March 25, 2008

3/25/2008: Observations

My Observations

I heard at one point that Miley Cyrus, AKA Hannah Montana, was going emo. Then again I heard this from TMZ.

Miley Cyrus, AKA Hannah Montana. Emo? Get real!

If you get your "news" from TMZ, if you ask me, you need to find a new news source. Why you might ask?

  1. TMZ gets their "news" right from the celebrities, which of course means that they can make up the stories, true or not!
     
  2. Most of the time when TMZ asks the celebrities the questions, the celebs are far beyond sober and/or getting out of rehab.

So the next time you see TMZ on, tell yourself to find real news.
 
 


Posted on 03/25/2008 5:15 PM Comments (5)

May 28, 2007

2007 Science Fair Project

 

Medieval Siege Engines

2007 Science Fair Project
 
By
 
DragonDude
 

The Medieval Era, also know as the Middle Ages, ran from about 500 AD to 1500 AD. European countries were often at war, under attack by the Vikings, Mongol and Islamic invasions and other rival European nations. The kings could not fend off such forces with their armies alone, so they and their nobles built castles and walled cities all over the country to protect their kingdoms in an eventual attack. These fortifications offered protection to the nobles, their armies and to the peasants for weeks and even months in the event of a siege. Siege warfare was more common in the middles ages than straight out battles. Major invasions were concentrated on castles rather than land. In most of the battles, siege engines were used to conquer walled cities and castles.
 

What is a siege engine?

A siege engine is a machine that is designed to demolish or get around castles, city walls and other fortifications in warfare.
 

When were siege engines first used?

Siege engines were first used by the ancient Greeks, Spartans and Carthaginians around 425 BC. These early siege engines were assault ladders, battering rams and later catapults. A battering ram is just a hefty, heavy log carried by several soldiers and usually used to break down doors, gates and sometimes walls.
 
Trojan HorseThe Spartans used battering rams, but it seems that the Greeks limited their use of siege engines mostly to assault ladders. Some archaeologists have recently proposed that the legendary Trojan Horse was not a secret container for stealthy attackers, but rather a large battering ram resembling a horse.
 
The first Mediterranean people to use advanced siege machinery were the Carthaginians, who used battering rams and siege towers against the Greeks. These engines influenced the ruler of Syracuse, Dionysius I, who loved to destroy things.
 
Philip II of Macedonia and Alexander the Great used siege engines quite often. Their large engines spurred an evolution that led to impressive machines, like a siege tower in 304 BC: nine stories high and plated with iron, it stood 125 feet tall and 60 feet wide and weighed 360,000 pounds.
 
The most common engines were simple battering rams or tortoises. Tortoises were covers propelled in several clever ways that allowed the soldiers to attack walls with a certain degree of safety.
 

Did the Roman use siege engines?

The Romans preferred to assault enemy walls building earthen ramps (agger) or simply scaling the walls with ladders. Soldiers working at the ramps were protected by shelters (gallery), which were arranged to form a long corridor.
 

 
Wicker shields (plutei) were used to protect the front of the corridor during its construction. Sometimes the Romans used another engine resembling the Greek ditch-filling tortoise, called a testudo. Battering rams were also widespread. Siege towers were first used by the Roman legions around 200 BC.
 
The first documented occurrence of ancient siege artillery pieces in Europe was the gastraphetes ("belly-bow"), a kind of non-torsion bolt-thrower. These were mounted on wooden frames. Greater machines forced the introduction of pulley system for loading the projectiles, which had extended to include stones also. Later torsion systems appeared (ballista), based on sinew springs.
 
Onager
 
The onager was the main Roman invention in the field.
 

What siege engines were used during the Medieval Era?

The most common siege engines used were battering rams, siege towers, different types of catapults and the trebuchet.
 

Battering Rams

These were large mechanical objects, often on wheels that were used to ram the walls and doors of a castle in an attempt to break them down. Sometimes battering rams were part of a siege tower. The image below shows a simple covered battering ram. They often had wooden structures around them to protect the soldiers using the ram.
 
Roman Battering Ram
 

Siege Tower

Seige tower assaulting a castleAttackers sometimes built a siege tower to scale castle walls. Soldiers lay in wait inside the structure as others wheeled it to the castle. Once there, the soldiers lowered a drawbridge at the top of the tower onto the castle wall. Some towers were almost 100 feet high, and many archers and catapults could be crowded into a single tower.
 
Siege towers were difficult and time-consuming to build, however, and castle defenders could burn them down with fire arrows or firepots (launched pots filled with flaming liquids such as tar). Sometimes castle knights launched surprise raids on a tower to destroy it during construction. To protect their siege engine, attackers draped it with rawhides of mules or oxen.

Catapults

A catapult was a large machine used to throw objects, often rocks, arrows, pots of fire, or even spears, at a castle. This would destroy the castle walls and buildings. When we think of a catapult the one shown here is what we envision. But more often than not the catapults used for sieges didn't have the cup that you put the thrown object into.
 
Catapult, also called an onager
 
The catapult makes use of tension from twisting ropes or leather straps to propel the arm forward. The arm is propelled against a stop where the projectile is released.
 
The main types of catapults were onagers, as seen above, and named after the wild donkey for the way they kicked, and mangonels (see below).
 
This type of catapult was called a mangonel
 
Catapults could be very troublesome. After each firing the machine needed repositioning. Catapults sometimes buckled and shattered when propelling objects much smaller than that which the trebuchet was capable of hurling. They sometimes had a sling, which could generate more force and throw the object further with more accuracy. This sling effect was later developed into the trebuchet.
 

Trebuchet

14th century drawing of a Trebuchet. Click to see the larger version.Only one engine was the invention of the Middle Ages, the trebuchet. It was the deadly weapon in medieval times. It relied on a counterweight and was simpler in design and construction than most others. Prince Louis of France is credited with bringing it to England in 1216. Similar to the catapult in that it was designed to throw large objects but it was more efficient than a catapult because it could be built faster and at less cost, yet it could throw heavier objects even further.
 
The trebuchet was more efficient and more stable than other types of catapults. Using counterweights, a complete transfer of energy to the projectile was possible. They flung further and hurled harder.
 
Photo of a working Trebuchet. Click to see the larger version.
 
The basic theory of the Trebuchet was like that of a see saw. One end had a heavy weight. The other end extended much longer and had a sling where the thrown object was put. When the trebuchet was activated the heavy weight would fall, and the swinging of the seesaw would propel the object.
 

Siege weapons today

Siege weapons are now considered obsolete owing to the effectiveness of aircraft and missiles, which have made fortifications and walled cities obsolete. The only defensive structures are now deep bunkers and tunnels used for military command and control.
 
Even these may be of questionable value as it appears that the most survivable command and control of mobile defensive forces (such as modern tactical and strategic aircraft, mechanized cavalry and mechanized infantry) is through the use of mobile command centers.
 
 

Resources:

Castle
By Christopher Gavett.
Dorling Kindersley Ltd., 1994.
 
This colorful large-format book is a good introduction to everyday life inside a castle, covering entertainment, food, work, and more.

Medieval Siege Warfare
By Christopher Gravett and Richard and Christa Hook.
Reed International Books Ltd., 1990.
 
This book has good information about the weapons used during a siege and their evolution during medieval times.

Cross Sections: Castle
By Richard Platt.
Dorling Kindersley Ltd., 1994.
 
This is a colorful book for young adults. It is an introduction to everyday castle life. It has intricate drawings of castles, and includes a castle siege.

Siege Warfare,
Microsoft Encarta 95, Microsoft Corporation. 1995
 

Extra Items:

These were used as additional items in my Science Fair presentation.
 
Arming and loading a catapult.
 
Arming and loading a Catapuld. Click to see large view.

Cartoon showing the uses of a catapult.
 
Click for full view.

How to make an origami catapult that really works.
 
Click here for the large version that you can print out.

You can see a photo of my presentation at our school's Science Fair from April 2007 by clicking here.

 


Posted on 05/28/2007 8:05 AM Comments (4)

December 31, 2006

3... 2... 1... Happy New Year!

 
Happy New Year Comment Graphics

Best Wishes to All My Buzznet Friends

Happy New Year 2007!


Posted on 12/31/2006 3:29 PM Comments (7)

October 23, 2006

Hoot

Looks like HOOT was really a hoot! It was filmed in Boca Grande and Fort Lauderdale, Florida, between July 6th and September 2nd, 2005. HOOT was produced by Jimmy Buffett (yes, the musician) and Frank Marshall (who produced Seabiscuit). Wil Shriner was directing the film. Luke Wilson plays Officer Delinko, and Logan Lerman and Brie Larson play Roy and Beatrice. Clark Gregg ("In Good Company"), Tim Blake Nelson ("O Brother Where Art Thou") and Robert Wagner (Austin Powers movies, among many others) have roles in the movie. Added bonus is that Jimmy Buffett was contributing original music. The studios are Walden and New Line. HOOT was listed by Walden as being in theaters on April 7, 2006.
Posted on 10/23/2006 3:22 PM Comments (2)

September 10, 2006

James Brian Reilly - A 9/11 Memorial

This is a 2996 Tribute to James Brian Reilly

James Brian Reilly - A 9/11 Tribute | Photo Hosted at BuzznetFor James Reilly, that Monday night in September was typical. He met his roommates Jon Johnnidis and Matt Brush at Crunch Fitness on Lafayette Street in New York City. tags: was very athletic, and he had just done five miles on the treadmill there. 

The three of them went shopping, then went home and made chicken nachos. Jim enjoyed cooking, according to his roommates. They relaxed and watched 'Monday Night Football.'  It was a nice evening," Jon Johnnidis said. 

No one had any idea that it would be Reilly's last.

Early the next morning, Jim Reilly went to his work at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, where he was a bond trader, so he had to be there for meetings between 7:30 and 7:45 AM. The company's offices were on the 89th floor of the South Tower of the World Trade Center. 

The day was Tuesday, September 11th, 2001.

At 8:46 AM, American Airlines Flight 11, a tags: aircraft, crashed into the north side of the North Tower. Jim called his roommates and his father, William Reilly, to assure them that he was safe on the 89th floor in the South Tower, although a plane had rammed the North Tower. Then at 9:02 AM, as television broadcasters from around the world watched, United Airlines Flight 175, a Boeing 767 airplane, crashed into the South Tower.

    United Airlines Flight 175 | Photo Hosted at Buzznet

Jim Reilly's family and friends never heard from him again.

He was not married, and had no children, but he was godfather to his niece, Katherine. He would swoop her from the arms of whoever was holding her and coo like he was the father. He really liked to make his other nieces and nephews laugh as well. 

He had the kind of personality and humor that brought pleasure wherever he went, friends said. "Jim could turn around any situation and make it funny," said Jon Johnnidis, his best friend since the eighth grade in Huntington Station. Reilly liked to make people laugh, even to cramming his 6-foot frame into a child-sized electronic train to amuse his young nephews and nieces. His family called him "the world's funniest uncle."

He was the youngest of the five children of William and Virginia Reilly, and was an honor student and a soccer player at Walt Whitman High School, in Huntington, NY, where he graduated in 1994. He went to college and graduated from the College of William & Mary in Williamsburg, VA, where he was a member of Theta Delta Chi fraternity. 

"Jim was so intelligent, we know he would have done something great if he had survived," said Jon Johnnidis' sister, Melissa. He was also "very gentlemanly," she said. During a snowboarding expedition he lent his ski jacket to his girlfriend, Jennifer Bresler. As a beginning snowboarder, "more down than up, he soon looked like a big white snowball," she said.

Jim's memorial mass was attended by over 850 people including his girlfriend.

There are a lot of people who remember Jim Reilly, and wrote some pretty nice things about him over the last five years and what he meant to them. He will not be forgotten.

James B. Reilly was one of 2996 victims of the September 11th tragedies.

2996 | Photo Hosted at Buzznet

We should never forget all that was lost on September 11th, 2001.

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Posted on 09/10/2006 7:56 PM Comments (6)

August 14, 2006

My Favorite TV Commercial

 
Click here for larger version! Photo Hosted at BuzznetI just finished uploading a bunch of new pictures here, and in all the photos, drawings and clip art, I found a file that I had almost forgotten about. It was a picture from what was my favorite television commercial for the longest time. That was a Quiznos ad that featured some crazy little animals singing a song called, "We Love the Subs!" I used to crack up every time it came on TV. My Dad wasn't sure if he liked it at first, and said that my singing it all the time drove him crazy, but he used to laugh.

Then one day he found something funny on the Internet, and it was the original song that the Quiznos as came from. It was called "We Like the Moon" and it came from a guy in England named Joel Veitch, who has a site called rathergood.com. He showed it to me, and we put all the links on my computer so I wouldn't keep making him nuts. I found out that those funny animals weren't rats, as some people said, or weasels. They were called Spongmonkeys. Not sponge-monkeys, the proper term is Spongmonkeys. Some people liked them and others didn't.

You can still find the original flash video clip of "We Like the Moon" and even download the song as an mp3 audio file. If you like their humor, they have another very funny music video clip, "I'm Gonna Flip Out Like a Ninja" with animated cats, and it's very good. They have lots of other songs, videos and crazy things there as well. He is sometimes associated with a British humor group called B3TA (remember Badger, Badger, Badger?) that was to Wikipedia), but I can't link to them here as some of their stuff is really NSFW. 

Here is the actual "We Love the Subs!" commercial that we found on YouTube.com. 

The Quiznos commercials aren't as funny anymore. They had a baby named Bob who talked for awhile. It was OK, but it just wasn't as funny as the Spongmonkeys singing "We love the subs..." Joel Veitch is still making commercials, but they are mostly seen in England. He just did one for Miller Beer, which is on the Internet for the US, but since I'm underage we can't go there. 

Since you're here, please take a look at my pictures, and leave comments (or Buzz +) if you like them.

DragonDude

 


Posted on 08/14/2006 1:17 AM Comments (1)
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