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May, 2011

  1. New Find In Germany

    May 25, 2011 by admin

    I’m a bit of an “arm chair” archaeologist, which means that I don’t really know a lot about ancient history but I always find it fascinating when something comes up in the news. The reason I’m talking about this now is that a new site in Germany has found evidence that there were major battles in the Bronze Age – something that hadn’t been proven before.

    The site contains a number of skills with fractures which seems to indicate a battle between two different tribes. This is made even more compelling by the fact that nearly all the skulls belong to men, although there are some which belong to women too which is interesting. There is also an upper arm bone which is an arrow head in it and a thigh which appears to have happened when the person fell from a horse.

    Other things that were found include two wooden clubs – exactly the kind of weapons that you’d imagine these sorts of people would use – along with various other weapons. Although there has been evidence of people fighting in this time period before, this is the first time anyone has discovered evidence that there was large scale violence between different groups of people.

    Even though this is obviously an exciting find, I don’t find it particaulrly surprising. It seems obvious to me that there would be large scale battles, although it’s great that scientists have found some proof.


  2. Super Fast Data Transfer

    May 23, 2011 by admin

    If you’re like me then you probably get frustrated with the speed of data transfer. It doesn’t matter what type of data I’m transferring or whether I have the fastest connection available, its always too slow! People who think like me have a real treat coming up in the future then with a new laser system that’s capable of sending data at vastly superior speeds.

    The laser uses a new type of technology to transmit the data and is capable of going at 26TB/s. This is a huge amount of data to transfer in a second – I could move my entire 1TB hard drive to a different device in a fraction of a second. It would be so quick that it would almost be instantaneous!

    It goes without saying that by the time this kind of technology is available for a reasonable price it may not be so quick in comparison to the sizes of data that’s transferred, but it’s difficult to imagine a time in the near future where 26TB/s wouldn’t be enough.

    The problem is how they are going to get it working in a home system environment. I don’t know much about the technology so I don’t know how straightforward it is or whether it’s even possible with today’s computers. Even so, it’s something to look forward to! With that sort of speeds computers would be edging towards what we imagined them to be all along.