Science & Technology
Science & Technology
In Praise of Those Commercializing the Moon
Ari Armstrong May 19, 2014
A consortium of space entrepreneurs plans next year to deliver to the moon’s surface a can of Pocari Sweat, an Asian sports drink. Yes, they’re doing it for the money—and that is a glorious thing. Part of the purpose of the mission is to inspire students to pursue careers in space exploration.
Science & Technology
Environmentalists: Peak Oil and No Peak Oil, Equally Bad
Ari Armstrong May 14, 2014
The notion of “peak oil” is scientifically fallacious because, with better methods of discovering and extracting fossil fuels, known reserves keep expanding, not contracting. Sure, there’s a theoretical limit to the amount of fossil fuels people can extract, but so far we’ve used the proverbial drop in the bucket.
Science & Technology
Fracking Fuels Advances in Domestic Plastic Production
David Biederman May 4, 2014
Although many people take polyethylene for granted, almost everyone regularly uses myriad products made partly or entirely from it, including modern airplanes, trash bags, food storage containers, lightweight vehicles, stretch films, hard hats, detergent bottles, piping for natural gas and water, insulation for electrical wires, medical supplies, the list goes on and on.
Science & Technology
Kitchen Supplies that Enrich Our Lives—and the Men of the Mind Who Produce Them
Ari Armstrong May 3, 2014
Some things are seemingly so mundane, and we use them so routinely, that we scarcely notice how important they are to our lives. Take, for example, common kitchen supplies. Pause for a moment to consider how businesses developed four essential products—and how important those products are to our daily food preparation.
Science & Technology
Frackers in Bakken Shale of North Dakota and Montana Produce 1 Billion Barrels of Oil
David Biederman May 2, 2014
Oil producers in the "Bakken shale formation in western North Dakota and eastern Montana have produced 1 billion barrels of crude [oil]" as of the first quarter of 2014, reports the Associated Press. "North Dakota has generated 852 million barrels of Bakken crude, and Montana has produced about 151 million barrels."
Science & Technology
Dr. Craviotto: “Damn the Mandates and Requirements from Bureaucrats”
Ari Armstrong May 2, 2014
Those of us who are not doctors, but who love our lives and our health, should not stand idly by as politicians and bureaucrats shackle the doctors on whom our lives and health may well depend. We should stand with those doctors who, like Craviotto, demand liberty to practice medicine in accordance with their own judgment.
Science & Technology
Austrian Steelmaker’s Texas Plant Highlights Value of U.S. Fracking and Property Rights
David Biederman May 1, 2014
Whereas in the United States owners of resources have a strong incentive to contract with frackers—development of Eagle Ford shale in Texas generated some $2.4 billion in leases in 2010 alone—European politicians and bureaucrats, who control the resources in question there, have little to no incentive (and likely negative incentive) to enable fracking.
Science & Technology
What’s in Your Food, Your Medicines, Your Body? SCiO’s Got an App for That
Ari Armstrong May 1, 2014
What if, when you looked at a piece of cheese (for example), you saw not only the cheese’s shape, color, texture, and the like, but also its chemical composition? Thanks to portable near-infrared spectroscopes now under development, you may soon be able to scan cheese or virtually any other object to learn facts about its chemical makeup.
Science & Technology
David Cameron Wants to Encourage Natural Gas Production; U.S. Shows the Way
David Biederman April 29, 2014
Due to government restrictions, UK producers have drilled only an averaged of 19 onshore wells per year over the last century. In stark contrast, because the U.S. government substantially protects the rights of private owners to subsurface oil and gas, energy producers here drill and frack thousands of wells annually.
Science & Technology
SpaceX Achieves Soft Booster Landing, Opens Door to Radically Cheaper Rocketry
Ari Armstrong April 29, 2014
SpaceX has successfully tested a soft landing of its Falcon9 rocket booster. Not only does such technology promise to vastly increase the launching of technologies and supplies into orbit, it promises to play a pivotal role in eventually transporting people to other planets, starting with Mars.