Neatorama |
- Dog Bites Woman Salt & Pepper Shakers
- Death on the Mississippi
- Risa Hirai's Edible Art
- Chocolate Dipped Peanut Butter Cup Stuffed Oreos
- National Newspaper Seeking Stories
- Circular Beam of Electrons
- Star Wars Baby Mobile
- Elemental Silver Surfer
- Wobble Head Bunny Pen
- In the Mountains of Fraggle Rock
- Australia in 1872
- Netflix for the Library: Hiring a Personal Librarian
- Kayla Loves the Moon
- Bed Bath & Beyond's Stack of Towels is a DAMNED LIE!
- I Wear a Fez Now. Fezzes Are Cool.
- Two Body Interactions: A Longitudinal Study
- Sun Wall Clock
- Seals Use Their Whiskers to Judge Size
- Doomed: a Biological Cartoon
- Bees Can See the Electric Field of Flowers
- Nuclear Explosions as Units of Measurement
- Tree Roots as Art
- The Civil War, Now in Living Color
- Bubbles Popping in Super Slow Motion
- Sesame Street Crew Socks
- Dolphins Have Names
- Razzie Award Winners
- Star Wars Family Tree
Dog Bites Woman Salt & Pepper Shakers Posted: 25 Feb 2013 05:00 AM PST Dog Bites Woman Salt & Pepper Shakers Whether you are making a delicious rump roast for dinner or a salad make sure that your table is dressed to impress with the Dog Bites Woman Salt & Pepper Shakers from the NeatoShop. This hilarious glazed ceramic salt and pepper shaker set is held together by magnets. Each shaker features beautiful hand painted details. Be sure to check out the NeatoShop for more great Salt & Pepper Shakers. | ||||||||
Posted: 25 Feb 2013 05:00 AM PST The following is an article from Uncle John's Unstoppable Bathroom Reader. Few people know about the Sultana, despite the fact that it suffered the worst maritime disaster in U.S. history. For some reason, it is almost completely ignored by history books. Here's the tragic story. The Civil War was finally over. It was April 1865, General Robert E. Lee had surrendered; Abraham Lincoln had been shot; and Confederate president Jefferson Davis had been captured. After four years of bloodshed, the war-torn nation was ready to start the process of healing and rebuilding. The first order of business was to get the weary troops home.
What was left of the Sultana drifted downstream until finally banking on a small island in the middle of the Mississippi River. The ship's broken, burning body then slowly disappeared into the dark water. As first light rose on the river, the devastation was overwhelming. Hundreds upon hundreds of bodies were floating down the Mississippi. Dotted between the corpses were dazed survivors floating on makeshift rafts of driftwood and ship parts. Some sang marching songs to keep their spirits up. Others just floated silently among the carnage. Sultana survivors at a reunion in 1920.
___________________ The article above was reprinted with permission from Uncle John's Unstoppable Bathroom Reader. Since 1988, the Bathroom Reader Institute had published a series of popular books containing irresistible bits of trivia and obscure yet fascinating facts. If you like Neatorama, you'll love the Bathroom Reader Institute's books - go ahead and check 'em out! | ||||||||
Posted: 25 Feb 2013 04:00 AM PST This is a cookie. Yes, it's also a work of art. Risa Hirai is an artist who uses cookies as her medium. She is a senior at Tama Art University in Japan. Hirai's cookies will be on exhibit in March in Tokyo, but you can see a few of them at Spoon & Tamago. Link -via Nag on the Lake | ||||||||
Chocolate Dipped Peanut Butter Cup Stuffed Oreos Posted: 25 Feb 2013 03:00 AM PST | ||||||||
National Newspaper Seeking Stories Posted: 25 Feb 2013 02:00 AM PST A Daily Mail reporter went to a British parenting forum to dig up dirt for a story. Instead, she got schooled. The question:
I gathered from reading this that A&E means a hospital. Anyway, the parents at Mumsnet who responded not only advocated sending children to a hospital if there are any doubts about a diagnosis, they also had plenty to say about the Daily Mail in general. Here's a sampling:
Those were only in the first couple of hours. The thread was passed around on Twitter and eventually blew up to over 300 comments. Link -via Not Exactly Rocket Science | ||||||||
Posted: 25 Feb 2013 01:00 AM PST
Oh, how I love you guys. In our recent post A Fiery Dance on the Sun, Neatoramanaut PlasmaGryphon kindly took the time to explain to us the physics behind solar flares. In the explanation, there was a link to Wikipedia article on Lorentz force, where I found this fascinating image of a circular beam of electrons in a Teltron tube. Neat, huh? (Thanks PlasmaGryphon!) | ||||||||
Posted: 25 Feb 2013 12:00 AM PST Andrea Burnett makes Star Wars-themed crib mobiles and sells them through her Etsy store Sheep Creek Needlecraft. They are each custom-made, with your choice of elements like different spaceships from the films, a Death Star, and planets. This is perfect for getting your geek baby off to a stellar start! Link -via Geeks Are Sexy | ||||||||
Posted: 24 Feb 2013 11:00 PM PST W00t! I'm happy to announce that we've got a set of new and neat Funny T-Shirts from graphic artist extraordinaire Pablo "Wirdou" Bustos over at the NeatoShop. I love the Periodic Table-inspired Elemental Silver Surfer above. Check out the rest (and yes, they're available in sizes up to 6XL): View more of Wirdou's T-shirts over at the NeatoShop: Link | Funny T-Shirts | Science T-Shirts, then visit his website for more awesome designs. | ||||||||
Posted: 24 Feb 2013 10:00 PM PST Has work sucked all the life out of you? Do you feel that the best years are behind you? Nonsense! Reclaim your misspent youth with the Wobble Head Bunny Pen from the NeatoShop. Things can be fun and functional. You may have mounds of mind-numbingly dull work to do, but by golly you can still do it with style. Be sure to check out the NeatoShop for more great Office & Desk stuff. | ||||||||
In the Mountains of Fraggle Rock Posted: 24 Feb 2013 10:00 PM PST The company will need help to get to Moria. Sign on a hobbit? No, they'll need professionals. Licia, a skilled painter who specializes in popular television and movies, imagined an alternate version of The Hobbit. | ||||||||
Posted: 24 Feb 2013 09:00 PM PST Bernhardt Otto Holtermann hired photographers to document Australia during its gold rush days. That photographic collection has been digitized by the New South Wales State Library, where you can browse them. A selection of these photographs have been paired with the same places as they appear now, which you can see and compare at the Herald Sun. Link -via Metafilter | ||||||||
Netflix for the Library: Hiring a Personal Librarian Posted: 24 Feb 2013 08:00 PM PST Jeff O'Neal writes:
He's talking about what librarians call readers' advisory. In a readers' advisory reference interview, the librarian asks questions about the patron's reading tastes and suggests books to read based upon the patron's answers. But O'Neal's librarian went even further. S/he automatically adds relevant reading materials to his hold queue without being specifically requested to do so. Kim Ukura thinks this is a great idea that could be expanded:
Link -via @brainpicker | Photo: radical.librarian POLL: Would you find this kind of readers' advisory service helpful?
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Posted: 24 Feb 2013 07:00 PM PST Little Kayla is very excited about seeing the moon, but she can't reach it! -via Viral Viral Videos | ||||||||
Bed Bath & Beyond's Stack of Towels is a DAMNED LIE! Posted: 24 Feb 2013 06:00 PM PST How does Bed Bath & Beyond manage to stack their towels so perfectly? The answer is, they don't. It's all lies. LIES! | ||||||||
I Wear a Fez Now. Fezzes Are Cool. Posted: 24 Feb 2013 05:00 PM PST | ||||||||
Two Body Interactions: A Longitudinal Study Posted: 24 Feb 2013 04:00 PM PST Physicist A presents a research paper to physicist B. The paper had not been peer-reviewed nor had it been published (at that time), and the results have not yet been replicated, but you can be sure that will happen sooner or later. If you can't read the entire page above, you can enlarge it at the link. But you can see that physicist B (identity redacted) checked the "yes" box, meaning she accepted his proposal. We wish both physicists many years of happiness. Link -via reddit | ||||||||
Posted: 24 Feb 2013 03:00 PM PST Spring is almost here. Are you looking for a quick way to heat up your home decor. Behold the Sun Wall Clock from the NeatoShop. This stunning wall clock is about 4.6 billion years in the making and features an actual graphic of the sun with solar flares. Make it the center piece of your room design. It is a great way to bring life to a cold boring room. Be sure to check out the NeatoShop for more great Clocks & Timers. | ||||||||
Seals Use Their Whiskers to Judge Size Posted: 24 Feb 2013 03:00 PM PST How big is that thing? Seals let their whiskers do the calculatin'. Robyn Grant of University of Rostock in Germany wanted to know how seals can judge the size of an object using their whiskers, but first she had to figure out how to put eyemasks and headphones on seals to restrict their other senses:
Ella Davies of BBC Nature has the post: Link | ||||||||
Posted: 24 Feb 2013 02:00 PM PST An increasingly frustrated narrator leads us through a nature documentary about useless animal species such as the cube fish and the inverted hedgehog that have no chance to survive or flourish because their evolutionary adaptations are just plain senseless. -via Daily of the Day | ||||||||
Bees Can See the Electric Field of Flowers Posted: 24 Feb 2013 01:00 PM PST Flowers are pretty and colorful to you and me, but to a bee, they're downright electrifying. You see, bees can sense the electric field that surrounds a flower:
Learn how a flower's electric field is actually also useful for bees as it tells them whether other bees have visited it before. Ed Yong of Not Exactly Rocket Science explains: Link | ||||||||
Nuclear Explosions as Units of Measurement Posted: 24 Feb 2013 12:00 PM PST UPDATE 2/24/12: Commenter Chew Bird notes that some scientists commenting at The Atlantic and Wellestein's own blog strongly disagree with him. They argue that a nuclear detonation is a reasonable measurement of energy output. ------------------------------------ Last week, a meteor exploded over Russia with, according to some press descriptions "the force of 30 Hiroshima bombs." These were references to the US atomic bombing of Hiroshima, Japan on 6 August 1945. Atomic historian Alex Wellerstein says that the analogy makes little sense:
Link | Photo: US Department of Energy | ||||||||
Posted: 24 Feb 2013 11:00 AM PST The canopy of trees usually get all the attention, but to artist Giuseppe Licari, the roots are equally interesting. In the Tent Rotterdam 2012 installation called Humus, the Sicilian artist featured the roots of trees as the main characters. Visual News has more pics: Link (Photo: Job Janssen & Jan Adriaans) | ||||||||
The Civil War, Now in Living Color Posted: 24 Feb 2013 10:00 AM PST The Civil War was the first American war to be documented on film, but those photographs are in black and white. John C. Guntzelman wants to change our perception of those scenes with his book The Civil War in Color: A Photographic Reenactment of the War Between the States, featuring dozens of photographed meticulously colored in Photoshop. Guntzelman talks about how he did it, and why he did it.
Smithsonian has more on the book, plus an interactive feature that lets you switch back and forth and compare several images in their original black and white and color versions. Link | ||||||||
Bubbles Popping in Super Slow Motion Posted: 24 Feb 2013 09:00 AM PST A bubble doesn't appear to pop instantly when you view it at 18,000 frames per second. The Slow Mo Guys used their Phanton v1610 camera to capture these dazzling moments. What would you like to see them shoot in super slow motion next? | ||||||||
Posted: 24 Feb 2013 08:00 AM PST Life has its ups and downs. Some days you feel like Bert and some days you feel like Ernie. For those roller coaster days you need the Sesame Street Crew Socks from the NeatoShop. This great set comes with 2 pairs of socks. One pair features Bert. Another pair features Ernie. Are you feeling really wild and crazy? Be daring and wear one Bert and one Ernie sock. People will be impressed by your willingness to express your complex personality. Be sure to check out the NeatoShop for more great Footwear and fantastic Sesame Street items. | ||||||||
Posted: 24 Feb 2013 08:00 AM PST They may not call each other "Flipper," but dolphins do have names. A new study by biologist Stephanie King of Scotland's University of St. Andrews and colleagues revealed that dolphins call each other by their names:
Brandon Keim of Wired has the story: Link | ||||||||
Posted: 24 Feb 2013 07:00 AM PST The 33rd annual Golden Raspberry Awards (affectionately known as the Razzies) were bestowed last night, to honor the worst Hollywood films and actors of the previous year. The Razzie ceremony is traditionally the night before the Oscars. The big winner this year was Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 2. It was nominated for 11 razzes (in ten categories) and took home seven.
Razzies founder John Wilson has a theory that instead of 40 million people seeing the Twilight movies, it's 8 million girls each watching them five times. Link | ||||||||
Posted: 24 Feb 2013 06:00 AM PST We know that Luke and Leia has got Daddy problem in Star Wars, the space soap opera we all know and love, but have you ever wondered about their family tree? Matt Baker of Chart Geek has got you covered. View the original at Chart Geek (and then tell me, who's Darth Vader's daddy?): Link - via GeekTyrant |
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