FAQ: All Your Hyperloop Questions Answered

If this works, it would be amazing. I know they keep using the examples of trips out on the west coast, but what about across the Midwest? Instead of just being flyover states, we could be shuttle across states too. Just think of those marketing opportunities.

Seriously though. Can you imagine living in Des Moines and commuting back and forth to Chicago for work every day? In about double the time you commute now just to get downtown? Fantastic!

These guys at Tested really lay this out in understandable terms.

New York to Los Angeles in 45 minutes? Hold on there, tiger. Elon Musk’s seemingly radical plan for the Hyperloop, which would blast people across the entirety of the United States in under an hour, is out. Sort of…continue reading

FYI: Why Does My Voice Sound Different When I Hear It On A Recording?

So you’re saying my thick skull affects the way my voice sounds? Does it also change the way I remember the words I said? I hope so…

It sounds different because it is different. “When you speak, the vocal folds in your throat vibrate, which causes your skin, skull and oral cavities to also vibrate, and we perceive this as sound,” explains Ben Hornsby, a professor of audiology at Vanderbilt University…continue reading

The Origin of the Oregon Trail Computer Game

I’d be willing to bet that 95% of elementary school students in the ’80s and ’90s played some version of the Oregon Trail. I have a copy on my iPad that pales in comparison to the version made for the Apple IIe or IIgs (I don’t remember. It was a looooong time ago.) I can still remember being disappointed when no deer or buffalo appeared while hunting and I lost a day for nothing. Or even worse, someone died from dysentery, or I hit a rock in the Columbia River (that was always the best way to finish). Think back to the good ol’ days while you read about the origins of this great game.

Think back to your first interactions with a computer. What were you doing? Probably not browsing the Internet, writing emails, or even typing in a word document. For many kids, video games and educational software came first, and that holds true as far back as the 1970s…continue reading