Yearly Archives: 2005


Cockroaches on Parade

If you have the goods on cockroaches–pictures, stories or otherwise related posts–send them on over to Ellison no later than midnight EDT tomorrow (10/20). He seems to have taken to them lately and plans to carnivalize them:

And if there’s enough interest, I may run Carnival of the Cockroaches as a regular feature. Because after all, everybody loves these little buggers, am I right?

Kind of reminds me of another humble beginning.


Best 100 English-Language Novels Since 1923

Two Time Magazine critics give us their list of the best 100 English-language novels since 1923.
I’m somewhat surprised that I’ve read only 51 of them. Certainly this list will be getting the usual treatment of “this one doesn’t belong but this one does” and, of course, the meme list where we can all mark the one’s we have read. Heck, if I had the cycles I’d build the list for you….I don’t. I will, though, do it when it makes its inevitable rounds just as I will do this one later today.
Via Kidney Notes.


Pillow Talk

As you either got up just a while ago or will be going to bed again soon it seems worthwhile to contemplate just who you are sharing your pillow with:

Researchers at The University of Manchester funded by the Fungal Research Trust have discovered millions of fungal spores right under our noses – in our pillows.
Aspergillus fumigatus, the species most commonly found in the pillows, is most likely to cause disease; and the resulting condition Aspergillosis has become the leading infectious cause of death in leukaemia and bone marrow transplant patients. Fungi also exacerbate asthma in adults.
The researchers dissected both feather and synthetic samples and identified several thousand spores of fungus per gram of used pillow – more than a million spores per pillow.
……
Each pillow was found to contain a substantial fungal load, with four to 16 different species being identified per sample and even higher numbers found in synthetic pillows. The microscopic fungus Aspergillus fumigatus was particularly evident in synthetic pillows, and fungi as diverse as bread and vine moulds and those usually found on damp walls and in showers were also found.
Professor Ashley Woodcock who led the research said: “We know that pillows are inhabited by the house dust mite which eats fungi, and one theory is that the fungi are in turn using the house dust mites’ faeces as a major source of nitrogen and nutrition (along with human skin scales). There could therefore be a ‘miniature ecosystem’ at work inside our pillows.”

How fertile is your pillow?
Hmmm, I wonder if there might be little run on pillows over the next week or two? If you’re of a mind invest wisely.
I might just encourage Mrs Modulator to replace our pillows even more frequently.
Via medGadget.


Where Are The Google Referrals?

Referrals from google.com to Modulator have dropped dramatically over the last week:

  • Today…….. 5.8%
  • Yesterday….15.3%
  • Last Week….23.1%
  • Last Month…28.6%
  • Last Year ….28.1%

Modulator’s Google Page Rank has not changed over the last year and referrals from yahoo.com continue about the same.
Is anyone else experiencing a similar phenomena?