the $1,200 purse slithers into view, imprinting my brain with temptation I didn’t invite.

But, yes, I did. I Googled. I oogled. And, though I resisted, I am henceforth captive to an automated data pimp.

Know this: Whatever you have done online is known. Whatever you will do will be known. And thanks to me, not even Mrs. McQueen and Mrs. Harry G. Brown, bless their dear, departed hearts, can ever be anonymous. Or hot.

 Parker is a columnist with the Washington Post Writers Group.

 

 

 

 

The Gig is big for Blacksburg

1-gigabit Internet connection could power free WiFi service downtown.

More than two decades have passed since Virginia Tech and Blacksburg joined forces to develop an “electronic village” with Internet access available to every home, school and business in town. Now a Blacksburg business incubator, with help from a virtual village of investors, is poised to move the downtown area to the fast lane of the information superhighway.

TechPad plans to establish a 1-gigabit network connection that is 100 times faster than the average Internet link, and scarcely available outside of major cities. TechPad is relying on “crowd funding” to raise $85,000 to defray installation costs and fund a year of operations beginning as early as August. As of Thursday, the campaign had raised more than $49,000.

Continue reading this editorial.

Natural law guides our ethics

by John B. Hodges

Clonnie Yearout’s commentary (“A Tale of Two Belief Systems,” April 19) asked many questions, almost in time for Ask-an-Atheist Day, which was April 18. I am pleased to reply.

Evolution is not a theory about the origin of life; it is about how life develops new varieties, new species, over time.

Read more.

Hodges lives in Blacksburg and reads a lot.

Be skeptical even of scientists

By Phillip W. Unger

Tired of the endless polls, scientific research and behavioral studies being published? Do they seem surreal, exaggerated or untrue? You are not alone and should be skeptical.

A 2011 article in London’s Daily Telegraph, not widely published in the U.S., reveals the trials and tribulations of a 45-year-old Dutch professor, Diederik Stapel, of the University of Tilburg.

Continue reading.

Unger is retired from a career with two multinational companies conducting business in the U.S., Europe and the Pacific Rim. He lives in Blacksburg.

Science museum seeks to be smash hit

By Jim Rollings

The Science Museum of Western Virginia at Center in the Square is poised to be among the most outstanding attractions in the region. The complete renovation of Center has been augmented by an investment of more than $3 million by area donors to the Science Museum to provide new exhibits that not only are spectacular but also designed for all ages. That’s an added dimension for the community.

We will continue to install these one-of-a-kind exhibits over the next several weeks, with most of them fully completed by the end of June.

Continue reading.

Rollings is the executive director of the Science Museum of Western Virginia

Crashing the tea party’s fences

Wikimedia Commons

Wikimedia Commons

By Mike Ellerbrock

In 1292 A.D., a devastating fire destroyed most of the seaside village of Dubrovnik, Croatia, where I took study abroad students last summer. An ancient fortress along the spectacular Dalmation coastline, Dubrovnik burned to the ground because its many wooden roofs enabled the fire to rapidly spread.

Afterward, Dubrovnik’s surviving citizens gathered in a town assembly (aka government) and voluntarily decided to rebuild their homes and businesses using only tile roofs (aka zoning ordinance). Seven centuries later, beautiful Dubrovnik stands as testament to the progress of materials science and collective wisdom of local democracy.

Continue reading.

Ellerbrock is director of the Center for Economic Education at Virginia Tech and a deacon for the Catholic Diocese of Richmond.

Ownership of genes stymies research

Angelina Jolie’s double mastectomy calls attention to limits others have in controlling their fate.

Angelina Jolie disclosed to the world last week in a New York Times op-ed that she had both of her breasts removed out of a very real concern that they would one day kill her. At a young age, Jolie’s mother had breast cancer and died of ovarian cancer, as did her mother before her. Family history clues that their cancer, like a small percentage of breast and ovarian cancers, was triggered by a genetic defect.

Jolie learned that she, too, had a defect on what is called the BRCA1, or breast cancer 1, gene, meaning that she had an 87 percent chance of developing breast cancer and a 50 percent chance of developing ovarian cancer. Those are terrible odds, but in knowing them, Jolie writes, she was empowered to flip them.

Continue reading this editorial.

Thursday, June 20, 2013

Weather Journal

Storms mark shift to calmer days

Thu, 20 Jun 2013 04:10:42 +0000





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