Neatorama |
- A Trailer for the Ultimate <i>Justice League</i> Movie
- Disney’s Many Failed Attempts to Bring <i>Don Quixote</i> to the Screen
- When Plants Go To War
- Vegetable Surgery
- London’s Narrowest Home is For Sale
- Sleep Helps Us React Better To Events
- We’re Outpacing Ancient Volcanoes
- Twitch Has Added Ads To Streams, And Streamers Are Not Happy About It
- Suspect Leaves Winning Lottery Ticket On Car
- A Star’s Final Masterpiece Before Death
- Crocodile Annoys Australians Trying to Get Some Work Done
- Why Birds Survived and Dinosaurs Went Extinct
- This Man Lives in an Abandoned Japanese School
- The Acorn Woodpecker Wars
- The Oldest Religious Graffiti In Britain Has Been Found
| A Trailer for the Ultimate <i>Justice League</i> Movie Posted: 17 Sep 2020 09:00 PM PDT
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| Disney’s Many Failed Attempts to Bring <i>Don Quixote</i> to the Screen Posted: 17 Sep 2020 09:00 PM PDT
Although it has been done, making a movie of the 17th-century novel Don Quixote has been quite a challenge for anyone who attempts it- just ask Orson Welles or Terry Gilliam. Or the Disney company, which has considered, and even developed the idea, many times over the past 80 years. The treatments varied from exhausting fidelity to the original to a 2012 adaptation that involved the CIA.
However, it never got off the ground. Disney's many Don Quixote projects got bogged down in perfectionism, with support pulled when each movie took too long to produce. Could it be that the story itself is cursed? After all, it is about a mentally ill man and his delusions of knighthood that charmed those around him. It has constantly drawn filmmakers who became overly obsessed with Don Quixote. Read about Disney's struggle with the story at Polygon. -via Digg (Image credit: William Stewart Watson) |
| Posted: 17 Sep 2020 09:00 PM PDT
Plants have a mission to grow and reproduce, but in order to survive, they must also defend themselves against destruction from insects. But plants only have the resources nearby, so they must perform a balancing act between using resources to grow and resources for defense. Many plants therefore have developed defense mechanisms that only go into operation when the plant is attacked.
You'll never know when the war begins, because this is chemical warfare, marshaling the plant's own chemistry, its neighbors, and underground networks. Read how various plants use toxins, weapons, communication, and trauma repair in the fight for survival against insects at Nautilus. -via Damn Interesting |
| Posted: 17 Sep 2020 09:00 PM PDT
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| London’s Narrowest Home is For Sale Posted: 17 Sep 2020 08:59 PM PDT
The house is only 5.5 feet wide, yet the asking price is £950,000. That 's $1.3 million! The five-story home has two (or possibly three) bedrooms, a garden, a roof terrace, and a bathroom that covers en entire floor. It also has some strange features, such as an opening looking into the bathtub from the floor above, a closet in a bedroom floor, a kitchen in the basement, and a hat-shaped lamp in front (it used to be a hat shop). Read about this unique home in London and see pictures at Bored Panda. (Image credit: Winkworth) |
| Sleep Helps Us React Better To Events Posted: 17 Sep 2020 06:47 PM PDT
The person who has enough sleep typically feels happy when they receive a hug or when they spend time in nature. The person who sleeps less, however, doesn't get that much of a boost of positive emotions from positive events such as the ones mentioned above. What's more, people deprived of sleep become more stressed as they respond to stressful events. These are the findings of the research led by health psychologist Nancy Sin. Using daily diary data from a national U.S. sample of almost 2,000 people, Sin analyzed sleep duration and how people responded to negative and positive situations the next day. The participants reported on their experiences and the amount of sleep they had the previous night in daily telephone interviews over eight days. "The recommended guideline for a good night's sleep is at least seven hours, yet one in three adults don't meet this standard," says Sin. "A large body of research has shown that inadequate sleep increases the risk for mental disorders, chronic health conditions, and premature death. My study adds to this evidence by showing that even minor night-to-night fluctuations in sleep duration can have consequences in how people respond to events in their daily lives." More details about this study over at Neuroscience News. (Image Credit: congerdesign/ Pixabay) |
| We’re Outpacing Ancient Volcanoes Posted: 17 Sep 2020 06:47 PM PDT
When it comes to sending great waves of carbon into the ocean, ancient volcanoes get the job done. For thousands of years, they have contributed most carbon emissions. But if you want someone who can do more than these volcanoes, and at a much faster pace, then call in the humans, who can introduce the material 3-8 times faster than these landforms. The consequences for life both in the water and on land are potentially catastrophic. The findings appear this week in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Researchers at Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory examined ocean conditions 55.6 million years ago, a time known as the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM). Before this, the planet was already considerably warmer than it is today, and the soaring CO2 levels of the PETM drove temperatures up another 5 to 8 degrees C (9 to 14 degrees F). The oceans absorbed large amounts of carbon, spurring chemical reactions that caused waters to become highly acidic, and killing or impairing many marine species. [...] The research is directly relevant to today, said lead author Laura Haynes, who did the research as a graduate student at Lamont-Doherty. "We want to understand how the earth system is going to respond to rapid CO2 emissions now," she said. "The PETM is not the perfect analog, but it's the closest thing we have. Today, things are moving much faster." Head over to ScienceDaily to know more about the study. (Image Credit: skeeze/ Pixabay) |
| Twitch Has Added Ads To Streams, And Streamers Are Not Happy About It Posted: 17 Sep 2020 06:47 PM PDT
As part of an "ad experiment" which started this month, streaming website Twitch stated that some viewers might experience ads during streams in the near future. "Like pre-rolls, these are ads triggered by Twitch, not by the creator," the company stated at their website. Unsurprisingly, streamers of the site are not happy with this development. Crucially, these ads utilize Twitch's "picture-by-picture" functionality, which basically means that the stream you're watching pops out into a smaller window while the ad rolls in the main window. However, ads will still steal the show from some viewers, with streamers none the wiser as to who can hear what they're saying (picture-by-picture mutes streams) and, therefore, understand what's happening on stream while ads are playing. [...] On a platform where amassing viewers is everything—a statement Twitch has definitively made through the way the site tracks metrics and, therefore, success—the last thing streamers want is for prospective fans to get fed up and depart in the middle of an ad. Streamers are, predictably, furious about Twitch's new initiative, even if it's just an "experiment" for now. "You're not YouTube," said Twitch partner ThatBronzeGirl on Twitter in response to Twitch's announcement. "When ads play in the middle of the stream, viewers actively miss out on content (muted or not). Add this to the fact that viewers are hit with an ad as soon as they enter a stream, so channel surfing is cumbersome. Idk why y'all hate viewer retention." The problem is, streamers earn most of their money from subscriptions, donations, and brand deals, while the site earns from ads. More details about this over at Kotaku. What are your thoughts about this one? (Image Credit: Wikimedia Commons) |
| Suspect Leaves Winning Lottery Ticket On Car Posted: 17 Sep 2020 06:46 PM PDT
Last Monday, deputies from the Cherokee County Sheriff's Office attempted a traffic stop on a vehicle in Canton, Georgia. Unfortunately, the unidentified driver immediately left his vehicle and fled on foot. Upon doing so, however, he left something very important behind — his lottery ticket, which happened to be a winning one. Deputies investigated the vehicle and discovered a winning scratch-off lottery ticket worth $100. The sheriff's office posted a photo of the ticket on Facebook. "To the suspect who ran on foot from our deputies on a traffic stop this morning on I-75, you left a winning $100 lottery ticket in your vehicle," the post said. "You can claim your ticket at 498 Chattin Dr. in Canton. It will be here waiting for you. Congratulations by the way." Will the suspect claim it? What do you think? (Image Credit: Cherokee Sheriff's Office — Georgia/ Facebook) |
| A Star’s Final Masterpiece Before Death Posted: 17 Sep 2020 02:06 PM PDT
One of the most fascinating things about stars is how they create their finest work of art as they die. The M2-9, also known as the Butterfly Nebula, is a good example of this phenomenon. As stars die, they "transform themselves from normal stars to white dwarfs by casting off their outer gaseous envelopes." The expended gas frequently forms an impressive display called a planetary nebula that fades gradually over thousands of years. How lucky we are to see such a spectacle. (Image Credit: Hubble Legacy Archive, NASA, ESA - Processing: Judy Schmidt) |
| Crocodile Annoys Australians Trying to Get Some Work Done Posted: 17 Sep 2020 09:07 AM PDT Matt Wright and his friend, Tommy, are trying to clear some logs out of a stream in the Northern Territory in Australia. A nosy crocodile named Bonecruncher gets into their business and won't leave them alone, despite Wright's commands to "sit" and "stay." This is nothing new for Wright, who is the star of a reality TV show called Outback Wrangler. And Bonecruncher is and old friend. The Guardian quotes him: Wright explained why he felt so comfortable around Bonecruncher. "He's a croc with poor self-esteem and he hangs out where the big crocs don't," Wright told NT News. Poor croc. I hope he gains some confidence in himself. -via Althouse |
| Why Birds Survived and Dinosaurs Went Extinct Posted: 17 Sep 2020 08:17 AM PDT
A great diversity of dinosaurs roamed the earth until 66 million years ago, when an asteroid impact changed the global ecosystem so much that they died out ...with the exception of a few kinds of avian dinosaurs that eventually became birds. What made those survivors so special? How were they different from all those dinos that died out in the aftermath of the impact? One theory holds that it was the beaks.
There's a lot more to the story, which you can read at Smithsonian. |
| This Man Lives in an Abandoned Japanese School Posted: 17 Sep 2020 08:17 AM PDT
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| Posted: 17 Sep 2020 08:17 AM PDT
Acorn woodpeckers are "unusual, socially complex birds," or in other words, they are rather weird. These woodpeckers live in colonies of up to 16 birds, only a few of which are allowed to breed. When one of the breeders dies, a slot opens up and war ensues. The birds battle each other for days until one wins the spot.
When the fights happen, birds from other colonies come and watch, maybe to learn what's in store for them, or to pick up some fighting tips. Read about the extremely weird lives of acorn woodpeckers at Atlas Obscura. (Image credit: gailhampshire) |
| The Oldest Religious Graffiti In Britain Has Been Found Posted: 17 Sep 2020 08:17 AM PDT
The oldest example of religious graffiti was found at Vindolanda, an ancient Roman fort in Northumberland. Researchers uncovered the shards of a chalice decorated with angels, crosses, and other symbols of Christian iconography. The 1,400-year-old artifact was found in poor condition, but thanks to technology, the researchers were able to discover the dozens of symbols etched on the chalice, as Artnet details: "It is genuinely exciting," David Petts, a post-Roman specialist at Durham University and project researcher, told the Guardian. "When we think of graffiti, we tend to think it's unauthorized vandalism. But we know from many medieval churches that people would put marks and symbols on buildings. What is unique about this is finding them on a vessel." The 14 pieces of the chalice, which was once the size of a modern-day cereal bowl, were discovered by a volunteer who signed on to help with the Vindolanda excavations last year. Among those identified were letters in Latin, Greek, and an ancient medieval script, as well as images of a fish, a whale, members of a church congregation, and a "chi-rho," the monogram representing Jesus Christ. "This is a really exciting find from a poorly understood period in the history of Britain," Petts added in a statement. "Its apparent connections with the early Christian church are incredibly important, and this curious vessel is unique in a British context." "It is clear that further work on this discovery will tell us much about the development of early Christianity in the beginning of the medieval period," he said. Image via Artnet |
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