New Species Discovered on eBay

An independent researcher who was contacted about identifying shells sold on eBay discovered that the shells he was being asked to identify were a previously unknown species.

Sounds cool, but the story turns out to have a dark side. Simon Coppard of the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature in London told New Scientist,

We think they must come from illegal trawling. Unfortunately, the only use the bright colors [of the shells] seem to have is to make them very desirable to collectors.

Source:

New species of sea urchin found in eBay auctions. New Scientist, August 19, 2006.

HD & Blu-Ray Media Making It to Market

In mid-August, Sony began shipping 50gb dual-layer Blu-Ray discs, while Memorex began shipping HD DVD-R discs. The Blu-Ray media retailed for about $48/disc and the HD DVD-R went for about $20.

At close to $1/gb, neither are much of a bargain when you can buy DVD+/-R media for about $.07/gb. Then again, if you need to back up 200gb of World of Warcraft screenshots like somebody I know does, then only needing 2-4 discs instead of swapping about 50 of them might be worth the price premium.

I’d like to think the HD DVD-R and Blu-Ray media prices might eventually come down, but since I think both technologies are very likely going to tank, I don’t have much confidence in that happening anytime soon.

Sources:

Memorex Begins Selling HD DVD Discs. Nate Mook, BetaNews, August 15, 2006.

Sony Shipping 50GB Blu-Ray Discs. Nate Mook, BetaNews, August 15, 2006.

Is Red a Performance Enhancing Color?

Aside from all the hype over genuinely performance enhancing drugs, one of the silliest performance enhancement stories revolves around the color of uniforms.

The May 19, 2005 issue of Nature published a study by Russell Hill and Robert Barton that examined whether or not the color of uniforms affected sports performance (I’m not making this up).

They examined a number of Olympic sporting where contestants were randomly assigned blue or red uniforms and found that the red-clothed athletes outperformed the blue-clad ones. “We find that wearing red is consistently associated with higher probability of winning,” Hill and Barton said.

That’s true enough, but given the relatively small sample of boxing, tae kwon do, Greco-Roman wrestling and freestyle wrestling events, not much else seems warranted. An obvious point about these events is that they specifically require interpersonal violence. Even if there is some specific bias toward players donned in red in such sports, it doesn’t follow that this holds in other competitions.

And concluding, as the researchers do, that “The color of sportswear needs to be taken into account to ensure a level playing field in sport” seems wholly unwarranted by their small sample.

In fact, it is awfully similar to the nonsense stats that sports commentators throw around. My favorite are the teams that supposedly are handicapped by either cold or hot weather typically based on ridiculously small sample sizes (usually less than 12 such games).

Source:

Red outfits give athletes advantage. Rob Roy Britt, LiveScience, May 18, 2005.

In Sports, Red Is Winning Color, Study Says. John Roach, National Geographic News, May 18, 2005.

Starship Dimensions

Starship Dimensions is “intended to allow science fiction fans to get an impression of the true scale of their favorite science fiction spacecraft by being able to compare ships across genres, as well as being able to compare them with contemporary objects with which they are probably familiar.”

In case you wanted a good visual reference on how much bigger the Death Star is as compared to the Babylon 5 space station.