Premiering March 24, 2006
Guests: Actor Jason Alexander, author/theologian Reza Aslan, Rep. Jack Kingston (R-GA), reporter Michael Ware
Every week, Bill Maher and the Real Time staff dig into the latest news stories.
Check out some of their sources on current hot topics our Real Time guests are likely to discuss.
Islamic Democracy?
Kabul Judge Rejects Calls to End Trial of Christian Convert
Note you may need to be a New York Times subscriber to read this article
Join debate on the Real Time community:
Islamic democracy, is democracy possible where there is not a clear separation of church and state?
Bush-Iraq Rhetoric
Bush Concedes Iraq War Erodes Political Status
Note you may need to be a New York Times subscriber to read this article
Saddam Trial
Q&A: Saddam on trial
from BBC News
U.S. Marines - Civilian Killing
US Troops Investigated Over Iraqi Massacres
from The Independent
U.S. Troops and Torture
In Secret Unit's 'Black Room,' a Grim Portrait of U.S. Abuse
Note you may need to be a New York Times subscriber to read this article
Sunday, March 26, 2006
Friday, March 24, 2006
Hypersonic jet ready for launch
BBC News 03/23/2006 Author: Jonathan Fildes
A new jet engine design able to fly seven times the speed of sound is scheduled to launch over Australia on Friday.
The scramjet engine, known as Hyshot III, has been designed by British defence firm Qinetiq.
If successful, it could pave the way for ultrafast, intercontinental air travel, and substantially cut the cost of putting small payloads into space.
The engine will launch on a rocket owned by the University of Queensland.
It is the first of three test flights planned for this year by the international Hyshot consortium.
The first Hyshot engine was launched in 2001 but the test flight failed when the rocket carrying the engine flew off course.
Simple engines
A supersonic combustion ramjet, or scramjet, is mechanically very simple. It has no moving parts and takes all of the oxygen it needs to burn hydrogen fuel from the air.
This makes it more efficient than conventional rocket engines as they do not need to carry their own oxygen supply, meaning that any vehicle could potentially carry a larger payload.
However scramjets do not begin to work until they reach five times the speed of sound.
At this speed the air passing through the engine is compressed and hot enough for ignition to occur. Rapid expansion of the exhaust gases creates the forward thrust.
To reach the critical speed, Hyshot III will be strapped to the front of a conventional rocket and blasted to an altitude of 330km before being allowed to plummet back to Earth.
On its descent the engine is expected to reach a top speed of Mach 7.6 or over 9,000km/ hour.
Making sure the flight happens correctly is incredibly difficult, according to Dr Allan Paull, project leader of the Hyshot programme at the University of Queensland.
"You are dealing with extremes of conditions. You're working out on the edge and with a lot of the stuff no one has ever tried [it] before," he told the BBC News website. "You've got to expect things to go wrong".
If everything goes to plan, the experiment will begin at a height of 35km. As the engine continues its downward path the fuel in the scramjet is expected to automatically ignite.
The scientists will then have just six seconds to monitor its performance before the £1m engine eventually crashes into the ground.
New design
The scramjet will not provide forward thrust during the flight, necessary if the engine is ever to power a vehicle. But the test will be enough to show that burning starts automatically and to verify trials already done in a wind tunnel.
"The wind tunnels operate for milliseconds," Dr Paull explained. "The difficulty is whether or not you can even see the supersonic combustion in this period of time."
Although the Qinetiq engine has never left the ground it is more realistic than previous Hyshot experiments.
It has a more efficient air intake on the front and can operate over a greater range of speeds. It also scoops air into the combustion chamber at a lower temperature, closer to that needed in a commercially useful engine.
If the test flight is successful, it will be followed four days later by the test flight of another Hyshot engine designed by the Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency (Jaxa). This will be followed in June by the launch of an engine that will fly at Mach 10, designed by the Australian Defence Science and Technology Organisation (DSTO).
Commercial reality
The Hyshot tests will bring the idea of a commercial scramjet one step closer to reality.
In the first instance these would probably be used to launch satellites into low earth orbit but many have speculated that they could also allow passenger airlines to fly between London and Sydney in just 2 hours.
Although this vision maybe many years off, it was given a huge boost when Nasa successfully flew its X-43A plane over the Pacific Ocean in 2004. The unmanned aircraft flew at 10 times the speed of sound, a new world speed record.
The team at the University of Queensland is also currently designing a vehicle that can fly under its own power.
If the plane works, it could be flying over the Australian desert within the next two years.
A new jet engine design able to fly seven times the speed of sound is scheduled to launch over Australia on Friday.
The scramjet engine, known as Hyshot III, has been designed by British defence firm Qinetiq.
If successful, it could pave the way for ultrafast, intercontinental air travel, and substantially cut the cost of putting small payloads into space.
The engine will launch on a rocket owned by the University of Queensland.
It is the first of three test flights planned for this year by the international Hyshot consortium.
The first Hyshot engine was launched in 2001 but the test flight failed when the rocket carrying the engine flew off course.
Simple engines
A supersonic combustion ramjet, or scramjet, is mechanically very simple. It has no moving parts and takes all of the oxygen it needs to burn hydrogen fuel from the air.
This makes it more efficient than conventional rocket engines as they do not need to carry their own oxygen supply, meaning that any vehicle could potentially carry a larger payload.
However scramjets do not begin to work until they reach five times the speed of sound.
At this speed the air passing through the engine is compressed and hot enough for ignition to occur. Rapid expansion of the exhaust gases creates the forward thrust.
To reach the critical speed, Hyshot III will be strapped to the front of a conventional rocket and blasted to an altitude of 330km before being allowed to plummet back to Earth.
On its descent the engine is expected to reach a top speed of Mach 7.6 or over 9,000km/ hour.
Making sure the flight happens correctly is incredibly difficult, according to Dr Allan Paull, project leader of the Hyshot programme at the University of Queensland.
"You are dealing with extremes of conditions. You're working out on the edge and with a lot of the stuff no one has ever tried [it] before," he told the BBC News website. "You've got to expect things to go wrong".
If everything goes to plan, the experiment will begin at a height of 35km. As the engine continues its downward path the fuel in the scramjet is expected to automatically ignite.
The scientists will then have just six seconds to monitor its performance before the £1m engine eventually crashes into the ground.
New design
The scramjet will not provide forward thrust during the flight, necessary if the engine is ever to power a vehicle. But the test will be enough to show that burning starts automatically and to verify trials already done in a wind tunnel.
"The wind tunnels operate for milliseconds," Dr Paull explained. "The difficulty is whether or not you can even see the supersonic combustion in this period of time."
Although the Qinetiq engine has never left the ground it is more realistic than previous Hyshot experiments.
It has a more efficient air intake on the front and can operate over a greater range of speeds. It also scoops air into the combustion chamber at a lower temperature, closer to that needed in a commercially useful engine.
If the test flight is successful, it will be followed four days later by the test flight of another Hyshot engine designed by the Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency (Jaxa). This will be followed in June by the launch of an engine that will fly at Mach 10, designed by the Australian Defence Science and Technology Organisation (DSTO).
Commercial reality
The Hyshot tests will bring the idea of a commercial scramjet one step closer to reality.
In the first instance these would probably be used to launch satellites into low earth orbit but many have speculated that they could also allow passenger airlines to fly between London and Sydney in just 2 hours.
Although this vision maybe many years off, it was given a huge boost when Nasa successfully flew its X-43A plane over the Pacific Ocean in 2004. The unmanned aircraft flew at 10 times the speed of sound, a new world speed record.
The team at the University of Queensland is also currently designing a vehicle that can fly under its own power.
If the plane works, it could be flying over the Australian desert within the next two years.
Monday, March 20, 2006
Korean Air debuts Connexion TV
Korean Air announced Friday it is offering live global television as part of its in-flight Internet service powered by Connexion by Boeing. The airline said Connexion currently is on 18 of its airliners and that by the end of 2006 Connexion will be on about 50 airplanes.
The carrier expects that by 2007 Connexion will be available on all Korean Air Boeing 747s and 777s serving long-haul routes. The airline is offering Connexion service at a 45 percent discount until May 31.
The carrier expects that by 2007 Connexion will be available on all Korean Air Boeing 747s and 777s serving long-haul routes. The airline is offering Connexion service at a 45 percent discount until May 31.
Sunday, March 12, 2006
LG Philips Develops World’s Biggest LCD Panel
LG Phillips LCD says it has developed the world’s largest liquid crystal display panel measuring 100 inches across.
The massive wide-screen panel has a screen ratio of 16:9 and measures 2.2 m by 1.2 m. The largest currently available LCD panel of 82 inches was developed by Samsung Electronics in March last year but has yet to become available in the shops.
Among commercially available panels, a 65-inch TV by Japan’s Sharp is the biggest. Plasma display panels retain a slight edge, with Japan’s Panasonic releasing a 103-inch panel early this year, and Samsung Electronics selling the world’s largest PDP TV measuring 80 inches since last year.
LG Philips says the development proves it is the global leader in large LCD technology because the industry has so far considered a 100-inch LDC panel impossible to make. The feat will also boost the competitiveness of LCD TVs vis-à-vis PDP TVs in the big-screen TV market, breaking a perception that only PDPs can deliver good quality in that size, it added.
Using the company’s own copper-based interconnect technology, the panel offers high-definition 6.22 megapixel picture quality without distorting video signals and supports a response speed below 5 ms with 1.07 million colors. It also boasts a maximum 3,000:1 contrast ratio, 92 percent color reproduction and a 180-degree viewing angle, LG Philips says.
“Technological advances for large LDC TVs, such as the 100-inch LCD, will act as a catalyst accelerating customer demand for high picture quality and large screens,” said LG Phillips LCD’s executive vice president for development Yeo Sang-deog.
(englishnews@chosun.com )
The massive wide-screen panel has a screen ratio of 16:9 and measures 2.2 m by 1.2 m. The largest currently available LCD panel of 82 inches was developed by Samsung Electronics in March last year but has yet to become available in the shops.
Among commercially available panels, a 65-inch TV by Japan’s Sharp is the biggest. Plasma display panels retain a slight edge, with Japan’s Panasonic releasing a 103-inch panel early this year, and Samsung Electronics selling the world’s largest PDP TV measuring 80 inches since last year.
LG Philips says the development proves it is the global leader in large LCD technology because the industry has so far considered a 100-inch LDC panel impossible to make. The feat will also boost the competitiveness of LCD TVs vis-à-vis PDP TVs in the big-screen TV market, breaking a perception that only PDPs can deliver good quality in that size, it added.
Using the company’s own copper-based interconnect technology, the panel offers high-definition 6.22 megapixel picture quality without distorting video signals and supports a response speed below 5 ms with 1.07 million colors. It also boasts a maximum 3,000:1 contrast ratio, 92 percent color reproduction and a 180-degree viewing angle, LG Philips says.
“Technological advances for large LDC TVs, such as the 100-inch LCD, will act as a catalyst accelerating customer demand for high picture quality and large screens,” said LG Phillips LCD’s executive vice president for development Yeo Sang-deog.
(englishnews@chosun.com )
Thursday, March 09, 2006
Samsung Unveils 10 Megapixel Camera Phone at CeBIT
Samsung Electronics says it has developed the world’s first 10 megapixel camera phone, which provides almost the same picture quality as professional cameras. Lee Ki-tae, the head of Samsung Electronics' telecom business, unveiled the camera phone at the CeBIT 2006, the world’s largest trade show for information and telecommunications technology which started in Hanover, Germany on Thursday.
A picture taken with a 10 megapixel resolution remains sharp even when blown up to calendar size. At last year’s CeBIT, the company displayed an 8 megapixel camera phone. “Increasing our market share in Europe will be decisive in determining the survival of our mobile phone business,” Lee said and vowed to increase the company’s market share there from 12.7 percent to 14-15 percent this year. Nokia, the world’s No. 1, has a firm grip on 30 percent of the European market.
Lee also said the global WCDMA mobile phone market will grow from 40 million units last year to more than 80 million this year, and Samsung Electronics aims to sell more than 10 million of the third-generation phones alone. Lee reiterated the company’s commitment to expensive high-price gadgets. “What would be the point of increasing our market share if we sell products costing US$30 or $40 a unit?” he asked.
The executive said mobile TV phones and HSDPA phones were leading the trend at the CeBIT this year. HSDPA is a “3.5 generation” mobile technology enabling users to access the Internet at speeds of up to 14.4 Mbps. Commercial mobile TV services will be available in many parts of Europe ahead of the football World Cup in Germany in June.
(englishnews@chosun.com )
A picture taken with a 10 megapixel resolution remains sharp even when blown up to calendar size. At last year’s CeBIT, the company displayed an 8 megapixel camera phone. “Increasing our market share in Europe will be decisive in determining the survival of our mobile phone business,” Lee said and vowed to increase the company’s market share there from 12.7 percent to 14-15 percent this year. Nokia, the world’s No. 1, has a firm grip on 30 percent of the European market.
Lee also said the global WCDMA mobile phone market will grow from 40 million units last year to more than 80 million this year, and Samsung Electronics aims to sell more than 10 million of the third-generation phones alone. Lee reiterated the company’s commitment to expensive high-price gadgets. “What would be the point of increasing our market share if we sell products costing US$30 or $40 a unit?” he asked.
The executive said mobile TV phones and HSDPA phones were leading the trend at the CeBIT this year. HSDPA is a “3.5 generation” mobile technology enabling users to access the Internet at speeds of up to 14.4 Mbps. Commercial mobile TV services will be available in many parts of Europe ahead of the football World Cup in Germany in June.
(englishnews@chosun.com )
Tuesday, March 07, 2006
Real Time episode 69
Real Time episode 69
Premiering March 3, 2006
Guests: comedian DL Hughley, editor/journalist Graydon Carter, correspondent Dana Priest, fmr. Dir. of FEMA Michael Brown, fmr. CIA case officer/author Bob Baer, actor Harry Anderson
On the Oscars
"There's a movie about a gay cowboy. There's a movie about a gay writer. There's a movie about a transsexual. If these Oscars were any gayer, they'd be the Tonys." – Bill Maher
On Rebuilding New Orleans
"We need to raise money. We have to add two bucks to a pack of cigarettes. We have to add a quarter to a beer. We have to get some money going here and stop looking like a kid with a bowl that Sally Struthers is pitching." – Harry Anderson
On Bush
"He speaks to the audience as if they're idiots. I think the reason he does that is because that's the way these issues were explained to him." – Graydon Carter
"Bush didn't really win on his popularity last time. He won on scaring people that Kerry might do something stupid like, I don't know, sell the ports to the Arabs." – Bill Maher
On Iraq
"We need Saddam or somebody like Saddam back in that country. It's been held together with somebody like him for the last 300 years, and we're not going to do it by democracy." – Bob Baer, Former CIA officer
Premiering March 3, 2006
Guests: comedian DL Hughley, editor/journalist Graydon Carter, correspondent Dana Priest, fmr. Dir. of FEMA Michael Brown, fmr. CIA case officer/author Bob Baer, actor Harry Anderson
On the Oscars
"There's a movie about a gay cowboy. There's a movie about a gay writer. There's a movie about a transsexual. If these Oscars were any gayer, they'd be the Tonys." – Bill Maher
On Rebuilding New Orleans
"We need to raise money. We have to add two bucks to a pack of cigarettes. We have to add a quarter to a beer. We have to get some money going here and stop looking like a kid with a bowl that Sally Struthers is pitching." – Harry Anderson
On Bush
"He speaks to the audience as if they're idiots. I think the reason he does that is because that's the way these issues were explained to him." – Graydon Carter
"Bush didn't really win on his popularity last time. He won on scaring people that Kerry might do something stupid like, I don't know, sell the ports to the Arabs." – Bill Maher
On Iraq
"We need Saddam or somebody like Saddam back in that country. It's been held together with somebody like him for the last 300 years, and we're not going to do it by democracy." – Bob Baer, Former CIA officer
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