Tech History Behind New York's New Year's Eve Ball 106
Toe, The writes "A perennial icon of New Year's Eve is the geodesic ball which first dropped in Times Square in 1907. Over the past century, there have been seven iterations of this ball. The first one, made out of iron and wood, weighed 400 pounds and sported one hundred 25-watt bulbs. The current ball weighs almost six tons and uses 32,256 Philips Luxeon Rebel LEDs. The designers expect there to be more tech improvements to the ball soon. What do you think of the ball and the bizarre status it holds in our culture? How would you change it for years to come?"
32256 LEDs? (Score:5, Funny)
So what happened to the other 512?
Are they on a private network?
Re:32256 LEDs? (Score:4, Insightful)
They probably would go in the space occupied by the mast on each end of the ball.
Re:32256 LEDs? (Score:5, Funny)
Those addresses were lost to subnetting.
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I guess this falls into the category of "only on Slashdot...", but yeah, it does seem kind of sad that they didn't go for the gold ring at 32,768. It's obviously not a rounding error, either, because then the news story would have said that there are something like 30000, 32000, 33000, or 35000. 32256 -- so close, yet so far... ;-)
127 bottles of of beer on the wall, 127 bottles of beer...
Tweets of course! (Score:1)
Just the east coast? (Score:5, Insightful)
Growing up in Idaho, nobody particularly cared about the ball. Is this just an East Coast thing?
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When I lived in NY I wasn't into the New Years Eve thing either. It was fun however to stick my head out the window right before midnight and hear the background noise of the city get a little louder.
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It's a little gaudy, isn't it? Perhaps an improvement would be one which was a little less tacky. Also, why is it dropping? What's that symbolic of? Wouldn't one which rose from the floor to some maximum height, combined with a light show/fireworks etc be a little more interesting?
Re:Just the east coast? (Score:5, Funny)
Also, why is it dropping? What's that symbolic of?
The US dollar?
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I was born in New York City. I like watching it come down, but don't care if it's ten 100 watt light bulbs or 32,000 LED's, as long as it's visible on TV. (which means even a 40 watt bulb would be sufficient given the TV technology.) I prefer not to have the flashing lights, just a lit ball.
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Does anyone in Idaho care about anything? Seems like living there is a good reason to give up on life.
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They arm instead.
Re:Just the east coast? (Score:4, Informative)
I lived in NYC for about 10 years, and not many people I know did. It's mostly a Big Media thing.
Re:Just the east coast? (Score:5, Funny)
"dropping of the big spud"
In Eugene Oregon where I grew up, we had the "lighting of the big joint", but a few years back they updated the technology to the "torching of the big bowl" with a giant 10 foot tall water bong. It's an Oregon thing...
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"dropping of the big spud"
In Eugene Oregon where I grew up, we had the "lighting of the big joint", but a few years back they updated the technology to the "torching of the big bowl" with a giant 10 foot tall water bong. It's an Oregon thing...
Naw, your fellow stoners, er, peeps up in Seattle do that same thing.
End the year like you start the year. =)
Ships set your chronometers (Score:5, Informative)
Watching a dropped ball was a historical way of setting a marine chronometer up and until the advent of radio signals. Pre 1920 watching a dropping ball was essential tech.
from :
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine_chronometer [wikipedia.org]
It was common for ships at the time to observe a time ball, such as the one at Greenwich, to check their chronometers before departing on a long voyage. Every day, ships would anchor briefly in the River Thames at Greenwich, waiting for the ball at the observatory to drop at precisely 1pm.
Other time balls (Score:2)
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Being from the Midwest, I had heard of the ball on occasion, but it wasn't until I was about 35 that I saw what the deal was. I pretty sick one New Years Eve, and I stayed in. And, Boy, was I disappointed.
I thought they dropped a glass ball on Times Square. All they do is lower the damn thing. Whoopie. No shards of glass. No mess. What a disappointment.
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Well, if you're not in EST, the timing isn't even right, so I would imagine that it would have to be more than a little region-specific.
Still, I can't bring myself to care. It's nice to be at a party with people who do care, though, because it really boosts the energy level.
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Wait, did you just say FOX News lied? I'm shocked! Shocked, I say! Shocked that suck a distinguished and reputable news source would be so disingenuous.
Next thing you know, you'll tell me that Santa Claus, the Easter Bunny, and the Tooth Fairy aren't real, or that there hasn't been a truly fiscally conservative Republican since pre-Reagan.
No, I'm quite certain that you're just misunderstanding the meaning of the word "live". It was live when it was recorded.
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"Care about" is probably too strong (though it has been sad to see Dick Clark slurring in his brief propping up on the show the last year or two).. but it is/was something to watch, sometimes had interesting musical guests (and sometimes not just lip syncing). Nowadays, just like everything else, I record it and FF through for the few interesting bits. For pure entertainment value, the one on CNN with Anderson Cooper & Kathy Griffin is funnier.
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It's covered by several major TV networks as the centerpiece of the New Year's Eve programming, and it's even repeated (and watched) in the Pacific Time Zone. So no, it's not just an East Coast thing.
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Most traditions are stupid and pointless from an outsider's viewpoint.
But to answer the question posed in TFS, "How would you change it for years to come?", I would have it spray viscous white fluid all over the assembled masses at the stroke of midnight.
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Pervert and a Prude. [slashdot.org] Come on 'spewey, you can't go making too many distinctions with a nick like that. At a certain level it all spews, man - it all spews.
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As a ball, the west coast seems stupid and pointless
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Nothing worse than in the Midwest where we're only delayed an hour and yet we watch the ball go down in NY and then wait through an hour of more after-ball-dropped third string acts to see the ball drop again. God it's painful.
Re:Dumb (Score:5, Funny)
Nothing worse than in the Midwest where we're only delayed an hour and yet we watch the ball go down in NY and then wait through an hour of more after-ball-dropped third string acts to see the ball drop again. God it's painful.
What kind of twisted masochist are you that watches that stupid thing more than once? Don't you have anything else on the TV where you live? Gillagan's Island reruns? Hell man, you could log into Slashdot. Even that would be better. You need help.
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Nope. They had a second TV station in our state for a little while, but it was too liberal, so nobody watched it. I think it was called PBS or something.
Hover Ball (Score:2)
Grumble (Score:3)
Very little. Are there really no better stories to post at the moment?
So the current ball is... much lighter? Or is it heavier? If you're not going to use the metric system, at least use consistent units.
Yes yes, get off my lawn. Happy new year.
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I wonder how the hell you get a ball with some damn lights to weigh that much....
Shhhh ... you're going to ruin the surprise.
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Well if you're going to be picky, they're using significant digits. 400 is accurate to within 50 pounds; 6 tons is accurate to within 0.5 tons, 1,000 pounds.
Essentially, 400 pounds +/- 50 pounds and 12,000 pounds +/- 1,000 pounds.
Re:Grumble (Score:5, Informative)
Yup, Google is a cooler overlord than Yahoo ever was
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Zerglings. (Score:5, Interesting)
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Say, whaaaa? (Score:5, Funny)
They must be members of the Ball Handlers Union.
Re:Say, whaaaa? (Score:5, Funny)
No, I'm pretty sure the TSA is not involved in any way.
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>"Foley says it's a team of about six people who operate and take care of the ball year round."
I wouldn't trust much of what this Foley person says. Must be pretty dumb not to be able to count the number of people with exact precision, when they seem to be as few as "about six".
Six Tons? (Score:2)
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No, its real U 238.
Gives my friends and I a real glow (in the dark!)
More Surprising... (Score:3)
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And being a ball, it won't die of cardiovascular complication before becoming really really huge.
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Wacky. According to your link, it gained an order of magnitude in weight in from 1999 to 2000 when the aluminum ball was replaced with a crystal ball (150 lbs to 1200 lbs) and then it gained another order of magnitude in weight when it was replaced with a larger crystal ball between 2008 and 2009 (1200 lbs to 12000 lbs).
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Now how many CCs is it, (Score:2)
and how much would it weigh if it was actually a dodecahedron with LEDs for facets?
Oh God! (Score:2, Interesting)
What do you think of the ball and the bizarre status it holds in our culture?
None. It's a Dick Clark thing.
How would you change it for years to come?
For the exception of this comment, I have never thought of it nor will I ever. I don't give a shit. Of all the shit happening in my life, this low tech ball with light bulbs (LEDs? BFD!) is completely meaningless to me. Jan 1 is just another fucking date on the calendar.
Tonight, I'll watch a movie with my wife and then go to bed at 10PM and wake up tomorrow with the same fucking problems I have today. Valentines Day means more to me than this holiday.
Old news? (Score:1)
From the linked article:
"On November 11th, 2008, The co-organizers of New Year’s Eve in Times Square (Times Square Alliance, Countdown Entertainment) unveiled a new Times Square New Year’s Eve Ball at a press conference at Hudson Scenic Studio in Yonkers, New York."
So the new ball already bounced around on two new year's eves. But hey, its about the history anyway.....
Just do the whole thing in CG (Score:2)
Just do the ball in CG. It's a made-for-TV event anyway. Going to Times Square on New Years Eve sucks.
LCD Ball (Score:2)
One word . . . (Score:2)
Which Ball Game? (Score:1)
Yankees (Score:1)
Next year ... (Score:3)
... a Death Star!
That's no moon!
Plasma, one way or another. (Score:1)
Actually, come to think of it, since it used one day a year, so what if the light source has 100,000 hours of useful runtime? Damn this fixation on longevity and efficiency!
I would make each vertex of the geodesic sphere a tungsten electrode (cooled
Rebel LEDs (Score:2)
The current ball weighs almost six tons and uses 32,256 Philips Luxeon Rebel LEDs.
Why are we buying LEDs from rebel scum?
Two words: Independent Contractors. (Score:2)
A construction job of that magnitude would require a hellova lot more manpower than the imperial army had to offer. [youtube.com]
Improve it (Score:3)
What would I do to improve it?
Drop the damn thing. It's boring as hell watching it slowly slide down a big pole. Actually drop it like a gallows drop or a bungee jumper diving off.
Kewl! They should drop it from the top (Score:2)
of the new World Trade Tower right into one of the memorial pools, once its finally up.
THAT should show Bin Laden, eh?
So much for LED energy efficiency (Score:2)
100 25W light bulbs = 2500W
32256 Phillips Luxeon Rebel LEDs, 3V @ 350ma = approx 34kW, not counting the driver circuitry that the 25W bulbs didn't need.
Bring back the incandescent bulb!
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and increase in ad speak (Score:2)
Now: Luxeon Rebel LEDs
It is the "luxeon rebel" part that really bothers me , indicative of the overwhelming pressure to put advertising everywhere at all times
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-Phillips Marketing Dept
You forget the largest component (Score:2)
Don't forget the New Year's Eve Ball's largest component: a decades-vacant One Times Square building.
Dr. Octavius? (Score:2)
Is that you?
Greenwich Observatory and other time balls (Score:2)
The Times Square ball is a decorative and symbolic version of a practical time signaling system used at Greenwich Observatory, in which a large ball, visible from a long distance, was dropped rapidly under the force of gravity--not the slow, majestic descent of the Times Square ball. Apparently this system worked well because the ball could be released directly by electricity, and observed visually (no speed-of-sound delay). See the Wikipedia article time ball [wikipedia.org]
What's up with ending posts with dumb questions? (Score:1)
I think I liked slashdot a lot more back when every post didn't end in a stupid question.
Ewen from Bagel Tech News (Score:1)