Ohio Is A Piano

There are 88 keys on a normal piano.  Anyone that enjoys playing or forced into piano lessons can tell you as much.  Well someone recently realized there are also 88 counties in Ohio. So what's a geek to do with this discovery?  Why he created a program that created a piano out of Ohio's counties! Now he didn't just assign a key per county, no, that would be too easy.  He assigned keys based on different information that you can choose from, name, population, density, no. of farms, etc. The result?  Well, it often sounds like an out of tune piano when playing music, but interesting none the less.  Play around with the "Assign note according to:" and see what you can come up with.
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Ohio Is A Piano

There are many directions one could go from here. I have chosen a few ways to see the geography of music (songs) and hear the music of geography (data, metro areas, or sequences based on Google Maps routing). In my experience, most of it sounds like crap, apart from the provided simplified bits of actual songs of course, although even those might sound wrong (but hey, blame the sheet music I found). But I would be very interested to hear if anyone discovers any patterns that sound decent. What’s missing, of course, is the ability to compose your own geographic music, that is, bringing in your own songs, sequencing counties into songs, seeing the data and grouping it in different ways, making your own chords and routes, and so on. That and controlling the music from the piano as well as the map. Compositionally, for now you’re stuck with just moving the mouse over the map, but perhaps you can imagine how this concept could be turned into a full-fledged crazy musical cartography application.
Ohio is a Piano

Popularity: 1% [?]

What Are You Made Of?

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Human Ingrediants T-Shirt

If you believe in truth in advertising, or just like showing off what you're made of, you'll like this t-shirt.  The shirt displays the makeup of an average human being, element by element, including oxygen, carbon, hydrogen, potassium, sulfur, chlorine, germanium, cobalt, arsenic, antimony, tellurium, yttrium, or scandium.   Sorry girls, not just sugar and spice, no matter what you've been told. If you like it, you can purchase one at MySoti. Human Ingredient T-Shirt

Popularity: 1% [?]

LA Forest Fires From Space

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LA Fires from Space

Thank NASA for this almost pretty image of the California Forest Fires near Los Angeles.  Click for the larger image. NASA
Triple-digit temperatures, extremely low relative humidities, dense vegetation that has not burned in decades, and years of extended drought are all contributing to the explosive growth of wildfires throughout Southern California. The Station fire, which began Aug. 26, 2009, in La Canada/Flintridge, not far from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, had reportedly burned 105,000 acres (164 square miles) of the Angeles National Forest by mid-day Aug. 31, destroying at least 21 homes and threatening more than 12,000 others. It is one of four major fires burning in Southern California at the present time. This image was acquired mid-morning on Aug. 30 by the backward (northward)-viewing camera of the Multi-angle Imaging SpectroRadiometer (MISR) instrument on NASA's Terra satellite. The image is shown in an approximate perspective view at an angle of 46 degrees off of vertical. The area covered by the image is 245 kilometers (152 miles) wide. Several pyrocumulus clouds, created by the Station Fire, are visible above the smoke plumes rising from the San Gabriel Mountains north of Los Angeles in the left-center of the image. Smoke from the Station fire is seen covering the interior valleys along the south side of the San Gabriel Mountains, along with parts of the City of Los Angeles and Orange County, and can be seen drifting for hundreds of kilometers to the east over the Mojave Desert. The accompanying plots are histograms that display the heights of the smoke plumes and wind speeds. In this data set, the plume is injecting smoke more than 7 kilometers (4.3 miles) above sea level. MISR observes the daylit Earth continuously and every 9 days views the entire globe between 82 degrees north and 82 degrees south latitude. This image was generated from a portion of the imagery acquired during Terra orbit 51601. MISR was built and is managed by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., for NASA's Science Mission Directorate, Washington, DC. The Terra satellite is managed by NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md. The MISR data were obtained from the NASA Langley Research Center Atmospheric Science Data Center. JPL is a division of the California Institute of Technology.

Popularity: 1% [?]

Flowchart Guides To Computer Repair

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Flowchart for PC Repair

From Morris Rosenthal's new book: 

On his site, the charts are interactive, so clicking on a diamond jumps you to the text for each decision step.

Click the Flow Charts below for larger (readable) versions.

Network Troubleshooting

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Network Troubleshooting

Power Supply Troubleshooting

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Power Supply Troubleshooting

CPU, RAM and Motherboard Troubleshooting

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CPU RAM and MotherBoard Troubleshooting

Hard Drive Failure

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Hard Drive Failure

CD and DVD Troubleshooting

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CD-ROM Troubleshooting

Video Card Troubleshooting

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Video Card Troubleshooting

Popularity: 8% [?]