Last Updated: 9:57 pm, July 28, 2010

Web Only:

What WebM means for the web

With the arrival of the iPad, the web has become even more readily available. However, Apple decided not to support Adobe Flash, a popular tool used to deliver dynamic content on the web, and rather pledged their support of HTML5 technology, which also has support for dynamic content, for the iPad. Most of the major companies on the web support HTML5, and they are all working to allow it to take over roles currently played only by Adobe Flash.
One common use of Flash is for embedding video onto web pages. Flash is used on almost all sites that stream video, including YouTube and Vimeo. HTML5 provides a framework to embed video, but the leading technology corporations are divided when it comes to the choosing the technology that fits into that framework.
This battle currently has three main contenders: H.264, Ogg Theora, and just recently joining the debate, WebM. H.264 is a proprietary but standardized codec supported by Apple. Ogg Theora is an open-source codec and is thus royalty-free, but lacks some technical capabilities. Before WebM was announced at the 2010 Google I/O conference, Mozilla, the company behind the Firefox web browser, was a staunch supporter of Theora, fighting against Apple.
According to the HTML5 specifications, the web needs “a codec that is known to not require per-unit or per-distributor licensing, that is compatible with the open source development model, that is of sufficient quality as to be usable, and that is not an additional submarine patent risk for large companies.”
Theora loses on the quality issue, while H.264 is closed-source, thus not “compatible with the open-source development model.”
Suddenly, Google solved this dilemma by releasing its WebM codec. This codec meets if not surpasses the quality standard set by H.264, while still remaining open-source. Already, it has gotten the support of dozens of hardware and software companies.
If WebM becomes standardized, the web can hope to see a lot of improvement. First, it solves the debate on the perfect codec for HTML5 video, and thus allows innovation to move forward with a secure foundation. Also, with a single codec standardized for HTML5, sites can safely implement HTML5 video without excluding anyone who happens to have a different codec. This brings web innovation to more people, both in the desktop and mobile fields.
Most importantly, a standardization of WebM would keep the web open. With an open-source video codec, anyone will be able to improve the web, and thus users on the web won’t be dependent on a single corporation for parts of the web that has become such a great part of the everyday life.


Large Hadron Collider explores origins of the universe

The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) has been a divisive subject of discussion from day one. However, the $10 billion dollar investment in this research tool appears to be paying off with exciting new scientific discoveries.

According to the CERN website, on Mar 30, two high-energy proton beams collided in the 17-mile-long underground tunnel after two previous failed attempts. The collider broke its own energy record with the protons reaching 3.5 trillion-electron-volts (TeV) to create a 7-TeV collision.

There were concerns as to whether the experiment could proceed at the LHC’s full potential according to National Geographic due to a 2008 electrical glitch that resulted in a large helium leek inside the machine’s tunnels. However, these concerns were refuted with the success of the test.

Currently, CERN scientists plan to create a collision with double this amount of energy in the near future.

Scientists at CERN hope that the collision will answer questions as to why Albert Einstein’s theory of relativity doesn’t apply to quantum mechanics, the study of particles infinitely too small for the human eye to see. With the data collected from the experiments, CERN scientists will attempt to understand why matter and antimatter weren’t created in equal amounts during the Big Bang, thus causing both to react and destroy the universe.

After more studies with the LHC, scientists hope to ultimately understand the events that occurred in the first fractions of a second after the Big Bang that CERN scientists theorize was the start of the universe.


CHS students take on Missouri All State Orchestra

This past week, from Jan. 27-30, the 2010 Missouri All State Orchestra commenced. Many CHS students were in attendance after an arduous preparation process.

CHS students Elle Jacobs, Matthew Millett, Richard Millett, Henry Myers, and Daniel Peipert all participated in the Missouri All State Orchestra.

After an hours-long trek to Tan Tar A Resort in Osage Beach, the students rehearsed and performed three pieces over their stay at Tan Tar A. The pieces were Samuel Barber’s Adagio for Strings, Tchaikovsky’s Capriccio Italien, and Kirt Mosier’s Run.

Run, written by Missouri composer Mosier, was a commissioned piece for the event.

Junior Elle Jacobs greatly enjoyed the pieces, particularly with a group of such talented student musicians.

“They were really fun to play because they sounded really good and really pretty,” Jacobs said. “I was happy to be playing them.”

Playing the pieces with such skill and achieving the honor of performing in the All State Orchestra was no easy task, however. The audition process involved different stages and required a great deal of practice.

“We went to Mizzou and we auditioned there,” Myers said. “That determined whether you got in. A few days ago, we actually went to All State and that’s where we re-auditioned with what we would actually be playing.”

In addition to performing in the more serious aspects of the event and the difficult audition process, Jacobs also found the experience to be very fun for her and fellow students.

“I thought it was really fun and I got close to people that I knew from earlier,” Jacobs said. “I’m really good friends with them now.”


Warm weather didn’t stop fun at Hidden Valley

Although the weather’s been getting much warmer than the previous two weekends, the above-freezing temperatures still made for a great time at Hidden Valley Ski Resort. On Monday, Jan. 18, the temperatures reached above 50 degrees Fahrenheit but that didn’t stop devoted ski and snowboard fans from making the long trek out to the slopes.
The snow, or slush rather, was nice to have;  it made falling much softer but for those on the ground more than a few seconds, wet butts were sure to ensue.
In the softer snow, trying new tricks or even trying skiing or snowboarding for the first time was well worth it, as sophomore Adam Ferguson explained.
“It was always fun but sometimes it was probably more fun for the people watching me,” Ferguson said. “The fact that I’m still alive is because it was a warmer day.”
Hidden Valley Ski Resort, a flat and monotonous 40-minute drive from Clayton, was well worth it. As sophomore Taylor Gold pointed out, there are truly no other options for avid skiers and boarders.
“You don’t really think of skiing when you think of the Midwest so it’s surprising,” Gold said. “It’s the best you can get for the Midwest.”
Hopefully the weather will stay cold enough for Hidden Valley to stay open and make more snow. The resort already has a 50-70 inch base, an incredibly high amount of snow for such a small ski area.
With both the terrain parks still open, plenty of snow to last and all the runs open, there’s something for everyone at Hidden Valley.
Ferguson also pointed out a useful bit of information he learned while at Hidden Valley this past weekend.
“The best piece of advice I received was from Jack Holds,” Ferguson said. “‘Snowboarding is 10 percent skill and 90 percent how you look.’”
Make sure you hit the fresh pow to shred some nar ‘fore the meltdown broskis.


Peppers Dance coming Feb. 6

The CHS Peppers dance will take place on Feb. 6  from 8 – 11 p.m. in Stuber Gym. This year’s theme is Vegas.
“We have an excellent DJ,” Activities Director Mike Nelke said, “in addition to a photo booth where students can take pictures and print out unlimited copies. It adds something unique.”
Performing Arts Director Stephanie Manny shares his excitement.
“Since its Vegas-themed, there are lots of lights,” Manny said. “and cards on tables so students can play. Plus, there’s more socializing. You don’t even have to dance.”
Senior Jake Leech is looking forward for Peppers as well, as it is the last one he is able to attend.
“I really want to make sure to go to a lot of the dances,” Leech said. “Peppers is always fun because it takes the pressure off the guys to ask the girls. I had a great time the last time I went.”
Indeed, student attendance has increased the past few dances.
“There must be something different going on,” Manny said with a smile.


Dishonesty proves the ‘me first’ syndrome

A classful of plagiarized papers, two stolen dresses. These are, undoubtedly, not the only occurrences of dishonesty at CHS to ever have happened recently. However, I find it disturbing that such things have happened at all.

How can one cheat a lab report without realizing that it only gets everyone in trouble? Or stealing clothing; how can one not care that every CHS students’ image is now tarnished as well, as a result of their individual actions?

The answer is simple. People like that in reality don’t care. How depressing.

There will never be a time when no one has even the slightest urge to cut corners. That’s just how it goes. Students speak of pressure, stress, sleep deprivation. But, from age six or seven on, we are also taught early-on that we cannot copy somebody’s test, that it’s bad if we steal our classmate’s belongings, and that if we break something, we should not lie about it. Lying, cheating, stealing; they are, in essence, the trio of crimes we were warned away from as children.

The same things translate smoothly as we grow older: no longer involving petty arguments between children, but real offenses that have real repercussions that not only affect those involved, but others as well, by association.

It is those effects that touch the entire community that I believe those that lie, cheat, and steal, cannot comprehend. It is those who cannot see beyond themselves that have no scruples taking anything from anyone else. How do we stop them when they have no qualms with anything they do, anyway?

The issue that I see here is that our society no longer has many principles regarding dishonesty. In this society, we are taught that he who wins, wins, no matter the cost.

In a world where the stakes keep growing, we all have so much more to lose, we think. Conversely, if we win, we think we’ll win big. This is what we see here. Some will do anything for that grand prize.

The CHS community is no exception. It is a microcosm of the larger world that lies beyond its front doors, and out there, the stakes are even higher. It might be a stolen dress from a charity event here. (That in itself, in this case, was indeed a felony.) However, ten years from now, will it be more than a dress? Will it be more serious than a lab report?

Yes, it will be, if we don’t do something now.

I believe that the issue is not what many would like to pass the problem off as: stress. It is simple selfishness and ignorance. Yes, CHS students are indeed under a tremendous amount of pressure; many juggle multiple AP or honors classes, participate in loads of extracurricular activities, and still manage to get sleep at night.

And yet, though I believe that the demands to maintain such precarious perfection do provide the temptation to plagiarize and steal, that really isn’t the problem.

The problem is that some students aren’t stopping to think that they might be making someone else’s life worse through their own short-sightedness. It is a pity—and a bit of a scare—to think that all of us, even the dishonest ones among us, will one day be in the world, perhaps in greater positions of influence. Unless we put an end to this win-lose mindset, we will never progress. But to progress, we also have to get over ourselves first.