Neatorama |
- The History of The Universe in 13,799 Dominoes
- The Three Mrs. Watsons
- Making Virtual College More Like College
- This Device Can Detect Lead In Minutes
- Ways To Overcome Fear of Death
- Growing Up In Green Areas Affects Your IQ
- Dogs Turn Green Because of Grass
- Cardistry Master Boomerangs a Card Behind His Back
- Coast Guard Fires at Shark That Crashes Swimming Party
- This Oversized Backscratcher Has Your Back Covered
- How I Deal With Kids Playing in My Driveway
- A Chinese Scholar is Domesticated by His Cat
- Frasier the Sensuous Lion
- A Brief History of Salt and Pepper
- The Facts and Fiction of Chicago's Prohibition-Era Bootlegging Tunnels
The History of The Universe in 13,799 Dominoes Posted: 28 Aug 2020 11:48 PM PDT
|
Posted: 28 Aug 2020 08:10 PM PDT When a man marries three women and they all die, one starts to question the circumstances. Was it really spinal meningitis, or something more nefarious? Still, you would think that anyone with a lick of sense would space the murders out so that they didn't form an obvious pattern. The third death occurred in 1907.
However, it wasn't all that long after the third Mrs. Watson died that the true cause of death was determined. The answer to this real-life riddle is even stranger than murder. See if you can guess what happened before you read the conclusion to the story at Strange Company. You'll find further information in the comments. |
Making Virtual College More Like College Posted: 28 Aug 2020 08:10 PM PDT While online classes are the safest way to get an education in 2020, it's not like being there. Administration and faculty members at colleges and universities have their hands full trying to deliver online classes, so it falls to students to deal with a social life -or lack thereof- during a virtual school year. One team at the Stanford Women in Computer Science Innovation Challenge jumped at the opportunity to create Club Cardinal, an online version of the Stanford University campus that students can inhabit online and meet up with each other through both avatars and video chat.
Students at other schools are setting up virtual campuses in Minecraft and other virtual reality platforms. Read about the new way to wander through a college campus at Smithsonian. Now if they could just do something about the tuition costs... |
This Device Can Detect Lead In Minutes Posted: 28 Aug 2020 01:50 PM PDT Lead is a substance that is very harmful to humans, especially to children. This is why many institutions have implemented guidelines to help monitor the lead content in food and water, as well as children's toys. It is difficult to do so, however, as laboratory-based tests take days. But maybe it doesn't have to be that way in the near future. Rutgers researchers have created a miniature device for measuring trace levels of toxic lead in sediments at the bottom of harbors, rivers and other waterways within minutes… "In addition to detecting lead contamination in environmental samples or water in pipes in homes or elementary schools, with a tool like this, someday you could go to a sushi bar and check whether the fish you ordered has lead or mercury in it," said senior author Mehdi Javanmard, an associate professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering in the School of Engineering at Rutgers University-New Brunswick. More details about this over at TechXplore. Amazing! (Image Credit: Azam Gholizadeh/ TechXplore) |
Ways To Overcome Fear of Death Posted: 28 Aug 2020 01:50 PM PDT Most of us fear death. But is death something that we should fear? After all, it is a natural process. Everything that we see in this universe is finite — all of them have an end. In other words, death is something that shouldn't be feared, but rather accepted. It will be hard, however. With these things in mind, how do we, at the very least, decrease our fear of death? Jane Wu has some tips for us over at QDT. What are your thoughts about this one? (Image Credit: geralt/ Pixabay) |
Growing Up In Green Areas Affects Your IQ Posted: 28 Aug 2020 01:50 PM PDT If ever you have kids, then consider living in a place full of parks and lawns, as well as other greenery, as these could improve children's IQ, apparently. A team of researchers affiliated with multiple institutions in Belgium has found that children who grow up in areas with little greenery are at risk of scoring lower on IQ tests. In their paper posted on the open access site PLOS Medicine, the group describes their study of children's IQ and the amount of greenery where they were growing up, and what they found. Prior research has shown that children who grow up in areas with less greenery experience more cognitive problems than those who grow up in greener areas. In this new effort, the researchers have found that growing up with less greenery can also reduce a child's intelligence. Details about this study over at MedicalXpress. (Image Credit: Tama66/ Pixabay) |
Dogs Turn Green Because of Grass Posted: 28 Aug 2020 01:49 PM PDT Want to dye your dog's hair without spending a penny? If yes, then just do this: let your dog play on freshly cut grass, and see the results after a few hours. It's a win-win situation, actually: you get to dye your dog's hair, while he gets to have fun. The only downside to this one, however, is that you don't get to pick the dog's color — it will always be green. But hey, the dogs love it, and I have pictures from Sad and Useless that will prove it! See the pictures over at the site. (Image Credit: Sad and Useless) |
Cardistry Master Boomerangs a Card Behind His Back Posted: 28 Aug 2020 10:27 AM PDT Sean O. is a master of cardistry: the flourishing movement of cards in complex movements, seemingly without effort but actually only through talent and long practice. In this routine, he twists a deck (I'm sure there's a proper technical term in the field) while tossing one card swinging around his back and back into the deck. -via Born in Space |
Coast Guard Fires at Shark That Crashes Swimming Party Posted: 28 Aug 2020 10:27 AM PDT The USCGC Kimball, which is based in Hawaii, held a swim call on Wednesday. That's when the ship halts and allows crew members to go for a swim in the ocean. They posted a rescue swimmer and watchmen because it's always a bit dangerous to conduct a swim call. Why? Well, there are sharks in the area. And while about 40 swimmers were in the water, an 8-foot shark swam up to them. One coastie armed with a rifle fired shots at the shark very close to his shipmates. According to Good Morning America, everyone made it safely back on board--including the unicorn floatie that you can see drifting at the end of the video. |
This Oversized Backscratcher Has Your Back Covered Posted: 28 Aug 2020 10:27 AM PDT Because normal-sized backscratchers only scratch a small part of your back, why not upgrade to this oversized backscratcher which could cover a large area? The plastic rake measures 7.5″ across at its widest point, and has 15 tines that flex to match the contours of your back. The tool only costs $24.99, which is pretty affordable, in my opinion. What do you think? (Image Credit: Redneck Backscratcher/ The Awesomer) |
How I Deal With Kids Playing in My Driveway Posted: 28 Aug 2020 10:27 AM PDT
|
A Chinese Scholar is Domesticated by His Cat Posted: 28 Aug 2020 10:27 AM PDT Vancouver author and Chinese history buff Xiran Jay Zhao introduces us to the poetry of Lu You, who lived 800 years ago. A few of his poems, written over a span of years, tells how he became a cat person simply by getting one cat to protect his books from rats.
Subsequent poems hint that the cat later gets fish to eat, and then a rug to sleep on, and even catnip. Then come more cats. Eventually (we don't know if it's the same cat) his cat doesn't even bother with rats, and Lu You doesn't mind because he has become a cat person. But that's not the only term that could be used.
Read the entire sequence (eight poems) in this Twitter thread, or at Threadreader. Those who have cats will understand completely. -via Metafilter |
Posted: 28 Aug 2020 09:01 AM PDT
|
A Brief History of Salt and Pepper Posted: 28 Aug 2020 09:00 AM PDT
|
The Facts and Fiction of Chicago's Prohibition-Era Bootlegging Tunnels Posted: 28 Aug 2020 08:58 AM PDT In Chicago, the Uptown tunnels connect the Green Mill Cocktail Lounge with several theaters and other businesses underground. Why would tunnels be built connecting unrelated businesses? Stories abound of the 1920s, when Prohibition made the liquor trade illegal, and Al Capone made a fortune supplying the city with booze.
Still, it's not a great leap to think that these shenanigans may have happened. Read the real story behind the tunnels under Chicago, particularly the Uptown tunnels, at Mental Floss. (Image credit: Flickr user Keith Cooper) |
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.