Friday, January 30, 2009

Shelby can see palm trees

The luke in luke-warm means tepid, but using it alone has fallen out of use.
--Telephoned in from Shelby who is in LA

An adult blue whale's heart beats about 5-6 times a minute.
--Elliot

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Anthropomorphize

Today I learned from Jenny that 'anthropomorphize' is when an inanimate object has physical human qualities (such as the five-fingered fern). (Personification is when an inanimate object performs human action, such as, the cold bites my nose.)

Thanks Jenny!

one trillion

In light of the stimulus package that is being pushed through congress, I thought I would write a fact that I learned a little while back. The package is worth almost 1 trillion dollars. To put that in perspective, 1 billion seconds ago was around Nixon's time in office. One trillion seconds ago is about 30,000BC (or BCE, whatever it is these days). So if you make 1 dollar every second ($3600 an hour!) you would have had to have been born in 30,000BC to make 1 trillion dollars. That's a lot of money our government is about to spend!

30,000BC according to wikipedia is when the bow and arrow where invented...and Neanderthals are not extinct yet.

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

If you don't like snakes

Then Maine is a good place to go, because Maine is the only state in the US that doesn't have venomous snakes.

Supposedly. I don't think I learned any good blog-worthy facts today, so I had to steal that from my computer.

medication errors

As of 2004: 10 to 18% of all hospital injuries are attributed to medication errors. 44,000 to 98,000 people die in US hospitals each year because of medication errors.

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

"A Farewell to Arms"

Hemingway's original transcript for "A Farewell to Arms" was stolen when his wife came to visit him on the train. Subsequently, he was a little irritated when he rewrote it, and claims that his second version of the novel was not as good as the first, and readers will note that it lacks Hemingway's flowery and more expansive language.

Bites!

28 to 80% of cat bites become infected. However, only about 3 to 18% of dog bites become infected.

Monday, January 26, 2009

Coconuts = plasma?

Shelby: The liquid inside young coconuts can be used as substitute for blood plasma.

(Supposedly.)



Elliot: Wyoming is the least populous state in the US, at just over .5 million. (We figure this is about how many people's houses we can see around Lake Merritt.)

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Katrina's Ice

According to my Public Finance and Public Policy book, the government spent $100 million on ice in the relief efforts for Hurricane Katrina... Interestingly, 60% of that ice never made it anywhere New Orleans, and some of it even ended up in Maine, which, in case you're not good at geography, is about 1700 miles away from New Orleans.


View Larger Map

Map thanks to Google. (I'm not sure what their copyright and citation deal-i-os are, and I definitely want to avoid this plagiarism thing.)

NSAIDs and Analgesics

The most common prescribed use of aspirin is to reduce platelet aggregation, not for its anti-inflammatory or pain-relieving properties. Also, acetaminophen poisoning is the most common type of poisoning for children.

Saturday, January 24, 2009

Two facts in one post

It's late and we're tired, so these are both in one post tonight.


Elliot: 1 in 7 Americans don't take their prescriptions.

Shelby: The average American CEO makes 475 times the workers' salaries. Britain has the next highest CEO pay, with 22 times their workers' salaries. A little ridiculous? I think so. (I have a list of about 5 of these, but my computer isn't on, so I'll get it later).

***Update!*** The average CEO's salary in the US is 475 times greater than the average worker's salary. In Japan, it is 11 times greater; France, 15; Canada, 20; South Africa, 21; Britain, 22.

Friday, January 23, 2009

Green Eggs and Ham

Dr. Seuss wrote Green Eggs and Ham because his editor made a bet with him that he couldn't write a book using 50 words or less. Dr. Seuss had just published The Cat in the Hat using 325. Green Eggs and Ham uses 50 words:

a, am, and, anywhere, are, be, boat, box, car, could, dark, do, eat, eggs, fox, goat, good, green, ham, here, house, I, if, in, let, like, may, me, mouse, not, on, or, rain, Sam, say, see, so, thank, that, the, them, there, they, train, tree, try, will, with, would, you.

You can find 9 more facts about Dr. Seuss here.

Mexican Jumping beans

Mexican jumping beans are a type of seed in which a moth egg has been laid. What makes them 'jump' is the larva inside reacting to uv light in an attempt to not have the seed dry out. Apparently the larva can live inside the seed for years.

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Jaywalking

According to someone on NPR today, males tend to jaywalk more often when females are around. Apparently it has to do with trying to appear all tough or something.

Multiple facts! From Science, Technology and Public Policy class

Today was my first science, technology and public policy class... We didn't get into anything too serious because it was only the first day, but here is what I learned from the intro to the class:

The 'war on cancer' was started in 1971 by President Nixon.

President Lincoln patented a machine for lifting sunken barges. This makes him the only president to have a patent (hint hint, Obama).

President Carter was a nuclear physicist.

In 1840, an act (sorry, can't find the name) created state universities... Which are all technical colleges oriented at creating a technical force, as opposed to liberal arts colleges, which are popular in Europe, because they create a more well-rounded population.

Barbed wire was very important in the settlement of the west because it contained/ kept out cattle.

Science accounts for as much as 50% of US economic growth over the past 50 years.

Automobiles were originally thought to be the solution to cities' pollution problems, because they don't create the piles of... waste... in the streets that horses do.

Yay! I beat Elliot tonight!

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Economics

Today I had my first public sector econ class... I learned what it means for the market to be 'efficient.' As long as there is the possibility that one person could be better off without another person becoming worse off as a result, the market is considered inefficient. Also, we learned that basically... the idea of a free market working right is a fairy tale. It's pretty much impossible.

Also, apparently San Francisco is considering a 'congestion tax' to tax cars going into downtown SF, because traffic is so bad. (HEY BAY AREA... How about a congestion tax on the dummies who cause the congestion?)

More blood facts

About 1% of the body's red blood cells is produced by bone marrow each day. That means that about 1% of the body's red blood cells is also destroyed each day.

Yep, another fact about blood. I can't really help it, it's what I am studying right now for class.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Recovering luggage

I can't think of one.

Barack and Michelle Obama are the second cutest couple in the world.

Sorry, but Elliot's curly hair and my naturally tanned swimmer skin makes us cuter.

NEWSFLASH! I have just been informed that the above does not constitute a fact.

I have this random facts widget on my computer (yay Vista!) that gives you a random fact every day. Some of them are quite stupid. Today's is "women blink nearly twice as much as men." But it doesn't give any support for this statement. I think it's dumb.

Okay, I found one. After digging through all the Obama-mania, I found this on CNN: you know that airplane that landed in the Hudson river last week? It's going to be weeks before they can recover peoples' stuff because first everything has to be weighed, then it all has to be dried, and then it has to be weighed again. Can someone explain why the need for the double-weighing? It says it's to verify the weight and balancing of the airplane (I think the 'balancing' might not be determinable at this point, people).

Blood Coagulation

Plasminogen in an inactive form of the enzyme plasmin. When plasminogen caught in a blood clot gets converted to plasmin it begins to break down the clot. Plasmin is also helpful in removing tiny clots in tiny blood vessels that would otherwise cause some problems.

Maybe not the most amazing fact but I had to write about clot retraction today so it was on my mind.

Our Blog

Hi!

The concept behind our blog is pretty simple. Every night, Elliot and I each try to come up with a fact we've learned throughout the day, and share it with each other. Going beyond just that, we thought we'd try blogging about it instead, to record these facts and share them with other unsuspecting people. Enjoy!