Researchers Create Fully Functional 3D-Printed Drone For the Defense Department

Researchers at the University of Virginia have
created a hand-launched, wing-shaped unmanned aerial
vehicle—otherwise known as a drone—that can be printed in a little
more than a day for a cost of $2,500.

It’s built from easily obtainable, “off-the-shelf” parts, and
its main processor is an Android smartphone, which means that just
about anyone with access to a 3D printer could make one. A complete
printing takes about 31 hours. 

Here’s a video looking at the development and testing of the
first prototypes:

A few technical specs from
the Wired report
that alerted me to the project:

The aircraft, with a four-foot wingspan, weighs just 1.8 pounds.
Loaded with all the electronics gear, it comes in at just under 6
pounds. That lets it fly at 40 mph for as long as 45 minutes,
though the team’s working to get that up to an hour. An earlier
prototype could top 100 mph, and the team believes the plane could
hit 120 mph, at the cost of a very quickly drained battery.

It can carry 1.5 pounds, so attaching a camera to it would be no
problem. The batteries take two hours to fully charge and are
easily swapped out, so if you’ve got three or four packs on hand,
the Razor can be in the air nearly continuously. The plane can be
controlled from up to a mile away, or fly on its own using
preloaded GPS waypoints to navigate. The team uses the Nexus
smartphone’s 4G LTE as well, meaning commands could be sent from
much farther away, though FAA guidelines have kept them from
long-distance testing.

Here’s where the 3-D printing really comes in handy: The design
can be modified—and reprinted—easily, to be bigger or smaller,
carry a sensor or a camera, or fly slower or faster. 

The drone was created at the request of MITRE, a Defense
Department contractor, but the low price and easy availability of
its components means this is the sort of thing that hobbyists or
small businesses could easily create and operate on their own,
especially if the design (or, more likely, something close) is
publicly distributed. 

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/1ydCymB
via IFTTT

The Onion Joins Reason in Bashing the War on Moms

CryingReason’s reporting on the
government’s war on parents who give their kids a modicum of
freedom and responsibility has brought scrutiny to an
out-of-control nanny state. Now
even

The Onion
is making fun of cops and busybodies who treat
parents like criminals for letting their kids play by
themselves.

The Onion’s latest infographic asks “Should Parents Who
Let Kids Play Outside Unsupervised Be Arrested?” Some hilarious
answers:

Absolutely not. I only support it when people get arrested for
things that could never happen to me.

Yes, it’s much more responsible to leave your children
unsupervised at home.

No way. When I was a kid, we played outside by ourselves and
everyone except Brian came home just fine.

Best of all:

Of course. You can never have too many reasons to arrest people
who can’t afford child care.

Reason’s Lenore Skenazy has been documenting this
exact phenomenon: Consider the case of
Debra Harrell
, a low-income mother who was arrested for letting
her daughter play at the park while she worked at McDonald’s.

But it’s not just the financially disadvantaged—parents of all
stripes are threatened by the mindset that an independent child is
an endangered one. Recently, children’s author
Kari Anne Roy
was investigated by Child Protective Services
because a neighbor reported her for letting her child play on a
public bench within sight of the house.

Read more from Reason on the War on Moms here.

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/1Dgk199
via IFTTT

4 C’s That Could Change The Financial World As We Know It, Again

Submitted by Mark St. Cyr

4 C’s That Could Change The Financial World As We Know It, Again

Those 4 C’s are: Confirmation, Crisis, Contagion, Catastrophe.

What type of confirmation could send the financial markets into such turmoil it could rock the very bastions of finance as we now know it?

First: Scotland votes yes to leave the U.K. If this turns out to be so, it could send shock-waves throughout the markets that run the world. i.e., Forex or World currencies.

No one with any financial acumen can look seriously at the markets as they stand at the time of this writing, and seriously argue the markets are prepared for such a resolution happening this Thursday.

If Scotland truly does vote Yes and confirms independence from the U.K. the initial shock-waves in my opinion that will hit the markets will be akin to the video we’ve all seen 1000 times when a nuclear device is unleashed with a house being obliterated. Or, the one where trees are bent over near flat to then reverse back the same.

In my humble opinion this could be a metaphor of what could take place. The reason is simple: By proof of the markets as they stand today, it is proof prima facie that everyone (especially so-called “smart crowd”) thinks it won’t happen. And the odds via polling alone show it to be the equivalent of a coin toss!

If this happens it will also confirm something just as real, and quite possibly far more instructive: With both a Federal Reserve meeting being held just days prior to such an event, the language out of this meeting could not be more important.

If it’s some revised boilerplate “till conditions improve, extended period, blah, blah, blah” based press release and conference, it will again confirm what many believed from the start, The Fed is both deaf, blind, and ill prepared to handle what might be an event such as this. An event that has the potential to make the crisis of 2008 the equivalent of a firecracker as opposed to what might be unleashed if Scotland does indeed secede.

The ramifications are truly unknown, unquantifiable, and what might be worse – unmanageable.

Then we move to crisis.

Just how does the Federal Reserve handle such a dilemma of this scale? I use the word “scale” for good reason. As many may know the Forex markets dwarf what the lovingly referred to as “mom and pop investor” believe it to be.

The saving of the “stock market” (aka the Equity Markets) in 2008 vs a Forex market crisis is the equivalent of bailing out a local bingo hall as compared to dealing with such a crisis on the scale of Las Vegas casino.

If the Forex market suddenly gets rocked with a clear fundamental breakdown and breakup of everything now known as the E.U. Along with all the tentacle entangled carry trades? Crisis might be an understatement.

Contagion across the Forex exchanges will not only wreak havoc from within it will also spread directly to the Bond markets. (which many don’t realize is also considerably larger themselves than the equity markets)

Such sweeping turmoil will most assuredly plunge the equity markets themselves into complete and utter chaos as money managers, market makers, margin executives and more decree: “Sell Everything, Close Everything, Now!”

What chaos might also be unleashed as the High Frequency Trading (HFT) algos are set loose selling anything and everything into a market where it’s suddenly revealed via news reading computers that the jig is up?

Or, what no one (and I mean no one!) thought possible till this week. What if this was the week HFT decides to not skirt the laws, but to now – obey them?! i.e., CME Rule 575 as explained by ZeroHedge: These Kinds Of Market-Rigging “Practices” Will No Longer Be Allowed On The CME

This could make the current Ebola crisis and concerns about the speed and severity of contagion look like the sniffles in a kindergarten class.

The panic, fear, mistrust, alienation, ___________(fill in the blank) that holders of what once believed were liquid assets on their books will find out rather quickly nothing runs quicker down the drain than paper gains and wealth.

If all this plays out, what will follow will be a blow to the IPO market and all it has morphed into these last few years with “free money.” So much so that one will think they actually saw Thor’s Hammer. Alibaba™ stands to be “the” poster child for top ticking headlines like never before.

Friday their stock hits the market in what has been touted as one of the most sought after and highly demanded offerings. So much so that they were able to wrap their road show early.

All this in an era of low if not non-existent GDP figures of recent memory. Along with real unemployment, and other metrics screaming recession, however these are adjusted, tweaked or adulterated so much so – it would make a vocal harmonizer jealous.

If Alibaba finds itself trying to release an IPO in this potential melee it will have ramification not only for its own offering, but for every single current high flyer in the markets from now until who knows when. The issue is not just if this happens, but what happens for everything else -if?

A catastrophe is quite possibly in the making. But it is still all in the hands of nothing more than the odds in a flip of a coin. We’ll know more Thursday when Scotland votes. Until then what we truly know is less about what if, and more about – if not.

However we do know a couple of things today that we didn’t know just 5 years ago.

First is, we understand the markets are not what people think they are. Second, the Fed is not as omnipotent as most believe. Third, 70% to 80% of what the “mom and pop” 401K holders think are trades in the markets, is an illusion. Fourth: Everyone, including many of the very professionals that work and breathe Wall Street have learned absolutely nothing since the Lehman crisis.

And what’s maybe more important than all of those combined?

They believe the chances of it repeating are not only nil, they’re betting it wont. Besides they still believe: “The Fed’s got their back!”

Problem is – will the Fed be able to save its own rear end if it does happen? Let alone theirs.

We’ll know soon enough.




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1qVBjTS Tyler Durden

Instapundit: Don’t Fear the Leaker!

Great,
must-read paper by Glenn Reynolds about creating a culture of
“ethical whistleblowing.”

Snippet:

Leaks are inevitable. So, it seems, is a government too large
and complex to be overseen properly by either the
President or Congress. Rather than trying
to 
overcome either of these problems by main
force, perhaps it makes sense to address 
one of
these phenomena via the other. While top-down oversight will never
be su
fficient to do the job, empowering the “little
people” of government to blow the whistle on illegalities is likely
to limit the worst excesses.

Read
the whole thing here
.

Previously from Instapundit on
same theme
.

One of the footnotes mentions Reason‘s interview
with former NSA employer William Binney, a.k.a. “Edward Snowden
1.0.” Check out the
transcript here
and watch the vid below:


from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/XdQlIu
via IFTTT

Instapundit: Don't Fear the Leaker!

Great,
must-read paper by Glenn Reynolds about creating a culture of
“ethical whistleblowing.”

Snippet:

Leaks are inevitable. So, it seems, is a government too large
and complex to be overseen properly by either the
President or Congress. Rather than trying
to 
overcome either of these problems by main
force, perhaps it makes sense to address 
one of
these phenomena via the other. While top-down oversight will never
be su
fficient to do the job, empowering the “little
people” of government to blow the whistle on illegalities is likely
to limit the worst excesses.

Read
the whole thing here
.

Previously from Instapundit on
same theme
.

One of the footnotes mentions Reason‘s interview
with former NSA employer William Binney, a.k.a. “Edward Snowden
1.0.” Check out the
transcript here
and watch the vid below:


from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/XdQlIu
via IFTTT

Elizabeth Nolan Brown on Steven Salaita and the Tyranny of ‘Hate Speech’

In the United States, hate
speech is only considered beyond the bounds of protected expression
when it’s intended to incite imminent violence. But lately we’ve
been witnessing a lot of “hate speech” mission creep, writes
Elizabeth Nolan Brown. It seems hate speech allegations are now
routinely leveled—and sticking—against anyone expressing a
controversial viewpoint.  

The most recent example to make headlines involves professor
Steven Salaita, whose job offer with the University of Illinois was
rescinded in response to his tweets about Israel and Gaza. Brown
looks at Salaita’s situation and how it fits into a larger loss of
respect for academic freedom and free speech on American college
campuses. 

View this article.

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/1t8FJHB
via IFTTT

Elizabeth Nolan Brown on Steven Salaita and the Tyranny of 'Hate Speech'

In the United States, hate
speech is only considered beyond the bounds of protected expression
when it’s intended to incite imminent violence. But lately we’ve
been witnessing a lot of “hate speech” mission creep, writes
Elizabeth Nolan Brown. It seems hate speech allegations are now
routinely leveled—and sticking—against anyone expressing a
controversial viewpoint.  

The most recent example to make headlines involves professor
Steven Salaita, whose job offer with the University of Illinois was
rescinded in response to his tweets about Israel and Gaza. Brown
looks at Salaita’s situation and how it fits into a larger loss of
respect for academic freedom and free speech on American college
campuses. 

View this article.

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/1t8FJHB
via IFTTT

Coalition of the Unwilling Resists Anti-ISIS Commitment, Scottish Independence Debate Gets Heated, Democrats to Hold the Senate?: P.M. Links

Follow us on Facebook
and Twitter,
and don’t forget to
sign
up
 for Reason’s daily updates for more
content.

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/1u3Ex6i
via IFTTT

Dow Hits New Record Intraday-High Ahead Of Fed & Scottish Uncertainty

Overnight weakness in Asia and Europe was shrugged off. The Dow hit all-time record highs (first since July) and the S&P broke back above 2,000 following headlines proclaiming a "stealth QE" from China (which actually hit the news during the Asia session) and chatter from WSJ's Hilsenrath that The Fed will leave the words "considerable period" in the statement tomorrow. Early weakness in stocks was ripped 25 points higher in the S&P on the back of a 97% correlation to AUDJPY (China-driven), the USD dumped to unch for the week (worst day since May), commodities all took off higher (led by Copper and Oil), and Treasuries flip-flopped to end steeper (5Y -5bps, 30Y +1bp on the week). "Most Shorted" stocks squeezed higher. HY credit compressed with stocks rally but decoupled later in the day. The Nasdaq and Russell (nearing death-cross) remain red on the week despite today's exuberance. VIX was smashed back under 13 (which makes perfect sense because there is no uncertainty this week at all). S&P closed below 2,000 and The Dow "off the highs".

 

AUDJPY was all that matters today…

 

Stocks ramped from the moment the China headline hit…

 

With S&P tagging 2,000…

 

As "Most Shorted" was squeezed into lunch…

 

But it was not enough to get Nasdaq and Russell green on the week… (note, just like yesterday, we had a sudden vertical ramp early in the morning before all the China/Fed exuberance)

 

With The Russell 2000 nearing the death-cross (50DMA crossing below the 200DMA)…

 

US financials push on to new cycle highs (and the meme is that all is clear) except that financial credit is notably divergent and flashing orange for now (just as it did in 2007)

 

HY credit tracked stocks as they ramped higher but decoupled in the last hour…

 

VIX also decoupled but to the upside…

 

Treasuries were mixed with 5Y outperforming… but steepened on the week…

 

As The Dollar tumbled on the China news… USD's worst day since May

 

And commodities surged… but PMs gave some back…

 

With Brent-WTI collapsing to around $4 as WTI outperforms…

 

We leave it to Diapason's Sean Corrigan to put a different perspective (as the chart below suggests last time China did this)…

…on today's exuberance about China QE…

The commodity move today is more a testament to short term oversold condition and proximity of various key technical supports than anything real…

 

Note that news about this came out before Europe and US were out of bed (and pretty much while Shanghai equities were getting hosed – go figure!)

 

 

…but our markets only reacted to it when Goldman helpfully 'explained' its supposed importance to the rest of us dullards….

 

Even if this WERE 'equivalent' to a 50bps RRR cut, that might only be a domestic offset to the base money destroying FX-drain which has been underway for the last couple of months and so would only imply neutrality, not renewed stimulus.

Charts: Bloomberg




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1siXeRk Tyler Durden

Dow Hits New Record Intraday-High Ahead Of Fed & Scottish Uncertainty

Overnight weakness in Asia and Europe was shrugged off. The Dow hit all-time record highs (first since July) and the S&P broke back above 2,000 following headlines proclaiming a "stealth QE" from China (which actually hit the news during the Asia session) and chatter from WSJ's Hilsenrath that The Fed will leave the words "considerable period" in the statement tomorrow. Early weakness in stocks was ripped 25 points higher in the S&P on the back of a 97% correlation to AUDJPY (China-driven), the USD dumped to unch for the week (worst day since May), commodities all took off higher (led by Copper and Oil), and Treasuries flip-flopped to end steeper (5Y -5bps, 30Y +1bp on the week). "Most Shorted" stocks squeezed higher. HY credit compressed with stocks rally but decoupled later in the day. The Nasdaq and Russell (nearing death-cross) remain red on the week despite today's exuberance. VIX was smashed back under 13 (which makes perfect sense because there is no uncertainty this week at all). S&P closed below 2,000 and The Dow "off the highs".

 

AUDJPY was all that matters today…

 

Stocks ramped from the moment the China headline hit…

 

With S&P tagging 2,000…

 

As "Most Shorted" was squeezed into lunch…

 

But it was not enough to get Nasdaq and Russell green on the week… (note, just like yesterday, we had a sudden vertical ramp early in the morning before all the China/Fed exuberance)

 

With The Russell 2000 nearing the death-cross (50DMA crossing below the 200DMA)…

 

US financials push on to new cycle highs (and the meme is that all is clear) except that financial credit is notably divergent and flashing orange for now (just as it did in 2007)

 

HY credit tracked stocks as they ramped higher but decoupled in the last hour…

 

VIX also decoupled but to the upside…

 

Treasuries were mixed with 5Y outperforming… but steepened on the week…

 

As The Dollar tumbled on the China news… USD's worst day since May

 

And commodities surged… but PMs gave some back…

 

With Brent-WTI collapsing to around $4 as WTI outperforms…

 

We leave it to Diapason's Sean Corrigan to put a different perspective (as the chart below suggests last time China did this)…

…on today's exuberance about China QE…

The commodity move today is more a testament to short term oversold condition and proximity of various key technical supports than anything real…

 

Note that news about this came out before Europe and US were out of bed (and pretty much while Shanghai equities were getting hosed – go figure!)

 

 

…but our markets only reacted to it when Goldman helpfully 'explained' its supposed importance to the rest of us dullards….

 

Even if this WERE 'equivalent' to a 50bps RRR cut, that might only be a domestic offset to the base money destroying FX-drain which has been underway for the last couple of months and so would only imply neutrality, not renewed stimulus.

Charts: Bloomberg




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1siXeRk Tyler Durden