Philosophy

Thursday, June 28, 2012

Boxing Cat


Monday, June 25, 2012

Piano, Erik Satie, Rain, Nosferatu

Piano, Erik Satie, Rain, Nosferatu - YouTube



Uploaded by ButterflyPerception on May 12, 2011

Piano, Erik Satie, Rain, Nosferatu
Category:

Music
 mark
 

License:

Standard YouTube License

Sunday, June 24, 2012

Amazing Illusions

 
By on July 18, 2010
 

The peacock illusion:  Both birds are exactly the same color, but you'll never convince your mind of that, see it on the bottom of this page.

 
Next courtesy of Alex Tabbarok, where again you can't convince your mind that the two boxes are the same color. 








 









source:
http://marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2012/06/a-visual-illusion.html









No Background reveals the truth



Source:
http://www.moillusions.com/2010/07/peacock-brothers-illusion.html

Friday, June 22, 2012

Own your own floating island for ONLY $4.6 million  - NY Daily News

Own your own floating island for ONLY $4.6 million  - NY Daily News 

Floating structure is a more “budget” alternative to superyachts – and has six bedrooms

By Gina Pace / NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

Renderings of a "floating island" that would sell for about $4.6 million.

Have you always wanted your own floating island?

An Austrian-based company has plans in the works for a “budget” floating island that would sell for about $4.6 million, according to a report from Rex Features.
 
Orsos Island would be about 120 feet long and provide about 3,300 square feet of living space, including six double rooms: enough room for 12 people and additional room for four staff members.

Interiors would be customizable, but renderings show a sun deck with palm trees, an area for lounging, outdoor grilling and hot tubbing.

Company owner Gábor Orsós wants to combine aspects of real estate on land with luxury yachts — at a reduced cost compared with ultraexpensive superyachts.

“In the beginning, my goal was to create an exclusive, high-quality hotel chain based on floating platforms,” he told Rex. “With the progress of the project it became clear that the attractive and unusual concept of Orsos Islands should not be limited to only a selected group of people.”

ISLAND22F_3_WEB

Rex / Rex USA/Rex / Rex USA

Mandatory Credit: Photo by Rex / Rex USA (1055915f)

 

 

Thursday, June 21, 2012

Dinosaurs by Wobble Works

Boing Boing

 

WobbleWorks: animatronic dinosaurs and animated floppy-ear hats

Engadget's Brian Heater visited the WobbleWorks folks at the Somerville, Mass. hackerspace, where animatronic dinosaurs and rabbit-ear hats are the order of the day. The WobbleWorkers sound like they have a hell of a time.

Dilworth flips three switches on the robo-dino's neck, firing it up. It looks around quizzically at first before its creator, manipulating knobs on a small block attached to the dinosaur with a thick wire, sends the robot on a clanking walk. The robot is roughly three or four years old, created as a museum piece, an attempt to bring life to lifeless exhibits made of fossil and bone. With a realistic silicone skin created by dinosaur exhibit giant Hall Train, the baby dino might someday become part of a robotic petting zone, wandering around the area with a certain level of autonomy, perpetually grazing in the museum hall.

...During our visit, the pair won't divulge too much about the projects they're prepping, even while many prototypes sit just behind them, atop of a couple of messy desks. They do happily show off a bipedal dinosaur, an early prototype of a future toy that they're looking to land in stores in the next year or so. It's not quite a museum-style protoceratops in every home, but perhaps the minimalist two-motor setup will make such products a little more widespread in a world that wasn't quite ready for Pleo. It's a small, off-white plastic contraption with two giant feet that lumber about. The company's also looking to branch out into four- and six-legged 'bots that share the two-legger's "natural gait," while maintaining a reasonable price point.

WobbleWorks: flapping ears and robotic dinosaur dreams (Thanks, Pete, and everyone else who suggested this!)




 Source:

 http://boingboing.net/






Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Scots Joke


A bloke walks into a Glasgow library and says to the prim librarian,

'Excuse me Miss, dey ye hiv ony books on suicide?'

To which she stops doing her tasks, looks at him over the top of her glasses and says,

'Fook off, ye'll no bring it back!'




Monday, June 18, 2012

Myna AND PAARAYING MANTIS



The week's best photojournalism - The Week
     
 

Dance of the red beards

Feed us!

An Indian Myna, with a praying mantis gripped in its beak, prepares to feed its chicks in a nest built inside the wall of an underpass in Greater Noida on the outskirts of New Delhi.
PHOTO: REUTERS/Parivartan Sharma

Sci-fi author Ray Bradbury dies at 91 - Arts & Entertainment - CBC News

Many people grew up reading BRADBURY's books as part of the school curriculum.

Sci-fi author Ray Bradbury dies at 91 - Arts & Entertainment - CBC NewsJun 6, 2012

 Bradbury created a dystopian future in which books were burned in Fahrenheit 451, his best-known novel. 

He wrote a wide range of fantasy, horror and sci-fi novels and short stories including Cold War morality tale, The Martian Chronicles.



Science fiction writer Ray Bradbury is shown Dec. 8, 1966, looking at a picture that was part of a school project to illustrate characters in one of his dramas in Los Angeles. (Associated Press)

He also wrote the screenplay for the 1956 film version of Moby Dick and created TV scripts for The Twilight Zone.

"What I have always been is a hybrid author," Bradbury said in 2009. "I am completely in love with movies, and I am completely in love with theatre, and I am completely in love with libraries."

Bradbury rejected the term science fiction, prefering fantasy to describe his work. "My stories are strongly moral in a way and exemplary; I'm not interested in predicting futures," he said in a 1969 interview with CBC.

On Wednesday, artists influenced by his work came forward to pay tribute to his genius. Among them was Pan's Labyrinth director Guillermo del Toro, who wrote "I feel lonelier. The world is vast and barren: Bradbury was one of the titans of fantastic fiction and a unique voice in American literature. The lyricism of his prose influenced many generations across the globe. A humanist before anything else, Bradbury nurtured my youthful hopes, my flights of fancy. His soul was gentle but his imagination was fierce."

Canadian DJ Deadmau5 acknowledged Bradbury's influence on his song The Veldt in his Twitter feed. "RIP Ray Bradbury: you've touched many lives with your work, and even a few more recently you might not have expected! Sleep well dude!" he tweeted.

In recent years a stroke had put him in wheelchair, but Bradbury continued to write new novels, screenplays and poetry and appeared at literary events in the Los Angeles area.

Author Ray Bradbury is shown April 25, 2009, attending The Los Angeles Times Festival of Books in Los Angeles. He remained a staunch advocate for libraries throughout his life. (Katy Wynn/Associated Pess)Born Aug. 22, 1920, in Waukegan, Illinois and raised in Arizona and Los Angeles, he was influenced as a young reader by Edgar Allan Poe, Edgar Rice Burroughs and H.G. Wells.
Loved the library

His family was too poor to send him to college, but Bradbury spent his time in libraries and fed his fertile imagination with movies.

He was rejected from military service during the Second World War because of his poor eyesight and began to write science fiction stories for pulp fiction magazines in 1938. His first collection of short stories, Dark Carnival, was published in 1947.

The book that made him a household name was The Martian Chronicles, a series of stories about an idyllic Martian civilization that is brutalized by colonizers from Earth. Like many of his books, it was a critique of politics on Earth, in this case the Cold War.

The influential British writer Christopher Isherwood gave the book a glowing review and brought Bradbury to wide attention.

In 1953, he wrote Fahrenheit 451, giving an apocalyptic picture of a world where nuclear war has led to a crackdown on dissenting ideas. Firefighters are assigned to burn books and most people are contented with electronic devices that provide unchallenging entertainment.

Bradbury’s book was inspired by his love for libraries and was meant as a critique of television, but also foreshadowed the world of iPods, interactive websites and electronic surveillance that is here today.


Hatred for book-burning

"It was a book based on real facts and also on my hatred for people who burn books," he told The Associated Press in 2002.

It became a futuristic classic and was part of many college and high school reading lists. François Truffaut directed a 1966 movie version and the book's title was appropriated — without Bradbury's permission — for Michael Moore's documentary Fahrenheit 9/11.

Bradbury published more than 500 novels, short stories, screenplays and TV scripts, including The Illustrated Man and Something Wicked This Way Comes. He is known for his inventive plotting — a boy defeating a vampire by stuffing him with silver coins; a dinosaur mistaking a fog horn for a mating call; Ernest Hemingway comes back to life on a time machine.

Short stories such as A Sound of Thunder (The Butterfly Effect), The Small Assassin and The Halloween Tree are among his many works to have been adapted to the screen. Dozens of stories were adapted for 1980s series The Ray Bradbury Theater.


Fahrenheit 451, by Ray Bradbury, became an American classic. (Simon & Schuster/Associated Press)

Bradbury's critics found his description unconvincing, his depiction of women old-fashioned and his rendering of worlds with problems too close to those here on earth repetitive. But he was rare as a genre writer who was treated seriously in the literary world.


Special Pulitzer

In 2007, he received a special Pulitzer Prize citation "for his distinguished, prolific and deeply influential career as an unmatched author of science fiction and fantasy." In 2000 he was awarded an honorary National Book Award medal for lifetime achievement.

"Everything I've done is a surprise, a wonderful surprise," Bradbury said during his acceptance speech in 2000. "I sometimes get up at night when I can't sleep and walk down into my library and open one of my books and read a paragraph and say, 'My God, did I write that? Did I write that?', because it's still a surprise."

Despite keeping his eyes on the future, Bradbury was not an early adopter of technology. He didn’t drive or fly and he refused to have a computer.


"I'm not afraid of machines," he told Writer's Digest in 1976. "I don't think the robots are taking over. I think the men who play with toys have taken over. And if we don't take the toys out of their hands, we're fools."



 

727 Airplane into Dream Home


Site:
http://airplanehome.com/

Woodland Dream Home


Bruce Campbell, a 62-year-old self-confessed nerd from Oregon, USA, has spent the last 10 years converting a 727-200 passenger jet into his dream home.

We’ve seen airplanes converted into living space before, like the 747 jumbo jet hostel in Stockholm, or the Boeing 707 plane hotel of Costa Rica, but Bruce Campbell’s work is the most impressive we’ve ever seen, because he did it all by himself.

The Building Services & Environmental Engineer bought the old 727-200 plane for $100,000 and spent at least another $100,000 on logistics costs like having it moved from the airport to his home, and temporarily removing the wings and tail. On AirplaneHome.com, the website dedicated to his ambitious project, Campell says planes like his aren’t that expensive nowadays, and costs can be significantly lowered if you work on the project during the summer, instead of a La Nina hurricane winter, like he did.

 Why did he choose to spend it all on an old airplane? 

Without meaning to offend anybody, the man says wood is just a terrible building material.

On his site, he calls it “termite and microbe chow”, “firewood”, “relatively weak”, and says “it’s secured with low tech fasteners using low tech techniques”.

Another reason would be that rectangular designs are structurally inferior which can’t withstand severe winds and earthquakes, are frequently broken into, kill people when they explode into flames, are leaky and degrade quickly.

On the other hand, airplanes are “well designed, high tech, aerospace quality sealed pressure canisters that can withstand 575 mph winds and seven G acceleration forces with ease, could last for centuries (with effective corrosion control), are highly fire resistant, and provide superior security. They’re among the finest structures that mankind has ever built.”

Bruce Campbell airplane home2 550x306 Man Turns 727 Passenger Plane into His Woodland Dream Home
Photo: CNN video capture


Although he has been working on it for over 10 years it’s still a work in progress.


Skulls Piled in a corner. Why?


BBC News - 700-year-old 'vampire' skeleton is put on display in Bulgaria

BBC News - 700-year-old 'vampire' skeleton is put on display in Bulgaria
 vampire, vampires



 




A 700 year-old skeleton on display at the National History Museum in Bulgaria is thought to be that of a person feared to be a potential vampire.

According to pagan customs at the time, people considered to be bad were stabbed through the heart with an iron rod after death so they could not return as vampires.

Two such skeletons were found at a monastery in the Black Sea city of Sozopol.
Deborah Basckin reports.

 
 

                                                                                          [Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons]

  A skeleton dating back to the Middle Ages and recently unearthed in the black sea town of Sozopol, and displayed at National History Museum in  Sofia, Thursday, June 14, 2012. Ever since archaeologistPhoto By Valentina Petrova Thu, Jun 14, 2012 http://news.yahoo.com/photos/photo-of-the-day-slideshow-slideshow/skeleton-dating-back-middle-ages-recently-unearthed-black-photo-160432047.html

Vampire skeleton 2012 06 14
A picture taken on June 14, 2012 shows a skeleton with an iron piece before being exposed at the National History Museum in Sofia. The 700-year-old skeleton -- unearthed in the necropol of a church in the Black Sea town of Sozopol earlier in June -- was stabbed in the chest with an iron rod and had his teeth pulled before being put to rest. (NIKOLAY DOYCHINOV/AFP/Getty Images)



Museum head Prof. Bozhidar Dimitrov has tentatively identified the skeleton as a man named Krivich, who was both a pirate and the mayor of the town of Sozopol where he was buried. When the Genoese besieged the town in the 14th century, Krivich bungled the defense. The town was sacked.

When Krivich died, he was punished for his failings in life by being staked through the chest. According to folk belief at the time, this kept him from becoming a vampire or ascending to heaven.

Even if you don't get a chance to see the dead vampire, the museum is well worth a look. Bulgaria has a rich heritage stretching back to earliest times. I visited the museum when I was excavating a Bronze Age village in Bulgaria and found the collection truly impressive.

In addition to many prehistoric artifacts, there are golden treasures from the Thracian period, fine art from the glory days of the medieval Bulgarian Empire and more modern displays showing the struggle to become independent from the Ottoman Empire.

Besides history, Bulgaria offers beautiful trails in the Balkan Mountains, beaches along the Black Sea and very cool people. It's a country worth visiting.
Read More

Bulgaria finds 'vampire' remains

 
“This was a pagan belief widespread in the Bulgarian lands in the 12th to 14th centuries. People were very superstitious then,” National History Museum head Bozhidar Dimitrov said.

“Throughout the country we have found over 100 such ‘vampire’ burials of mainly noblemen from the Middle Ages who were branded bloodsucking immortals.”

Dimitrov explained that these people were considered bad during their lifetime and according to pagan beliefs could become vampires after death and continue to torment the living.

“That’s why they were often pierced with rods, wooden or metal,” he said.

The Balkan country borders Romania — birthplace of the 15th century ruler often associated with the popular fictional character upon which Dracula is based.

Romania’s notorious 15th century ruler Vlad Tepes, or Vlad the Impaler was no vampire, but his cruelty and name inspired the fictional Dracula created by novelist Bram Stoker.

The finds in Bulgaria have sparked interest from vampire enthusiasts all over the world and the small Balkan country may seek to capitalise on its pagan heritage.


Source:
 http://www.khaleejtimes.com/displayarticle.asp?xfile=data/diversions/2012/June/diversions_June21.xml&section=diversions&col=


 

Sunday, June 10, 2012

SNOW JOB: drawings by Kim Russo, 2008-2012 - Sarasota Visual Art

 This blog has 'a kid on a crocodile' theme so this picture was irresistible...

SNOW JOB: drawings by Kim Russo, 2008-2012 - Sarasota Visual Art


Kim Russo
Kim Russo, Family (Pool) / watercolor and graphite on paper / 72" x 126" / 2011


Russo’s most recent solo exhibition, Family, was on view at the Cornell Fine Arts
Museum in Winter Park, Florida this past fall.

She has exhibited her work throughout the United States and in Ireland, received residency fellowships from the Frederick P. Lenz Foundation, Caldera, the Atlantic Center for the Arts, Americans for the Arts, and the National Endowment for the Arts. Her work is included in the permanent collections of the New Mexico Museum of Art (Santa Fe, New Mexico) and the Paul and Lulu Hilliard University Art Museum (Lafayette, Louisiana), as well as several notable private collections.

Russo was born in Darby, Pennsylvania, a suburb of Philadelphia. She received her BFA from Tyler School of Art (Temple University) and her MFA from Indiana University, Bloomington. Kim Russo lives and works in Sarasota, Florida.

Website: kimrusso.net

Saturday, June 9, 2012

Reading Material

 LINKS:


Who Was General Tso, Anyway? Here’s 5 beloved ‘ethnic’ foods that were actually created right here in the U.S. of A. (Mental Floss)

You’ll Go Blind Reading That: Surprise! Christian authors hate Fifty Shades of Grey. (BuzzFeed)

A New Flavor of Film: The best movies from the New York Indian Film Festival (Divanee)
Bad Company: The top 10 evil corporations on film. (TIME.com)

The Best- and Worst-Dressed, Royal Edition: Rating the fashion of the British monarchs through history, in honor of the Diamond Jubilee. (Go Fug Yourself)

Thank You, Haters: Instead of making steam come out your ears next time you read something infuriating on the Internet, sing this happy, NSFW song. Don’t like it? Let us know in the comments! (The Daily Wh.at)



Read more: http://newsfeed.time.com/2012/06/08/reading-while-eating-for-june-8-haters-gonna-hate/?xid=newsletter-newsfeed#ixzz1xKo3heXv

Prosthetic Leg Lost at Sea, Returned to Owner | NewsFeed | TIME.com

Prosthetic Leg Lost at Sea, Returned to Owner | NewsFeed | TIME.com

 Northwest Florida Daily News, Nick Tomecek / AP
 Matt Willingham, owner of the shrimp boat Michele Dawn, looks for indentifying features on a prosthetic leg at his dock in Valapraiso, Fla. The leg has a few barnacles on it and is imprinted with the University of Kentucky Wildcat logo.





More Fish Stories: Giant Catfish Caught In Spain | Outdoor Life

Giant Catfish Caught In Spain | Outdoor Life


 
Wels catfish are found primarily in Europe, these fish grow to humongous sizes. The world record, just recently caught in Italy's River Po, weighed more than 250 pounds and measured over 8 feet, 2 inches. 
 
Reeling in one of those giants has got to be just an incredible experience.
 
British angler Jonathan Avery sure got a taste for that thrill last weekend when he landed a giant of his own while fishing the River Segre in Spain.

It took five men to help haul Avery's catfish to the bank where it was taped at 8 feet, 3 inches. It was later weighed at 245 pounds.

Quite the reward for 15 hours of fishing.

Big Fish

Updated: Best Fish Faces of All Time | Outdoor Life

 newff_08


 50faces_01

 

Photos: Catching A 400-lb Piraiba

Check out these amazing photos and video clips of big-fish angler Larry Dahlberg beaching what should be the world's largest catfish ever landed on a rod and reel.

 Catching a 400 Pound Piraiba 3


While it's true that a few bigger catfish swim in the world's fresh waters and have been dynamited, found dead, or found tangled in nets (as was this 646-pound giant Mekong catfish in Thailand in 2005), no catfish the size of Dahlberg's has ever been beaten on sporting tackle before.


Catching a 400 Pound Piraiba 7

 Catching a 400 Pound Piraiba 8

Read More at the source of articles and pictures:   http://www.outdoorlife.com/photos/gallery/fishing/2007/02/photos-catching-400-lb-piraiba




Bear Grylls Survival Knife by Gerber

 
 This knife is so popular that it is sold at the local drugstore.  They tell me people are buying them for their earth quake survival kits.  It steps out of the world of custom knives because of the popularity of a television show.

Gerber Bear Grylls Ultimate Survival Knife

The first version of this knife (with a partly serrated edge) was insanely successful, due to its high quality, practical design, and very reasonable price.

I like this version better. Gerber did everything right, including putting the knife in reach of even the humblest at around $52. Now you, too, can parachute into some loathsome part of the world, eat stuff that makes you puke, and return home little worse for the experience.

knv_12



 Source:
 Best New Knives from SHOT Show 2012 | Outdoor Life

Friday, June 8, 2012

Big Knives | Outdoor Life Survival

untitled image 6844
Eyewitness Taylor British Army issue dagger from World War II or thereabouts. With its leather handle and brass furnishings it is the most sophisticated of  big knives.
untitled image 6847
his two-edged Mark II dagger from Gerber is downright sexy and balances perfectly in the hand.


untitled image 6840

A.G. Russell Model 1861 Pattern Bowie.
 untitled image 6857
San Mai III Trail Master by Cold Steel and has simple, elegant lines that contrast with its undeniably formidable construction. I think it is one of the most beautiful knives I owned. 
 untitled image 6845

untitled image 6846

SOG makes some of the coolest looking blades around and this is the company's new Tigershark 2.0. With the skull basher on the hilt this knife is bad news at both ends.

untitled image 6839This is a classically styled Bowie knife from A.G. Russell with an 8 1/4 inch blade. A first-rate historical reproduction.


 Photos by Outdoor Life Online Editor
Source:
 http://survival.outdoorlife.com/photos/gallery/survival/2008/08/big-ass-knives-part-one?photo=0#node-1000022473


Big Ass Knives | Outdoor Life Survival


Tuesday, June 5, 2012

The 30 Fattest Birds On The Planet

The 30 Fattest Birds On The Planet

 

The 30 Fattest Birds On The Planet

These birds are so fat, you'll go on a diet. Presenting—for your gluttonous pleasure—the plumpest, most morbidly obese birds on the whole dang planet Earth. posted

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