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Large Hadron Collider Clogged by Bird's Baguette Bomb

Every now and then, something will randomly fall out of the sky into an extremely insular environment, and chaos and confusion will erupt. Those consequences, as Chicken Little will tell you, can be devastating.

Something along those lines recently happened at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) when a bird dropped a baguette on the giant particle accelerator as it was flying overhead, nearly shutting the whole thing down in the process. The Register reports that the LHC, located at CERN laboratories in Switzerland, saw temperatures in parts of its accelerator circuits rise rapidly as a result of this baguette-bombing bird. (We're gonna go out on a limb and guess it was French.) Luckily, the LHC wasn't in operation, because if it had been, the incident would've likely suspended all further activity. Dr. Mike Lamont, who works in the CERN control center, reassured everyone that the LHC's safety net would have been strong enough to withstand the attack, especially in light of its significant upgrade in September.

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Computers

Happy 20th Birthday, Interwebz!

Al Gore may not agree, but this week marks the anniversary of the birth of the Web. 20 years ago, on March 13, 1989, Tim Berners-Lee, a researcher for the European Organization for Nuclear Research lab outside of Geneva, Switzerland, proposed an idea to counter data-loss at CERN due to personnel turnover and incompatible computers. In the proposal, Berners-Lee described the predicament by stating, "When two years is a typical length of stay, information is constantly being lost... The technical details of past projects are sometimes lost forever, or only recovered after a detective investigation in an emergency. Often, the information has been recorded, it just cannot be found."

To combat the information dilemma, Berners-Lee drafted his manifesto "Information Management: A Proposal." In his script, Berners-Lee suggested that we "should work toward a universal linked information system," and that "the aim would be to allow a place to be found for any information or reference which one felt was important, and a way of finding it afterward." Using remarkable foresight, Berners-Lee's proposal would take a few years to take shape, as pioneers such as Jim Clark and Marc Andreessen of Netscape paved the way for casual surfing.

So even though Al Gore may have said "I took the initiative in creating the Internet," give Berners-Lee his due credit this weekend as you search for random videos of people doing ridiculous things. Oh, how proud he must be of how far his baby has come. [From: Cnet News]

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Maybe Tom Hanks Can Get the Large Hadron Collider Working



The world's scariest technological advancement and Hollywood's most familiar standby will soon meet, according to Crunchgear.

In case you'd forgotten, the massive, underground machine the Large Hadron Collider -- engineered to simulate the "Big Bang" -- was first kicked into gear last September. Fortunately for everybody, when the switch was flipped, the world didn't implode. Unfortunately for the scientists involved, when the switch was flipped, the Large Hadron Collider broke down, requiring around $29 million in repairs.

Scientists with the Swiss laboratory Cern are now hoping that 'Forrest Gump-', 'Da Vinci Code-' and 'Bachelor Party'-star Tom Hanks will be able to rub some of his moxie off on the repaired machine and push the button as early as June, the Telegraph reports. Since Hanks's forthcoming film, the 'Da Vinci Code' sequel 'Angels and Demons,' deals with antimatter stolen from Cern, we imagine the scientists saw a unique publicity opportunity. We just hope the LHC relaunch fares better than 'The Ladykillers'. [From: The Telegraph via CrunchGear]

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