16.6.05

the last truck stop on the data highway

Hi again

Like I promised, there will again be some diary-style short stories posted about my travels and work in the Polar regions. Now, I have just returned to Longyearbyen, Svalbard, where part of my PhD work and a large part of my tourist guide experience originates.

Svalbard is an Arctic archipelago under Norwegian administration and has long been an adventurous outpost-like settlement where coal mining, whaling, fishing, and to some extent hunting and trapping have sustained small populations in up to four larger settlements as well as smaller stations and cabins throughout the area of some 60.000 sq km. For more info, visit the CIA ;-)

CIA - The World Factbook -- Svalbard

But, finally, the world has reached out and has now connected itself with even the last miner and trapper, whether they want it or not. A brand-new glass fibre cable connection from the Norwegian mainland now brings Gigabit data transfer capabilities (at least theoretically) right up to 78 °N.

Actually, the growing scientific community on the main island, Spitsbergen, has been in dire need of such a stable line with some significant bandwidth, especially since there is a satellite downlink station located just outside the main settlement, Longyearbyen, where I stay right now. Previously all data and communications connections to the mainland had been satellite-based as well, which was kind of absurd for the downlink station...

Check out the link to the station:

SvalSat-Svalbard Satellite Station Nowegian Space Centre

Even the northernmost community on Svalbard, Ny-Ålesund, also a former mining town which now markets itself as an "International Research Platform" is by now connected by an upgraded direct-beam radio link from Longyearbyen and should be getting something like 155 MBit/s of data through.

Ny-Ålesund LSF - General information about Ny-Ålesund

But there are even more exciting things down the pipeline in this area: the Russians, which by the way also support a good-sized coal mining settlement not far from Longyearbyen, have previously been the suspects of (real or imagined?) cold-war style scenarios, combining secret bases, transport helicopters that could be refitted with their original weaponry in a flash (?!), nuclear subs sneaking along the ice-covered coasts, etc. You get the idea.

But hey, now even these (admittedly still pretty scary) subs can be put to a 'good' purpose: one of them is scheduled to launch a refitted ballistic missile carrying a prototype of a solar-sail-powered spacecraft, er, next tuesday from somewhere in the Barents Sea (i.e. our "backyard").

Let's hope the thing takes off as scheduled and delivers its cargo to a nice orbit altitude (the last attempt seems to have - ehm - crashed in Kamtchatka). Here is the full story:

Wired News: Cosmos 1 Set to Test Solar Sail

And, by the way, let's hope they fire the right rocket, huh ?-)

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9.6.05

Mactracker - Get info on any Mac

Here is a nice tool to find your first mac, your current mac, any mac, wíth specs, and on the the fly!

Mactracker - Get info on any Mac

It is a simple database of every mac ever made, and definitely the thing if you want to live out some nostalgia and do not have the access to the net, where similar online data are availabe at:

Apple History

Apple History offers some more sorting options like "time line", "family", or "processor" etc. so check this one out, too!


I just tested both and here is what I found on MacTracker:



• my first mac: Macintosh SE (thanks, brother!) salvaged from UCSB


The Mac SE - history


• my first powerbook: Powerbook G3 "wallstreet", later upgraded to G4/500, 20 GB HD, 512 MB RAM, USB, FW, BT (pc-cards)


The BOOK!


• my first powermac: Power Mac G4 "sawtooth", G4/400


Power Mac G4/400


• my first iPod: iPod (click wheel) "q21", 40 GB


The iPod


• my next machines: ;-)




iMac 2.0 Ghz 17" (@office), 160 GB HD, 1.5 GB RAM...

The iMac

and possibly another iMac 2.0 but in 20" for home (400 GB HD, 2.0 GB RAM...) in sync with the office machine, and with a nice DVB-T option for recording a tv show now and then



and if the good ol' BOOK ever gives up, I hope Steve has the Powerbook DxP4 ready ;-)

Da IntelBook!


I always liked the ultra-compact design of the 12", just the tech specs and the tiny screen were major issues for me. And oh yeah, the price for this pizza box deluxe...

Now that I have adopted my old wallstreet/G4 as a simple, robust and lean travel/mail/surf/blog machine, the 12" (with new processors, in time to come) seems to be the ultimate replacement if the 8 year old hardware should ever fail.

I guess I am just not the type of guy who runs Mathematica in the airport lounge or finishes Photoshop projects on the commuter train...;-? who DOES this anyway?

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7.6.05

Leopard Seal (Hydrurga leptonyx)

...in case anybody wondered who or what "Leptonyx" is...

SCS: Leopard Seal (Hydrurga leptonyx)

A nice comprehensive site of the Seal Conservation Society (SCS).

And if you still wonder why I like these guys so much, take a look at the pic:

Leopard Seal

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how it all began...

hello world

finally I enter the world of blogs. Actually, this is almost something like a prequel to my website, which has been running since 1999 (www.rupert.krapp.org) and originated as an online diary of a year spent on Svalbard, an archipelago in the Arctic.

So, similar to the great success of other prequels which followed - and subsequently explained and gradually enhanced - the otherwise mediocre sequels released much earlier, I intend to rework the material of my Polar travels and adventures, as well as the "more serious" part of my scientific explorations and career. And yes, I have been watching Star Wars recently... ;-)

So here we go: begun again, this online diary has!

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