536 lines
23 KiB
Plaintext
536 lines
23 KiB
Plaintext
Date: Thu, 5 Aug 93 19:38:58 PDT
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Reply-To: <surfpunk@osc.versant.com>
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Return-Path: <cocot@osc.versant.com>
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Message-ID: <surfpunk-0092@SURFPUNK.Technical.Journal>
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Mime-Version: 1.0
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Content-Type: text/plain
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From: surfpunk@osc.versant.com (jro bs gehfg)
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To: surfpunk@osc.versant.com (SURFPUNK Technical Journal)
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Subject: [surfpunk-0092] DIGEST: archive, mime, _Runesong_, Potato Guns, AMER
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via gnu to cypherpunks:
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> Interestingly, I am coming to the conclusion that big
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> business operates on a web of trust very much like
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> what is found in PGP. There are Dun&Bradstreet
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> reports of course, but, bye-and-large, when a company
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> wants credit, they give a list of the other companies
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> that they do business with as evidence of their
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> trustworthiness in receiving credit.
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>
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> Peace ..Tom Jones <TCJones@DOCKMASTER.NCSC.MIL>
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nimrod appends to some mail:
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# A full VR 3D BBS is feasible at 9600 Bd on PC+CyberScope
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# as I hope to demonstrate within 6-12 months.
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# zzzen@pax.eunet.ch (Nimrod S. Kerrett)
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questions we get:
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@ From: A.Mcbride@axion.bt.co.uk
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@
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@ Is there an ftp site for this stuff?
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@
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@ regards, alan
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There's a WWW site -- if you have www or xmosiac, you can use the address
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http://www.acns.nwu.edu/surfpunk/
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I should talk to the www.acns.nwu.edu people and see if we can get
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surfpunk into the anon-ftp there as well.
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+ Date: Sun, 1 Aug 1993 23:57:33 -0700 (MST)
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+ From: Horea Virgil Marian <marian@enuxhb.eas.asu.edu>
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+ Subject: mime
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+ To: surfpunk@versant.com
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+ hi!
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+
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+ where i can get mime on the net?
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+
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+ thank you,
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+
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+ horea
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The main ftp site is "thumper.bellcore.com", but it hasn't been
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working for me for the last couple of days. I've found a MIME FAQ
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that I might issue as a surfpunk soon:
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Xref: netcom.com comp.mail.mime:1358 comp.answers:1389 news.answers:10585
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Path: netcom.com!netcomsv!decwrl!olivea!uunet!pipex!pipex!not-for-mail
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From: tim@pipex.net (Tim Goodwin)
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Newsgroups: comp.mail.mime,comp.answers,news.answers
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Subject: comp.mail.mime frequently asked questions list (FAQ)
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Supersedes: <mime-faq_741350266@pipex.net>
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Followup-To: comp.mail.mime
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Date: 22 Jul 1993 21:11:05 +0100
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Organization: Pipex Ltd., 216 Science Park, Cambridge CB4 4WA, England
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Lines: 1467
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Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
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Message-ID: <mime-faq_743371861@pipex.net>
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NNTP-Posting-Host: tank
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Summary: This posting contains answers to some of the Frequently Asked
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Questions about MIME (Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions).
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Please read it before posting a question to comp.mail.mime.
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Archive-Name: mail/mime-faq
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Last-modified: 1993/07/22
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Version: 2.7
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strick
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________________________________________________________________________
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________________________________________________________________________
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Date: Sat, 17 Jul 93 15:22 GMT
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From: Don Webb <0004200716@mcimail.com>
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To: ARCANA <ARCANA%UNCCVM.BITNET@pucc.princeton.edu>
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To: surfpunk <surfpunk@versant.com>
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Subject: _Runesong_
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Dear Dwellers in Arcana,
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While I'm in the plug mode this morning, I thought I would
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mention that my friend Edred Thorsson has finally come out with
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his long promised book and tape package _Runesong: A Practical
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Guide to Rune Galdor_. I have found the cassette a great help in
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what has been for me a major stumbling block along the way the
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way to learning the lore -- the pronunciation of the now-exotic
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sounding words and phrases of the Teutonic tradition. This
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product was designed to remedy that problem. Pronunciation of
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languages such as Proto-Germanic (the reconstructed tongue from
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which all Germanic languages are derived) Old English or Old
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Norse is usually the kind of thing only learned in the ivory
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towers of academia. With his cassette and booklet, the
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information is now available beyond that sphere.
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_Runesong_
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is available for $19.95 from Runa Raven Press/ POB
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180931/Austin, TX 78718
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Don Webb
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0004200716@mcimail.com
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The Secret of magic is to transform the magician.
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________________________________________________________________________
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Date: Fri, 30 Jul 93 19:36 EDT
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From: thug@phantom.com (Murdering Thug)
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To: surfpunk@osc.versant.com
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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From: thaanuj@prism.CS.ORST.EDU (John Thaanum)
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Subject: Re: Potato Guns
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In article <9307240917.1.11327@cup.portal.com>
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#I just saw on TV a news story where they covered a police demonstration
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#of the deadly potato gun. These are not the sort of potato guns you
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#may have played with as a child, using a small tube such as an ink
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#cartridge for a pen that had the point cut off and the ink cleaned
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#out.
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#
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#This was a big potato gun. It appeared to be made from PVC pipe
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#about 2 inches in diameter (that's 2.733 decihectares, for our
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#Canadian friends :-). The cops were shooting potatoes at an old
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#car, and managed to smash a side window in one shot from a distance
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#of about 10 feet.
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#
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#The cops said children as young as 12 had been caught with these
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#things, and that they are illegal under the same laws that make
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#sawed-off shotguns illegal.
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#
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#The TV spot was carefully filmed to avoid revealing any detail how
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#to build one. Could anyone provide a detailed set of instructions
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#how to build a monster potato gun?
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I don't know what the law has to say about such devices, but they are quite
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the rage back in my hometown. I was there last week, and saw one that a
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friend of mine built. They are so popular that all the plumbing and
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irrigation supply stores are sold out on the materials.
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My friend built his with a barrel length of about three feet, and a bore
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diameter of about two inches. The combustion chamber was slightly larger
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in diameter, maybe five inches. Standard plastic tubing adapters were
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used to connect the two different sized peices. At the base of the barrel
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was drilled a small hole, with a wooden dowel inserted and glued into place.
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This keeps the potato from being pushed too far with the ramrod. The
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muzzle end of the barrel was filed down to a sharp edge all the way around.
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This way, the user can take a potato larger than the bore diameter, and
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manually force it into the muzzle, and the sharp edge trims it off to snugly
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fit in the bore, and a snug fit is necessary for good performance, just like
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a conventional gun. At the very end of the gun was a threaded plastic fitting.
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This could be unscrewed to squirt a -small- amount of engine starting fluid,
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which is mostly ethyl ether. A squirt lasting about 1/2 a second seemed about
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optimal. Too much or too little results in a weak shot. Anyway, after
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squirting in a small amount of propellant, quickly screw the plastic plug back
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into place. A push-button barbeque igniter was used to touch off the
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propellant. It was installed through a small hole drilled in the side of
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the combustion area. Note- all joints between the pipes, igniter, and dowel
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must be sealed with a strong glue. These things belch fire out of every
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seam even when throughly sealed, so be careful.
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They are not very loud, and can launch a decent sized baker potato about
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150 yards. They are a lot of fun. Getting the quantity of fuel just right
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takes some practice, but when the ratio of fuel/air is just right, they
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really go!
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Disclaimer: These things are potentially dangerous. Build and shoot one
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at your own risk. If they are illegal in your area, don't
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build one!
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Have fun!
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--
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************ John Thaanum thaanuj@prism.cs.orst.edu ************
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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From: kj@solbourne.com (Ken Sullivan)
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Subject: Potato Bazooka PlanZ!@#!
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Well it seems to have spread across the country :-) I was talking to my
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dad in N.C. who said that all of the kids over 30 were playing with potato
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bazookas :-) And that it was developed in CA. and introduced to the East
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Coast. Now Rush Limbaugh ?sp. has talked about it! Well, I built one
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from verbal instructions and it works! It has a few bugs to be worked out,
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but all in all, it's very impressive. I thought I would post an acsii
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drawing of it to the net ;-)
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___ <---- sharpen this end to
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| | cut the potato plug
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~~~~~ <---- 2" diameter ABS
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|~~~| plastic pipe 36" long
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|___|
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[___]
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/_____\ <--- 4" to 2" reducer
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[_______]
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| @|@ <--- gas grill ignitor
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| | <--- 4" diameter ABS tube
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|_______| 12" long
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[_______]
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[///////] <---- screw thread fitting
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[///////]
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[__] <--- screw cap
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Assemble all the parts (except the screw cap) and glue them together using
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ABS glue. Fit the gas grill ignitor through the middle of the 12" section
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of tube. So far, what I have seen that works is to load a potato plug,
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spray a couple shots of Aquanet Hairspray into the other end, screw on the
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cap, and using a 30" plunger - push the potato plug down the 36" tube. Aim
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(never aim this at a person or animal!!) and fire! It will launch a potato
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plug about 1200'!!!
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I will not assume any responsibility for your ability to build this
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correctly, choice of fuel, ammo, or choice of target. You are responsible
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for your actions. Be careful and have fun :-) If this is illegal in your
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state, I am not responsible if you break the law. std. disclaimer. etc.
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-- KJ Sullivan
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====== END OF FILE =====
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________________________________________________________________________
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Date: Sun, 1 Aug 93 21:58 GMT
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From: Don Webb <0004200716@mcimail.com>
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To: scotto <scotto@penguin.gatech.edu>
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To: "Arnold R. Watson" <0005317516@mcimail.com>
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To: "John A. Youril" <0002135500@mcimail.com>
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To: "fringeware@wixer.bga.com" <fringeware@wixer.bga.com>
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To: surfpunk <surfpunk@versant.com>
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To: "Mary A. Bordi" <mbordi@netcom.com>
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To: Jon Lebkowsky <jonl@ghostwheel.bga.com>
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To: jon lebkowsky <jonl@well.sf.ca.us>
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To: "Dr. Michael A. Aquino" <0002784041@mcimail.com>
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Subject: Jonesboro Case
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Dear Folk,
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My friend Chris Carlisle of AMER asked me to distribute this.
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If you find the case important, please post it.
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Don Webb
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July 31st, 1993
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
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Civil Rights Activists Denounce Religious
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Discrimination in Jonesboro, Arkansas
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Today the Alliance for Magical and Earth Religions (AMER), a
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national civil rights and civil liberties organization based
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in St. Louis, Missouri, issued a statement denouncing recent
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religious discrimination against the owners of a small
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business in Jonesboro, Arkansas. AMER's president and
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spokesman, Brad Hicks, called recent events in Jonesboro
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"deplorable" and "un-American" and said that he would be proud
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to march in a protest against such discrimination planned for
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Jonesboro on Sunday, August 1st.
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The controversy began on June 21st when a Jonesboro couple
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named Terry and Amanda Riley opened a bookstore, called Magic
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Moon. The Rileys are self-proclaimed Witches, members of the
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religion known as Wicca, and the store specializes in books
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and supplies of interest to other members of their faith.
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According to AMER's sources, on June 23rd their landlord,
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accompanied by two local ministers, entered the store and
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instructed the Rileys that their store would have to close and
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vacate the premises by July 10th (since extended to August
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10th).
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AMER has also heard that a number of local ministers have
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denounced the Rileys and their store, falsely accusing them of
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being Satan worshipers, and have asked other property owners
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and realtors in Jonesboro not to rent to the Rileys. Since
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June 23rd, the Rileys have been seeking new quarters for their
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store but have been unsuccessful.
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AMER, through its president and spokesman Brad Hicks of St.
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Louis, Missouri, denounced these actions in strong terms.
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"Religious discrimination like this," said Hicks, "is wrong
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and un-American."
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Hicks stressed that if Jonesboro residents are afraid of
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Witches, their fears are misplaced. "Above all, the Rileys and
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their customers are regular members of the community who have
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never hurt anyone." Hicks and AMER called for calm, hoping
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that "cooler heads will prevail."
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Another reason that AMER believes that the Jonesboro churches
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are wrong to denounce Magic Moon is that their denunciation is
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based on two factual errors. First, there appears to be a
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widespread misconception that the Rileys and their customers
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are Satan worshipers. AMER and many other national religious
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experts agree that there is no more similarity between Wicca
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(also known as Witchcraft) and Satanism than there is between
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any two other religions, such as Christianity and Buddhism.
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Wicca is a form of natural magic and nature worship, usually
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worshiping a God and a Goddess of nature and following the
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natural cycles. Religious Satanists, on the other hand, honor
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a single God whom they call Satan, Set, or Prometheus, whom
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they claim gave the gift of intelligence and consciousness to
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human beings.
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Satanists and Witches do have one thing in common: a
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reverence for human life, which both consider sacred, albeit
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for separate reasons. This contradicts the other apparent
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misconception of the Jonesboro residents who have denounced
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Magic Moon, who seem to fear that allowing Witches to transact
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business in their community is in some way dangerous.
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Hicks said that most of the image that people have of Satan
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worshipers and Witches as dangerous lunatics comes from what
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experts call "dabblers." Dabblers are maladjusted young people
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or small groups who base their practices or beliefs on what
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they've "learned" from horror films, denunciations at church,
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or in the most dangerous cases, from misleading information
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from ill-informed, self-proclaimed anti-occult "experts"
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instead of what the religions of Wicca or Satanism teach.
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In addition, AMER warned that business practices which
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discriminate, such as denying business owners a lease on the
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grounds of their religion, are illegal and open up the person
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or business that so discriminates to both criminal and civil
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liability.
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"Besides," said Hicks, "I would hope that the horrible
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religious conflicts in Bosnia, Northern Ireland, and Algeria
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would have taught us by now that religious discrimination is
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wrong and dangerous." In each of the examples cited, terrible
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wars or insurrections were started when a majority religion
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attempted to outlaw the practices of religious minorities.
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"How can anyone say that they believe in America while
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opposing the free exercise of religion? How can anyone say
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that they believe in civil rights while opposing civil rights
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for religions they don't understand?" asked Hicks.
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The Alliance for Magical and Earth Religions is sending its
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President, Brad Hicks, and possibly other members and
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officers, to march in support of the Rileys in an event
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planned for Sunday, August 1st, in Jonesboro, Arkansas.
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For more information, contact the Alliance for Magical and
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Earth Religions at P.O. Box 16551, St. Louis, Missouri 63105,
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or call its president, Brad Hicks, at (314) 878-8402.
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FOR UPDATES, PLEASE CONTACT CHRIS CARLISLE AT C24884CC@WUVMD.BITNET
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OR BRAD HICKS AT JBHICKS@MCIMAIL.COM.
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PLEASE DO NOT REDISTRIBUTE WITHOUT THE DATE OR THESE EMAIL ADDRESSES.
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******************************************
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*CHRIS CARLISLE C24884CC@WUVMD.BITNET *
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* OR C24884CC@WUVMD.WUSTL.EDU *
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* EMAIL LIAISON AND VICE-PRESIDENT *
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* ALLIANCE FOR MAGICAL AND EARTH *
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* RELIGIONS *
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******************************************
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________________________________________________________________________
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________________________________________________________________________
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The SURFPUNK Technical Journal is a dangerous multinational hacker zine
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originating near BARRNET in the fashionable western arm of the northern
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California matrix. Quantum Californians appear in one of two states,
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spin surf or spin punk. Undetected, we are both, or might be neither.
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________________________________________________________________________
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Send postings to <surfpunk@versant.com>,
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subscription requests to <surfpunk-request@versant.com>.
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________________________________________________________________________
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________________________________________________________________________
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Finder: keith@cc.gatech.edu (Keith Edwards)
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Subject: "Using the Spin of Electrons to Make the Smallest Chips Yet"
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Source: NYT, 7/6/93, pg B5, William Broad <100 LINES>
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'Each chip could hold trillions of transistors, compressing vast power
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into a tiny space'
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- a standard circuit line today is about a micron wide
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- 100 times thinner than a human hair
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o with considerable work, it can be seen how to make .1 micron circuits
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- enabling billions of transistors
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- that's been seen as the likely end of the electronics race
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o a new field is emerging that may leap the size barrier
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- circuits perhaps .01 microns wide
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- the width of about 100 atoms
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- enabling trillions of transistors
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o a subtle aspect of quantum mechanics is used - electron spin
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- in a normal electric current, the electrons spin in a random mix
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. quantum states known as up and down
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- by viewing this as analogous to light polarization,
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scientists are creating "off" and "on" states
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- enabling a surprising new dimension to computing
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o Mark Johnson, Bellcore (Red Hook NJ) physicist
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- unveiled his invention of a spin transistor in a recent Science issue
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- his device is only a prototype but its properties excite experts
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- for one thing, it works better as it gets smaller!
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- and it's made of highly conductive metals, not semiconductors
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o Gary Prinz, Naval Research Lab solid-state physicist
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"The 21st century could run on spin polarization.
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It could be the answer to the diminishing-size dilemma of semiconductors.
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Johnson's work is certainly going to make a mark, the question is how large"
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o one application is likely to be computer memory
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- the spin transistor works basically on magnetism
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. fundamentally, itself an expression of aligned electron spins
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- arrays of spin transistors could be information storage banks
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. replacing bulky, slow and unreliable computer disk drives
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o Eli Yablonovitch, U of CA at Los Angeles electrical engineer
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"You'd think, with the end of the 20th century, we'd have banished
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moving parts....what Johnson has done will contribute to their demise"
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o Johnson's work at Bellcore extended his PhD work at Cornell in 1986
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- "Interjection and Detection of Spin Polarization Electrons in Metals"
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- in 1990 he experimented with exceedingly fine films
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- in July 1992, he found very strong signals
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. unlike the weak ones he recorded as a graduate student
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- the polarization efficiency in the target was nearly 100%
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. 'why this should be so is still largely a mystery'
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o what was clear: shrinking the device redoubled its signal strength
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- theory predicted even further strides
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"As you trap the spins in a smaller volume, the effect gets
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relatively bigger" Johnson
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o Johnson saw the application in switching, digital revolution's heart
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- his device is a thin gold film between 2 magnetic strips
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- a current sends polarized electrons from the 1st strip into the gold
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- their ability to exit (turn the circuit 'on') depends on the magnetic
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orientation of the 2nd strip
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- passage requires the electrons and the strip all have the same polarity
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o this sandwich thus can act as a memory device
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- the magnetic polarity of the 2nd strip is remembered
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after the current is turned off
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- reading the memory requires only a brief electrical impulse
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- 'arrays of such devices could produce chips that don't need electricity
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to store information - one of the most coveted prizes in computing'
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o it's even possible spin transistors could be used in logic processors
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- if further work in the field is encouraging: Johnson
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- so far the sandwich has been tested at -297 degrees
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- Johnson expects spin devices working at room temperature in 1993
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o another question is whether the signal amplification of spin devices
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will be large enough for logic applications: Johnson
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"If other people become interested, within 1-2 years we could answer
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a lot of questions"
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o Bellcore cannot make and sell spin chips, due to legal constraints
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- they have applied for a patent and could reap licensing fees
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o if the answers to these questions are positive, the effects will be huge
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- everything will become dramatically smarter or smaller or both
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- cars could drive themselves
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- large machinery would waste less energy
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- satellites would shrink from yards to inches
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- robots might become talented
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- PCs could have the power of todays supercomputers
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o Dr. Prinz warns that this new frontier is endangered in America
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"The Japanese are very good in magnetics.
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I don't know who is going to do this here.
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The companies are getting out of basic research. It's a tragedy"
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o a few dozen US scientists has been exploring spin engineering
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- most are at universities
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- some at companies: Bellcore, 3-M, Honeywell, IBM
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. IBM is working in giant magnetoresistance, a spin phenomenon
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. to improve magnetic disk drives
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o several Federal agencies are studying the work in spin devices
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- including the Advanced Research Projects Agency
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- their funding could pickup the pace of work
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- David Awschalom, U of CA at Santa Barbara physicist:
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"You can now spin engineer systems to do all kinds of unique things...
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Spin devices could be the basis for a new generation of devices"
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<Several other articles on electron switches are available, 450 lines:>
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REQUEST ATOM from NSDEC at CARVM8
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Norm deCarteret Advantis - Tampa FL
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------------------------------------------------------------------
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