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President Obama To Appear On Mythbusters

Muondecay writes "President Obama will be featured in the December 8th MythBusters episode, 'Archimedes Solar Ray,' during which he will challenge Adam and Jamie to revisit an ancient and somewhat controversial myth: Did Greek scientist and polymath Archimedes set fire to an invading Roman fleet using only mirrors and the reflected rays of the sun during the Siege of Syracuse? This is part of a White House effort to highlight the importance of science education."

15 of 795 comments (clear)

  1. Re:The original idea for the episode... by Chris+Burke · · Score: 5, Funny

    For some reason this reminds me of the Onion headline: "Black Man Given Worst Job In Country".

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    The enemies of Democracy are
  2. Really? by orphiuchus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I don't really have a problem with the president appearing on random TV shows a few times during their term, but I would really like Obama to spend less time being cool and more time fixing shit.

    1. Re:Really? by CannonballHead · · Score: 5, Insightful

      How to be a good supporter of your candidate:

      When a president you like is in office and doesn't do "enough," you claim that the President doesn't really have a lot of power and is more of a figurehead, like royalty.

      When a president you dislike is in office and doesn't do "enough," you claim that the President should be doing more.

      When a president you like is out of office, you blame everything that went wrong in his term on Congress.

      When a president you dislike is out of office, you blame everything that went wrong in his term on him.

      When a president you like is in office and something bad is happening (e.g., the economy), you blame it on the previous administration, because economic problems take a while to develop.

      When a president you dislike is in office and something bad is happening (e.g., the economy), you blame it on the current President or the previous Congress.

  3. Re:They've already busted that twice now by Pojut · · Score: 5, Insightful

    My favorite part was how people were (rightly) criticizing him for being such a media whore, when the conservative savior of 2008 Sarah Palin has a freakin' TV show .

  4. Re:They've already busted that twice now by master0ne · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think this is more of a "media event" to promote sciences and education more than trying to prove anything. When the goverment wants to prove something, they dont turn to Adam and Jamie, they hire scietists with billion dollar budgets and secret labs. This is more just the president trying to get more kids involved in science/history etc.... i doubt he even thinks their orignal conclusion was wrong, just wanted a intresting "Myth" for the duo to revisit that might turn a few heads. Take this for what it is.... a attempt to revive education in the american youth.

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    Noone writes jokes in base 13!
  5. Re:Archimedes was not born in Greece by WilliamGeorge · · Score: 5, Funny

    Someone really should have warned the Romans before that battle: 'never go in against a Sicilian when death is on the line!'

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    William George
  6. Re:The Greeks by blair1q · · Score: 5, Funny

    If the UN existed at that time, we'd never have had the Dark Ages, the Inquisition, the rise of Colonialism, or two World Wars.

    It wouldn't all have been rainbows and unicorns, but it would have been better than it was.

  7. He gets to meet Kari! by smellsofbikes · · Score: 5, Funny

    I'd love to get to meet Kari Byron, too, but he went to all the trouble to get elected *President* just to arrange an introduction? Guy's got style and determination, no doubt.

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    Nostalgia's not what it used to be.
  8. Truth, myth and how they blend into one. by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Say this battle happened. How do we know for certain? Because X number of people wrote about it or wrote about people having told them about it or having being told about people who heard it from others. If X is large enough, we accept it as fact. If not, well then it becomes myth or religion.

    Now, imagine a battle. Ships are going to attack an harbor. Ships ain't easily destroyed by the weapons of the age and worse, if you can hit them, they can hit you. They might be unable to hide, but neither can you, you are on the walls of the defences and the enemy knows this.

    So, how can you protect your archers from their archers? Blinding light? Pose them beside mirrors and the enemy can't see them. Simple trick if you think about it. With this blinding light, you can fire countless arrows, even heavy slow ones like fire-arrows and aim at ease.

    How would such a tactic, written down by someone who didn't understand and heard it from someone else be recorded?

    The mighty ships sailed at the harbour and a blinding light erupted from the walls and one by one the mighty ships were set on fire and sunk.

    Death ray is born. Nothing more then smoke and mirrors.

    THAT is what disappoints me about the Myth Busters. They far to often examine only part of a myth or add their own elements, the worsed of it being "well we two couldn't do it, so no-one could". Well, I doubt the myth busters could put a man on the moon. So the moon landings are a myth?

    Take the pycrete "myth". Why the paper substitution? THAT is not what the myth is about. And I still don't know how such a ship could have set sail. After all I presumed WW2 admirals were smart enough to ask "won't it melt". So why wouldn't it have melted?

    Or the Jaws myth. "We are going to examine wether a very large movie monster can ram a ship, but we are going to use a smaller shark because sharks ain't that large in real life..." No shit sherlock. And sharks also don't ram ships in real life.

    What next, I am going to test if my cat likes tuna by feeding it dog shit. If it doesn't like that that proofs it doesn't like tuna?

    As for the movie myths. Can a pen explode, kill a room of baddies but leave the hero intact... NO. If you think James Bond has myths, you REALLY need to get out more.

    The program was okay but has rapidly gone in the general direction of Discovery. Here is a hint. Gay fat guys building bling-bling bikes is NOT science. Mind you, they can go lower. Cakes? Tatoo shops? Why not just relabel it Oprahs Channel and be done with it.

    So cool, they are once again going to proof a couple of overweight Americans can't build something that is highly unlike to have ever existed and if it did, not have been able to destroy and entire fleet before the soldiers landed (or swam ashore) and destroyed it. That is supposed to encourage Americans back to science? Fat chance.

    We know what Americans think about science. We can see it in the nose-dive the science content on Myth-busters has taken. Unless it goes boom, not intrested. Note the increasing lack of myths that do not go boom.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

    1. Re:Truth, myth and how they blend into one. by demonbug · · Score: 5, Insightful

      So, how can you protect your archers from their archers? Blinding light? Pose them beside mirrors and the enemy can't see them. Simple trick if you think about it. With this blinding light, you can fire countless arrows, even heavy slow ones like fire-arrows and aim at ease.

      How would such a tactic, written down by someone who didn't understand and heard it from someone else be recorded?

      The mighty ships sailed at the harbour and a blinding light erupted from the walls and one by one the mighty ships were set on fire and sunk.

      Death ray is born. Nothing more then smoke and mirrors.

      THAT is what disappoints me about the Myth Busters. They far to often examine only part of a myth or add their own elements, the worsed of it being "well we two couldn't do it, so no-one could". Well, I doubt the myth busters could put a man on the moon. So the moon landings are a myth?

      I agree that Mythbusters often doesn't exhaustively test myths, but that generally isn't realistic. You have to set some boundaries and often make some assumptions in order to come up with a testable hypothesis.

      Take your hypothetical interpretation of the Death Ray myth - if you are going to start coming up with hypothetical ways that the myth may have come into being, then there is simply no way to test them all. Maybe it was a sunny day, and light was reflecting off the shields of the city's defenders. In a completely unrelated event, someone in one of the ships dropped an oil lamp and started a fire. If the ships were closely grouped, and it was a windy day, numerous ships could be consumed in such a fire; some dude watching interpreted the fire as the result of the reflected light, and recorded it as such. Is it possible? Absolutely. But that isn't what the myth says. And there are innumerable other potential explanations, none of which really have any bearing on what they are doing.

      They are testing the myth, not (usually) what potential events may have caused the event that gave birth to the myth. In this case, the myth is that Archimedes developed a weapon using focused light to start fires on attacking ships. That is all they were testing - not trying to figure out what might have happened, but trying to determine whether the myth, as recorded, is plausible. In order to do that, they have to make some assumptions to narrow the test - try to stick to materials that would have been available at the time, etc.

      Now, I often take issue with their test methods and interpretations, but on the whole I think they do a reasonable job of taking a myth, defining what aspect of the myth it is that they are testing, and then devising different tests and quantifying the results. It is a fair balance of entertainment and genuine testing to find out neat stuff; while I (and probably most Slashdot readers) would like them to be a little more rigorous and at least acknowledge shortcomings in their tests, it would be very easy to get bogged down in details ("rigor" in the oblig. xkcd) and then instead of Mythbusters you would have the Televised Transactions of the American Society of Materials Engineering, Physics, and History, and all of five people would still be interested in watching.

  9. Penn and Teller by AliasMarlowe · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Somehow, I'd rather see politicians appear on the "Penn and Teller: Bullshit!" series than on Mythbusters. Penn and Teller often deal with issues that politicians could address, if they were so inclined. Several politicians and bureaucrats have been on the show, mostly promoting ludicrous stupidity, but occasionally being almost sensible.

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    Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities. - Voltaire
  10. Re:They've already busted that twice now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Even Russian magazines, which she can read from her back porch.

  11. Re:The original idea for the episode... by nacturation · · Score: 5, Interesting

    If they could debunk that successfully it would be fantastic. People have been trying for a couple of years now, and still over 25% of this country is convinced he wasn't legally elected.

    That's better than Bush Jr's stats, where over 50% was convinced he wasn't legally elected.

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  12. Re:Science? by Carik · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Their science isn't always perfect, no. But their overall methodology is pretty decent.

    Step 1) Define the question.
    Step 2) Make a guess as to what will happen.
    Step 3) Design a test to confirm or deny your guess.
    Step 4) Try the test and see what happens.
    Step 5) If the producers have given you enough money, and your first test didn't work, repeat until you get an actual result.

    Sure, it's not perfect, but they do push the idea of forming a hypothesis and testing it, rather than just assuming that common wisdom is true. Which is, when you get right down to it, the essence of science.

    (That said, they have been slipping the last few seasons... they've fallen a little to much into "We have lots of money, we can just add dynamite!" territory, and a little too little into "Hey, let's show the math to explain this weird thing we just found.")

  13. Re:They've already busted that twice now by drakaan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I don't know if it's possible to burn nearly 10 years of positive karma in one post, but this appears to be the thread to attempt it on, so here goes...

    I have never before seen such a complete orgasmic crap-fest of bashing a single person in one place as I have with Palin in this comment thread.

    I get that people believe she is stupid (arguable). I get that people loathe her because she's conservative (fine). I get that people believe that not being fully-credentialed with a degree means that you have no intelligence (patently untrue).

    What I don't get is how this circle-jerk of "dude, I hate her TOO!" is not as evidently moronic to the people participating in it as it should be.

    Don't like stupid people? Cool...fine. Think Palin's stupid? Okie-dokie. Feel the need to be the 12,000th slashdotter to note her perceived ignorance in the same frigging thread? You fail it.

    Let me be clear, I don't expect people to rally around me, here, but I caught myself saying "seriously?" so many times while looking for actual discussion of the president appearing on Mythbusters that I had to share my irritation.

    As a side-note, "Flamebait" is the appropriate down-mod for a statement that you feel will draw a largely negative response because of its content. "Troll" is for when someone says something unkind or untrue in order to drum up a disagreement.

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    "Murphy was an optimist" - O'Toole's commentary on Murphy's Law