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Dana Dana Blankenhorn has been a business journalist for over 25 years and has covered the online world professionally since 1985. He founded the "Interactive Age Daily" for CMP Media, and has written for the Chicago Tribune, Advertising Age, and dozens of other publications over the years.
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Moore’s Law defines the history of technology. It held that the number of circuits etched on a given piece of silicon could double every 18 months as far as its author, Intel co-founder Gordon Moore, could see. Moore’s Law has spawned constant revolutions since then, not just in computing but in communications, in science, in a host of areas. Moore’s Law applies to radios, and to optical fiber, but there are some areas where it doesn’t apply. In this blog we’ll take a daily look at new implications of Moore’s Law in real time, as it rolls forward to create our future.
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January 13, 2005

Tastes Like Chicken

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Posted by Dana Blankenhorn

Sometime in the distant, distant past, an animal like my dog Blackie apparently ate some other animals like the chickens we used to keep in the backyard, and it was good.

Proof comes in the form of some fossils from China, which indicate that our common attitude of the mammal-dinosaur relationship (mouse-like things hiding in the nooks and crannies of the dinosaur world) needs some major revision.

Apparently, Liaoning back then was heavily volcanic. The animals in the area went to sleep one night, poisonous gas from nearby volcanoes washed over them, and they never woke up. In time the ash covered them, which eventually became a layer of sandstone filled with the most amazing finds -- feathered dinosaurs, early birds, fish and mammals.

Repenomamus gigantus weighed 30 pounds, or 13 kg, and we know it ate dinos because some undigested psittacosaurs were found where the stomach on a modern mammal would be, on the lower left side.

Somehow this explains Blackie's fondness for chicken kibble.

Oh, and there's no truth to the rumor that Blackie was named for "Blackie" Blankenhorn, the inspiration for a saloon-keeper played by Clark Gable in the movie San Francisco." We didn't even know about him, then. (Although now that you mention it I do see the resemblance.)

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