Neatorama |
- The First Guy To Ever Have A Home
- Different Cats, Different Personalities
- Creating A Wooden Steering Wheel For The PS4 Controller
- Brain Gene Tops the List for Making Humans, Human
- How The Cozy Coupe Became The Best Selling Car Of All-Time
- Dark Side of the Sun: A Brief Guide to Midsummer Lore in Britain & Ireland
- Keanu Reeves Will Call You For Charity
- Are Vitamins Really Effective?
- Here’s How You Can Use Twitter’s New “Tweet Your Voice Feature”
- A 66 Million-Year-Old Egg Was Discovered In Antarctica
- In Mongolia, a Mysterious Island Ruin Is Finally Giving Up Its Secrets
- The Science Behind Haribo Gummies’ Flavors
| The First Guy To Ever Have A Home Posted: 20 Jun 2020 04:53 AM PDT
|
| Different Cats, Different Personalities Posted: 19 Jun 2020 11:36 PM PDT
Which cat breeds are more aggressive to family members? Which are shy towards strangers? Which cat breeds groom a lot, and which cats groom less? These might be some factors that you might want to consider when adopting a cat. A group of researchers decide to examine the behaviors of different cat breeds, as well as the heritability of their behaviors. Salonen et al. (2019) surveyed Finnish cat owners on their cats' behaviors, which included "tendency to seek human contact," "aggressiveness towards human family members, strangers, or other cats," and "shyness towards strangers or novel stimuli." In total, 5,726 cats were studied. The researchers then separated these cats into 19 breeds. The researchers controlled for environmental factors including "weaning age, access to outdoors, presence of other cats," and general characteristics (sex, age of cat) in their analyses. Check out the summary of the study over at Psychology Today. (Image Credit: ClaudiaWollesen/ Pixabay) |
| Creating A Wooden Steering Wheel For The PS4 Controller Posted: 19 Jun 2020 11:35 PM PDT
Finding it difficult to win in PS4 racing games? Consider making your own steering wheel and attaching it to the controller just like this man did. That, or you could just buy a steering wheel compatible with the video game console. Despite making this however, the man still placed last in the race. Watch The Q's video on YouTube. What are your thoughts about this one? (Image Credit: The Q/ YouTube) |
| Brain Gene Tops the List for Making Humans, Human Posted: 19 Jun 2020 11:34 PM PDT
To study how humans evolved large brains compared to other primates, scientists experimented with marmosets, a small primate with a small brain that is still genetically similar to humans. At the heart of the study is one of a few genes that appear in no other species besides humans.
If this experiment sets off your cringe response, you aren't alone. How man human brain genes can be transferred to another species before that species becomes human? More than one, apparently. Read about the experiment and what it could mean for the study of "humanness" at Smithsonian. |
| How The Cozy Coupe Became The Best Selling Car Of All-Time Posted: 19 Jun 2020 11:34 PM PDT
|
| Dark Side of the Sun: A Brief Guide to Midsummer Lore in Britain & Ireland Posted: 19 Jun 2020 11:32 PM PDT
The sun is the source of all of our energy, directly or indirectly. The sun has always been the subject of myths, legends, and even religious worship as long as people have observed the star. The sun takes on even more meaning in latitudes further from the equator, where the sun comes and goes over the course of a year. The June solstice is the point that sun climbs the highest in the sky in the Northern Hemisphere and gives us the longest daylight, so the date was important for those who lived before artificial climate control, spawning festivals, celebrations, and rituals of all kinds.
That's just a few of the rituals associated with the summer solstice. Read more of them at Folklore Thursday. -via Strange Company |
| Keanu Reeves Will Call You For Charity Posted: 19 Jun 2020 04:12 PM PDT
Just ready $16,000 for donations, of course. The actor is auctioning off a phone call via fundraising portal Greater Giving. Reeves is doing a phone call for a cancer charity, and the bidding for a special phone call from the star is up to $16,800 and climbing. Interested? MentalFloss has more details: The call is intended to benefit Camp Rainbow Gold, a nonprofit that provides support for patients and families in Idaho dealing with cancer. Reeves has reportedly long been active in various charitable efforts for the disease following his sister's leukemia diagnosis in 1991. Organizers have a few caveats. The call has to take place the week of July 6, pending the availability of both Reeves and the winning bidder. If the caller exhibits any "threatening or inappropriate behavior," the conference will be terminated. Otherwise, the winner should feel free to discuss Reeves's career, including the forthcoming Bill and Ted Face the Music, due out August 14. image via MentalFloss |
| Are Vitamins Really Effective? Posted: 19 Jun 2020 04:12 PM PDT
Vitamins and other forms of supplements have been marketed to "boost one's immune system." During the pandemic, people have been inclined to purchase more of these to strengthen themselves against COVID-19. But do vitamins really do what they're marketed to do so? James Hamblin and Katherine Wells discuss the effectiveness of these supplements in their podcast Social Distance. You can listen to the episode here. image via wikimedia commons |
| Here’s How You Can Use Twitter’s New “Tweet Your Voice Feature” Posted: 19 Jun 2020 04:12 PM PDT
Twitter is now testing out a new feature for a limited number of users. Unfortunately, it still isn't the edit button we all need. You can now tweet your voice with audio tweets, a feature that will be available to all users in the coming months. If you have early access to the new feature, here's how to use it, as FastCompany details:
Twitter is limiting audio tweets to 140-second clips (like the original 140-character limit), but the company says it will automatically create a thread of tweets when users' recordings stretch past that time limit. Twitter won't allow users to reply to tweets with their voice, a decision presumably shaped by the social network's failures to address harassment and abuse on the service. image screenshot via FastCompany |
| A 66 Million-Year-Old Egg Was Discovered In Antarctica Posted: 19 Jun 2020 04:12 PM PDT
A fossil soft-shell egg has been discovered in Antarctica. The egg is a large, football-sized egg believed to have been left by an ancient marine reptile known as a mosasaur. The fossil was estimated to be 66 million years old, as iflscience details: "It is from an animal the size of a large dinosaur, but it is completely unlike a dinosaur egg," said lead author Lucas Legendre, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Texas Austin's Jackson School of Geosciences," in a statement. "It is most similar to the eggs of lizards and snakes, but it is from a truly giant relative of these animals." It was previously believed that giant marine reptiles from the Cretaceous did not lay eggs, yet "nothing like this has ever been discovered." Chilean scientists first came across the fossil nearly a decade ago, after which it sat unlabeled in the country's collections at the National Museum of Natural History. Scientists referred to the more than 28-by-18-centimeter (11-by-7 inches) stone-like fossil simply as "The Thing". image via iflscience |
| In Mongolia, a Mysterious Island Ruin Is Finally Giving Up Its Secrets Posted: 19 Jun 2020 04:12 PM PDT
An archaeological site in Russia, near the Mongolian border, has baffled scientists. Set on an island in Lake Tere-Khol, it is unlike other ancient structures in that it contains no supporting artifacts, like bones, pottery, or tools that would give clues as to its age or purpose. Even the discovery of the site reads like an adventure game.
That sets up the mystery, which has been solved in an amazing way. Analysis of tree rings in the timbers used pinpoints the construction date at 777 CE. That reveals its place in history, from which the details could be filled in. Read how they did it at Atlas Obscura. |
| The Science Behind Haribo Gummies’ Flavors Posted: 19 Jun 2020 09:13 AM PDT
Haribo gummy bears are one of the top-selling candies in the world. With the various flavors in its roster, it actually takes a lot of time and effort to add a new flavor that the masses will love. Popular Science details on the process behind the famed gummies flavors: Anointing a new flavor to the Haribo lineup, however, takes some confection-making perfection. The company's food scientists test each recipe exhaustively for aroma, texture, and regional preferences. The last step is key to ensuring a gummy will succeed across multiple markets. For example, Triffler says, Americans and Germans don't always agree on what a "lemon" candy should taste like, making it tricky to develop a single yellow piece for a mix that suits everyone's tongues. The company even had to change up Riegel's famous recipe when introducing Goldbears stateside in the 1980s. Haribo is quite tight-lipped about what makes their gummies such a culinary delight. But outside of the candy industry, food scientists are upfront about the challenges of crafting gummies. "Most gummy confections contain 5 to 10 percent fruit juice and the rest is sugar water," Vodovotz says. "There are non-synthetic flavors and dyes, but they're really still mostly chemicals." image via Popular Science |
| You are subscribed to email updates from Neatorama. To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. | Email delivery powered by Google |
| Google, 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA 94043, United States | |












No comments:
Post a Comment
Keep a civil tongue.