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Spanish Granny Blogger Dies at 97

Blog lovers this week are lamenting the loss of one of the Web's oldest and most beloved bloggers. According to Reuters, Maria Amelia Lopez of La Coruña, Spain passed away this week at the age of 97. In her blog, Lopez discussed the tribulations of living through the Spanish Civil War and the dictatorship of Francisco Franco, as well as current topics including hosting Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero.

Lopez dictated her nostalgic recollections to her grandson, who helped her start the blog in 2006 for her birthday (she wittily blogged that he was "stingy"). Contrary to certain opinions, Lopez found the Internet and blogging to be invigorating -- she wrote that blogging allowed her to "forget about my illness... It wakes up the brain and gives you great strength."

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Cameras, Digital Camera

Students Take Space Photos With Simple Latex Balloon and Digi-Cam

Spanish Students Take Photos of Space With Balloon and Digi-Cam
Who needs the Hubble? Not Gerard Marull Paretas, Sergi Saballs Vila, Marta­ Gasull Morcillo and Jaume Puigmiquel Casamort, that's for sure.

The four Spanish teenagers, working with their teacher Jordi Fanals Oriol as the Meteotek team at the IES La Bisbal school in Catalonia, started with a fairly lofty goal: They wanted to launch a balloon with a digital camera and some custom-built electronic sensors to 30,000 feet. Much to their surprise, they ended up considerably exceeding their expectations. Their $60 heavy duty latex balloon and $80 Nikon digital camera soared to 100,000 feet, right to the edge of space. Describing the team's homegrown approach, Gerard Marull Paretas told the Telegraph, "We took readings as the balloon rose and mapped its progress using Google Earth and the onboard radio receiver."

Like something out of a Roald Dahl book or upcoming Pixar film, these four students were able to accomplish something unexpected, and quite impressive, with meager resources. This is recession astronomy -- for less than the cost of some people's electric bills, the group was able to capture some stunning images from the very limits of the Earth's atmosphere. Check out the gallery below for some images from the team's Flickr feed. [From: Telegraph]

Gallery: Meteotek08

  • The
  • The Team and the Balloon
  • No That Isn't Google Earth
  • The Sun and the Edge of Space
  • The Very Edge of the Atmosphere


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Green Tech

Renewable Energy Hits Cemetery in Spain



With renewable energy being a thing of the future, a Spanish town called Santa Coloma de Gramenet is making it a thing of the past. And the dead.

The town has erected a sea of solar panels sitting atop is local cemetery. Flat, sunlit land is apparently so scarce in the region that the graveyard is essentially the only viable spot to install its solar energy program. The 462 panels installed produce enough energy to power 60 homes.

"The best tribute we can pay to our ancestors, whatever your religion may be, is to generate clean energy for new generations. That is our leitmotif," said Esteve Serret, director of Conste-Live Energy, the company that runs the cemetery in Santa Coloma and also works in renewable energy.

No word yet from said ancestors, though we have a feeling they're cool either way. [From: DailyMail]

Cell Phones

Two Spanish Children Institutionalized for Cell Phone Addiction

Two Spanish Children Institutionalized for Cell Phone Addiction
Here in the U.S., the practice of sending troubled kids to institutions for mental problems has seemed to lose favor in recent years. American kids with issues seem to either be coddled by parents who act like there's no problem, or they're shuffled onto the stage for an episode of 'Dr. Phil' and a dose of tough love. Things are handled a little differently in Spain, where two kids have been sent to a mental health facility because of their dependence on cell phones.

The children, aged 12 and 13, were diagnosed with addiction and sent away to the Child and Youth Mental Health Centre in Lleida, not far from Barcelona. Their school grades were flagging and both showed "disturbed behaviour" that resulted in their having "serious difficulties leading normal lives" when separated from their phones. That actually sounds like perfectly normal behavior to us -- perhaps we'll cancel that summer outing to Valencia we've been planning. [Source: BBC News]

Silicone Head Implant Makes Anyone Two Inches Taller

Head implants increase height by up to two inches.

As Randy Newman once crooned, "Short people got no reason to live." Far be it from us at Switched to dismiss those who don't measure up to certain height standards, but a doctor out of Madrid, Spain, may have a solution for the vertically challenged, or at least a way to change the general perception of height (if not a person's ability to reach items on the top shelves of kitchen cabinets).

The surgeon, Dr. Luis de la Cruz, has devised an implant for the tops of people's heads. Yes, through an incision on the side of the scalp, said surgeon slips a piece of silicone between the skin and the skull that apparently adds two inches to the overall measured height of the patient.

There are many professions with height requirements, and de la Cruz says his procedure can help short people who are seeking jobs as soldiers, police officers, air hostesses, models and firefighters. The operation costs about $8,000.

Of course, a height requirement usually is in place to guarantee a person's ability to reach high objects, maybe jump certain distances, or fit properly into certain pieces of equipment. Adding soft material to the top of someone's head is unlikely to do the trick if overall reach is really a job's defining criteria. (Would two inches of silicon on top of your skull help you dunk a basketball? If you think so, let us know.)

From Daily Mail.


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Cell Phones, iPhone

iPhone Expanding to Italy, Spain, and Switzerland?

iPhone Expanding European Presence?

While Americans have been lovingly showing off their iPhones since the end of June of last year, Apple fans in Germany, France, and the United Kingdom were only recently given the opportunity to buy their phones this past November. The rest of Europe is still (officially) out of luck. Now, though, it looks as though that's finally about to change, with talk of other members of the European Union finally going getting official iPhone releases later this month.

Rumor has it that Telefonica in Spain will be announcing its support for the device at the 3GSM Mobile World Congress in Barcelona later this month. Also, word has it that Swisscom will start selling in Switzerland on February 2 and that Telcom Italia Mobile will cover Italy this year as well.

Again, these are all rumors, but with U.S. demand for the iPhone seeming to wane, Apple would do well to start expanding while there's still interest out there.

From textually.org

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Green Tech

Engineers Invent Liquid-Cooled Buildings

Watery Windows Cool BuildingsThis time of year, when the temperatures are soaring, there's nothing like a nice dip in a cool body of water to make the heat tolerable. Who knew the same could be said for buildings? Apparently, a group of Spanish aircraft engineers do.

The engineers recently developed a technique to pump water through specialized double-pane windows. The sun heats the water, which is moved elsewhere and cooled, ultimately preventing the heat from warming the building. This effectively reduces the sun's effect on large glass office buildings, reducing cooling costs by as much as 70%.

The engineers have created a company called Intelliglass to market the idea. Don't expect to see this stuff in your home anytime in the near future, though, as the idea is still in the process of "being born" according to the (automatically translated) press release.

Looks like you're still stuck with Stupiglass for now. Sorry, we couldn't help that one.

From SCI FI Tech

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