Showing posts with label Hyperloop. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hyperloop. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Rodeo clown banned

Search results

  1. BBC News - Missouri State Fair rodeo clown banned for Obama mask

    www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-23677773   Cached
    The Missouri State Fair has banned for life a rodeo clown who donned a mask bearing the likeness of President Barack Obama for a mocking comedy act. The ...
  2. www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/08/13/211602534/rodeo...
    Missouri State Fair officials have now banned the rodeo clown who wore a President Obama mask during a performance that mocked the president. Fair ...
  3. www.nydailynews.com/news/politics/clown-anti-obama-rodeo...
    JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — The Missouri State Fair on Monday imposed a lifetime ban on a mask-wearing rodeo clown whose depiction of President Obama getting ...
  4. www.cnn.com/2013/08/12/politics/missouri-obama-rodeo   Cached
    Rodeo clown mocks Obama ... The Missouri State Fair Commission called it "unacceptable" and said the clown has been banned "from ever participating or ...
  5. www.chicagotribune.com/news/sns-rt-us-usa-clown-obama...   Cached
    [Aug 12, 2013] The Missouri State Fair Commission voted Monday to "permanently banthis rodeo clown from ever participating or performing" at the annual state fair ...
  6. www.cbsnews.com/...fair-bans-rodeo-clown-wearing-obama-mask   Cached
    This photo provided by Jameson Hsieh shows a clown wearing a mask intended to look like President Obama at the Missouri State Fair. The announcer asked the ...
  7. www.csmonitor.com/USA/DC-Decoder/Decoder-Wire/2013/0813/...   Cached
    Missouri State Fair officials have banned for life the rodeo clown who wore a President Obama mask while facing bulls at the event over the weekend. The ...
  8. www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/obama-mocking-rodeo...
    The Missouri State Fair on Monday imposed a lifetime ban on a rodeo clown whose depiction of President Barack Obama getting charged by a bull was widely criticized by ...
  9. www.upi.com/.../12/Missouri-rodeo-clown-banned-for-Obama...   Cached
    SEDALIA, Mo., Aug. 12 (UPI) -- A rodeo clown Monday was banned from working Missouri's State Fair for wearing a Barack Obama mask and asking the crowd if ..

Selena Gomez

Trending Now

  1. 1Kendrick Lamar
  2. 2Alaska serial killer
  3. 3Kristen Bell
  4. 4Selena Gomez
  5. 5Sinkhole Disney World
  6. 6Rodeo clown banned
  7. 7Pomona shootings
  8. 8AOL firing
  9. 9Chrissy Teigen
  10. 10Doomsday Castle

Jason Dufner

New IPhone

New IPhone

Hyperloop

Monday evening Elon Musk finally unveiled his vision for a futuristic transportation system he calls Hyperloop; like a giant silver bullet shot from a gun at up to 800 miles per hour, it would transport people (and cars) across California faster than a bullet train -- and at a fraction of the cost.

But far-fetched as it sounds, Musk’s idea is just one of many concepts for revolutionizing transportation. And it’s hardly the craziest.

That award goes to the space elevator.

A space elevator would raise and lower people and cargo to a platform tethered in space by a sturfdy length of nanoengineered cable. Scientists believe the platform -- essentially a satellite -- would remain stable, while robots would crawl up and down the length of the cable. If it ever works, a trip to space would require no more energy than that of the motor raising and lowering the platform.

“There are some concepts of what we call tethered satellites and there are some interesting things you can do with the orbital dynamics by building tethers and expanding them,” John Hansman an MIT professor of aeronautics and astronautics, told Discovery News. But even a tethered satellite would still use lots of energy. “There’s no free ride to space,” Hansman added.

Cars of the future face change as well -- we may not have vehicles that pack up into a suitcase as George Jetson did, but we will have robot chauffeurs. And shortly. Google has been spearheading a program to develop autonomous driving technology that relies upon laser range finders, radar sensors, and video cameras to navigate the road ahead. And clearly, the company has cornered the market in mapping technology.

Google claims this will make driving safer, more enjoyable and more efficient -- and clearly more accessible. Last year, Steve Mahan took one of Google’s vehicles out for a spin. Mahan happens to be 95 percent blind, proving the technology is reasonably successful.

And we’ll have flying cars soon as well -- at last. The Terrafugia Transition is a street legal aircraft with wings that fold up into the body, letting it cruise down the highway as easily as it soars the skies. Earlier this month, the company showed it off at an air show in Oshkosh.

What of those jetpacks that everyone craves? Yes, Martin Aircraft Corp. has promised the things for years. The New Zealand developer said Tuesday that aviation authorities have issued the device a flying permit -- finally allowing for manned test flights.

Martin Aircraft chief executive Peter Coker said the certification was a significant milestone in the development of the jetpack, which the company hopes to begin selling next year.

"For us it's a very important step because it moves it out of what I call a dream into something which I believe we're now in a position to commercialize and take forward very quickly," Coker told AFP.

Woo hoo!

But don’t forget the plane itself. A company called Skylon has plans to build a supersonic aircraft that would travel at five times the speed of sound with a special engine. It’s like the Concorde’s hyperactive kid brother. According to the company, it could take 300 passengers from London to Sydney in 4 hours.

Meanwhile, the Air Force has a similar plan. The military has been testing what it calls the X-51A WaveRider, a sleek bullet that it says uses a similar engine technology to ultimately reach Mach 6.

Yet of all those technologies, Elon Musk’s may surprisingly be the most realistic.

Google’s self-driving cars face an uphill court battle; would you really want a robot driving your car? And those space elevators, long a dream of science fiction fans, remain almost entirely a dream.

Musk said Monday that if no one else steps forward, he might build a working prototype. That would take three or four years, he said.

Onward and upward!

 

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/science/2013/08/13/beyond-hyperloop-wild-ideas-for-future-transportation/#ixzz2bsTpYOdD