Neatorama |
- The Teddy Roosevelt-Inspired Roller Coaster That Killed 7 People at Coney Island
- An Honest Trailer for <i>The Rock</i>
- How to Make a Krispy Kreme Face Shield
- Cyber Ironman
- Float Away with a Forgotten Futurist’s Vision of Paris
- A Roller Coaster Synchronized to "Bohemian Rhapsody"
- Armor for a Rabbit
- This Koi Pond is a Cake
- The Cargo Mask
- Thinking About Time
- From The Sands To The Cosmos: The UAE’s Inspiring Six-Year Story
- Man Bites Seagull Over His McDonald’s Meal, Gets Arrested
- The Hagia Sophia Will Be A Mosque Soon
- In Search of The Solar System’s Ninth Planet
- The Hero Of Goodall Park
The Teddy Roosevelt-Inspired Roller Coaster That Killed 7 People at Coney Island Posted: 15 Jul 2020 02:05 AM PDT If a kid encountered a thrill ride called Rough Riders today, she'd probably think it was ride on a rough track. That wasn't why the roller coaster that debuted at Coney Island in 1907 was named that. It was a tribute to the current president, Theodore Roosevelt, who led the unit called the Rough Riders in the Spanish-American War.
That sounds dangerous. Strangely, the ride survived for years, even after the first fatalities. Learn exactly how dangerous it was at Mental Floss. |
An Honest Trailer for <i>The Rock</i> Posted: 15 Jul 2020 02:05 AM PDT
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How to Make a Krispy Kreme Face Shield Posted: 15 Jul 2020 02:05 AM PDT Step 2 involves eating a dozen donuts (well, in my version), because you'll need to empty the Krispy Kreme box of its contents. Andy Clockwise, though, is more straightforward and simply assumes that you have an empty Krispy Kreme box. Follow his simple instructions to make a sweet-smelling face shield. -via Swiss Miss |
Posted: 15 Jul 2020 02:04 AM PDT Cosplayer Christopher Lavallee, a less famous Tony Stark, built this combat suit inspired by the Doctor's cybernetic foes, the Cybermen. Lavallee properly calls himself a "foamsmith" due to his mastery of foam cutting and molding. |
Float Away with a Forgotten Futurist’s Vision of Paris Posted: 15 Jul 2020 02:04 AM PDT We know Jules Verne, who gave us science fiction and, a century later, steampunk. But he wasn't the first to write about how technology would affect the future. Another was Albert Robida, who wrote in French, but just as wondrously, also drew his visions of the future.
Robida not only envisioned flying machines, tall skyscrapers, and video phones, but also a world of gender and racial equality. While his works are available online, they are in French. So you might want to read about Robida and see a collection of his futuristic illustrations at Messy Nessy Chic. |
A Roller Coaster Synchronized to "Bohemian Rhapsody" Posted: 15 Jul 2020 02:04 AM PDT
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Posted: 14 Jul 2020 11:37 PM PDT Why leather armor for a rabbit? Well, a rabbit's key ability is dexterity. Although mail and plate armor may raise a rabbit's armor class, it can also induce a dexterity penalty and cause encumbrance problems if your dungeon master is a stickler for those rules. So it's best to keep to leather armor or magical armor options for when you must take your rabbit adventuring. Etsy seller The King's Shilling can properly equip you and your furry pal. -via Technabob |
Posted: 14 Jul 2020 08:18 PM PDT
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Posted: 14 Jul 2020 06:51 PM PDT
Don't think of your face mask as a burden. It's an opportunity! Twitter user Ingenuous Firebrand proposes sewing on a pocket and using the mask for more everyday carry gear. I suggest making the mask from heavy canvas to make sure that it doesn't sag too much from the extra weight you store in the pocket. -via Aelfred the Great |
Posted: 14 Jul 2020 11:54 AM PDT Quantum mechanics and Einstein's relativity. Both are pillars of 20th-century physics, and, as pillars go, these scientific fields stand opposite of each other, at least when it comes to the concept of time. When derived from quantum mechanics, time is a parameter that is ever-flowing at a constant rate. When derived from relativity, however, time can be seen as something relative from two observers. So what really is time? "We don't know," Martin Bojowald, a physicist at Pennsylvania State University in University Park, told Live Science. "We know that things change, and we describe that change in terms of time." But it seems that we're now closer to reconciling the conflicting concepts of time through this new theory of a universal clock. More details about this over at Live Science. (Image Credit: FelixMittermeier/ Pixabay) |
From The Sands To The Cosmos: The UAE’s Inspiring Six-Year Story Posted: 14 Jul 2020 11:54 AM PDT It was 2014, and the United Arab Emirates announced that it would be launching a mission to Mars by December 2021, the country's 50th birthday (the United Arab Emirates was founded on December 2, 1971). They had several challenges to overcome before achieving that dream, however, as the country had no space agency or planetary scientists, and it only just launched its first satellite at that time. With only less than a decade as its time limit, and with odds stacked against it like that, one would wonder whether the country could really accomplish their goal. The rapidly assembled team of engineers, with an average age of 27, frequently heard the same jibe. "You guys are a bunch of kids. How are you going to reach Mars?" says Sarah Al Amiri, originally a computer engineer and the science lead for the project. But they prevailed. Six years on, Al Amiri beamed as she admired the country's fully assembled Mars orbiter while it underwent tests in February. In the bright, clean room at the Mohammed bin Rashid Space Centre (MBRSC) in Dubai, engineers were testing the car-sized orbiter before shipping it to the Tanegashima Space Center in Japan. It will launch sometime during a three-week window starting on 15 July. The Emirates Mars Mission (EMM) will be the first interplanetary venture of any Arab nation, but it's not just a technology demonstrator. Once it arrives at the red planet in February 2021, the orbiter, known as Hope (or Amal in Arabic), will produce the first global map of the Martian atmosphere. And, somewhat unusually for a space mission, the EMM will release its data to the international scientific community without an embargo. But the battle's not over yet, as going to space is not the UAE's main concern, but rather, its economy. But for spectators, the UAE's future is bright. More about this over at Scientific American. What are your thoughts about this one? (Image Credit: Natalie Naccache for Nature/ Scientific American) |
Man Bites Seagull Over His McDonald’s Meal, Gets Arrested Posted: 14 Jul 2020 09:50 AM PDT Police stationed at Plymouth, UK, were shocked when they saw a man sinking his teeth into a seagull before throwing the bird on the floor. According to the man, the seagull attacked him because it took a taste of his McDonald's meal, and so he grabbed and bit it . The police immediately rushed into the scene and detained the man. Around this time, the man volunteered the information that he was under the influence of drugs and it was decided that he should be taken to Derriford Hospital for treatment. The seagull was clearly injured by the incident but flew off before we were able to check on its welfare. We don't know what happened to it afterwards. Because seagulls are protected by UK laws, the man, if found guilty, could face six months in jail or a fine of £5000 (around $6300). Via 9GAG (Image Credit: JJ Harrison/ Wikimedia Commons) |
The Hagia Sophia Will Be A Mosque Soon Posted: 14 Jul 2020 09:45 AM PDT After 85 years as a museum (since 1934), the Hagia Sophia will turn into a mosque on July 24, as Turkey's Cabinet of State repealed the order that turned the building into a museum. With this being the case, some are curious as to what Hagia Sophia's future will be. The Turkish government has stated that, although Muslim religious services will resume at the site, it will remain open to visitors of all nationalities and faiths—much like the Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris, which has been an active Catholic church as well as a major tourist attraction and UNESCO World Heritage Site. Erdogan's spokespeople have also stated that Christian iconography inside the Hagia Sophia will continue to be preserved as it has been since the 1930s. Some say that this was done in order to make a political statement, and this political move could be compared as to how the building was treated in the past: a place of power. Know more about the intriguing history of the Hagia Sophia over at Ars Technica. What are your thoughts about this one? (Image Credit: Arild VÃ¥gen/ Wikimedia Commons) |
In Search of The Solar System’s Ninth Planet Posted: 14 Jul 2020 09:40 AM PDT When Pluto was downgraded to a "dwarf planet" in 2006, the number of officially known planets in our Solar System decreased from nine to eight. But astronomers have been seeing strange gravitational patterns beyond the planet Neptune. Dubbed as "trans-Neptunian objects", or TNOs, these objects suggest that there is a ninth planet in our Solar System. Various theories about these TNOs have been offered. The hypothetical planet, dubbed "Planet Nine," would orbit our star at hundreds of times the distance between the Earth and the Sun. It's been a contentious topic, with some writing off the odd behavior of TNOs as being caused by a cluster of much smaller space rocks. Others predict that such a planet would be five times the mass of the Earth, orbiting our star at about 400 times the Earth's distance from the Sun. Finally, there's the possibility that Planet Nine is actually a teeny-tiny black hole left over from the Big Bang. So tiny, in fact, that it'd only measure about five centimeters across — basically impossible to see with any kind of telescope. "There has been a great deal of speculation concerning alternative explanations for the anomalous orbits observed in the outer solar system," explained Amir Siraj, a Harvard undergraduate student, in a statement. "One of the ideas put forth was the possibility that Planet Nine could be a grapefruit-sized black hole with a mass of five to 10 times that of the Earth." But if the so-called "ninth planet" is not really a planet, but a very tiny black hole, then how would astronomers confirm its existence? Learn more about this intriguing story over at Futurism. (Image Credit: Comfreak/ Pixabay) |
Posted: 14 Jul 2020 06:50 AM PDT An odd incident that occured in Sanford, Maine, started a true-crime mystery. A car went onto a baseball field during a game in 2018. This odd incident was the start of a true-crime mystery that was 50 years in the making. ESPN Senior Writer Tom Junod writes the details surrounding the mystery. Check the full piece here. image screenshot via ESPN |
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