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This Day in Geek History: April 9

9 Apr 2008  Geek History

1895
A spectrogram made by American astronomer James Keeler proves that the rings of Saturn are composed of meteoric particles, as predicted by Maxwell. If the rings were solid, observations would show uniform rotation. However, Keeler’s spectrogram of light reflected from Saturn’s rings show a Doppler shift indicating a variation in radial velocity. Thus, particles in the inner part of a ring, closer to Saturn, move at a different rotational speed from those in more distance parts of a ring, as predicted by Kepler’s third law. Keeler will publish “A Spectroscopic Proof of the Meteoric Constitution of Saturn’s Rings” in the May 1895 issue of Astrophysical Journal.

1913
The Danske Statens Arkiv for Historiske Film og Stemmer (Danish State Archive for Historical Film and Sound) is established at the Royal Library in Copenhagen. It is the world’s first film archive. Its function is to collect records of significant events.

1940
A Nazi mobile radio transmitter in a truck parked close to the royal palace in Copenhagen comes on air on the frequency of Radio Copenhagen, broadcasting news of the surrender of the Danish king, whose palace has been occupied and sealed off by invading troops. Occupation of the country by German forces is rapidly completed soon after.

House of Wax1943
A meeting held by Colonel Leslie E. Simon, director of the Ballistic Research Laboratory at Aberdeen, Professor Oswald Veblen, of the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton and a handful of others. Their agenda is to discuss the memo sent to them by Dr. John William Mauchly and Mr. J. Presper Eckert, Jr., “Describing an Electronic Difference Analyzer”. The decision will be made to back the project.

1953
Warner Brothers premieres the first 3-D color film, House of Wax.

1959
The Mercury SevenNASA announces the selection of the United State’s first seven astronauts, chosen to participate in the Mercury program, the nation’s first manned space program. The seven chosen are: Scott Carpenter, Gordon Cooper, John Glenn, Gus Grissom, Wally Schirra, Alan Shepard, and Donald Slayton, who were chosen from 110 applicants. The news media quickly dubs the group the “Mercury Seven“. Their training program at Langley consists of a wide range of activities, ranging from a graduate-level course in introductory space science to simulator training and scuba-diving. Project Mercury will be NASA’s first high profile program. The purpose of the program is to learn if humans can survive in space. NASA required astronaut candidates to be male, no older than 40 years of age, no more than 5′ 11″ in height, and in excellent physical condition. On 5 May 1961, Shepard will become the first American in space.

1981
Nature publishes the longest scientific name in history. With 16,569 nucleotides, the systematic name for human mitochondrial DNA is 207,000 letters long.

1982
Atari Inc. opens the offices of Atari Far East Ltd. in Japan, at the Fukide Building, 2nd Floor, 4-1-13, Toranomon, MinatoKu, Tokyo, Japan 105. In celebration, a reception is held at the Hotel Okura hosted by John Farrand, president of Atari’s Coin Games International Division and Rivington Hight, president of Atari Far East.

1996
Infotainment World announces the promotion of John Rosseau to president of GamePro magazine and the appointment of Gini Talmadge as president of PC Entertainment magazine.

1997
Disney Online opens the Disney Daily Blast Internet website for ten thousand visitors, aimed at children aged 3-12 years.

Kilauren Gibb of Toronto reveals that she surfed the Internet to determine that celebrity musician Joni Mitchell is the birth mother who gave her up thirty-two years prior. By way of Mitchell’s Internet home page, Gibb discovers fourteen “points of comparison” to find confirm her suspicions.

1998
Playboy is awarded US$3.74 million plus court costs in a judgment against a San Diego-based firm called Five Senses Productions and its owner, Francesco Sanfilippo. According to the suit heard in federal court, the commercial Internet company used almost 7,500 Playboy-owned photographs on their service without permission.

The Seiko RuputerSeiko Instruments introduces the world’s first wrist wearable Personal Computer (PC). The watch, planned for release Wednesday, June 10, has been named Ruputer and will sell for US$285. It features a 16-bit, 3.6 MHz processor and 2 MB of non-volatile storage memory, 128 KB of main memory, a full graphic display, and a small joystick. It can download pictures and data via infrared signals from other PCs and will be provided with three applications that run on Windows ‘95.

The Stanford University Graduate School of Business, sysadmins install additional disk capacity on their servers. They then reload files from a corrupt backup tape, destroying many faculty and graduate student research files. This very public incident demonstrates yet again the importance of verifying the readability of backups. It also underscores the wisdom of making two backups before attempting to reload a system.

1999
David Herpolsheimer, Chief Executive Officer (CEO) for Bleem!, LLC (www.bleem.com) announces that a San Francisco Federal District Court has rejected a request submitted by Sony Computer Entertainment America (SCEA) to block sales of their PlayStation emulator, BLEEM!, for IBM compatible computers. Sony denies that such a request was submitted to the courts.

The Matrix is released to theaters in Australia.

2001
GameDaily newsletter reports that Japan’s Nihon Keizai Shimbun stated that about 235,000 worldwide users have logged on to play the Phantasy Star Online RPG on their Sega Dreamcast. Of that number, about 130,000 are Japanese gamers.

Intel releases the 850 MHz Celeron processor. Price: US$138 in 1000-unit quantities

2002
Yahoo! Launches a new small business site, http://smallbusiness.yahoo.com. The site is a centralized resource for online small business services and solutions. Read the original press release.

2004
One of the .ly nameservers stops responding, causing the other nameserver to go offline, making the domain completely inaccessible. .Ly is the top-level domain of Libya. Service will be restored on April 13th.

Shaun of the Dead, starring Simon Pegg and Nick Frost is released to theaters in the UK. The romantic comedy is a spoof on the zombie horror genre.

2006
Ubisoft announces the release of a Heroes V demo sometime in that week.

2007
Apple announces that it has sold its 100 millionth iPod, cementing it as the fastest selling music player. On average, one iPod has been sold every 1.7 seconds for the five and a half year duration of the device. In total, 10 different versions of the player have been released, and about 2.5 billion tracks have been downloaded from the accompanying iTunes music store. In March, Apple announced the sale of its 90 millionth iPod – evidence of the continued momentum of the product. The product line was reinvigorated when Apple introduced the new iPod Shuffle, one of the smallest MP3 players in the US.

Nintendo releases Super Paper Mario for the Wii in the US.

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