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- The Real-Life Guardians of The Galaxy
- What Holds This Ring of Pringles?
- Weird Liquid Hand Soap
- The Best Horror Game That You Probably Haven’t Heard Of
- The ‘Batman Effect’: How Having an Alter Ego Empowers You
- Christmas Lunacy with Jean-Luc Picard
- Kentucky Fried Chicken Builds Gaming Console That Keeps Your Chicken Warm
- The Particle That’s Only Available In Two Dimensions
- A TV For Ants
- Weird Al Yankovic's 9th Grade Crush
- Perseverance: Coming Soon to a Planet Near You
- The Satisfaction of Mathematically Efficient Christmas Cookies
- Cary Grant pilots the Millennium Falcon in Darth by Darthwest 2
The Real-Life Guardians of The Galaxy Posted: 24 Dec 2020 07:56 PM PST If your country had a space force, what would you call the personnel of that force? For the United States Space Force, they decided to call their personnel "Guardians". Yes. Guardians. Let that sink in. "Henceforth, the men and women of the United States Space Force will be known as Guardians," U.S. Vice President Mike Pence announced today (Dec. 18) during a ceremony marking the branch's impending first anniversary. "Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen, Marines and Guardians will be defending our nation for generations to come," Pence added, also invoking the terms that refer to people who serve in the U.S. Army, Navy, Air Force and Marine Corps. (Service members in the nation's other military branch, the Coast Guard, are called "Coast Guardsmen.") But what does the United States Space Force do? Learn more about the country's newest military branch over at Space.com. Well, what do you think? (Image Credit: United States Space Force/ Wikimedia Commons) |
What Holds This Ring of Pringles? Posted: 24 Dec 2020 07:56 PM PST Humans are able to do great things when they have mastered the laws of physics. This ring made out entirely of Pringles is proof of that statement. But what holds the pieces together? According to the one who posted this, it's friction and gravity. Amazing! (Image Credit: u/ LaurenLdfkjsndf/ Reddit) |
Posted: 24 Dec 2020 07:56 PM PST Is it just me or does the hand soap kind of solidified? I think it's too cold in this bathroom. Might be best to turn the heater on, or else someone might suffer from hypothermia. |
The Best Horror Game That You Probably Haven’t Heard Of Posted: 24 Dec 2020 07:56 PM PST When it comes to modern horror video games, there is one element that gets used a lot, and that element is jumpscares. But jumpscares aren't the only thing that can make a video game scary. In fact, you can make a video game scary without using them. But how? The answer lies in great sound design and storytelling. In this video, YouTuber Bricky reviews Darkwood and explains why it is the best horror game with no jumpscares. (Image Credit: Bricky/ YouTube) |
The ‘Batman Effect’: How Having an Alter Ego Empowers You Posted: 24 Dec 2020 07:32 PM PST Science says that having an alter ego, a different persona than the one you inhabit every day, can boost confidence and reduce anxiety. I can attest to that, as I used a stage name on radio and another on the internet. Batman probably got a lot of courage in hiding behind a batsuit. And others have tried that method of overcoming stage fright.
Of course, that confidence isn't always used for good, as any internet comment section reader can tell you. Read about the experiments that led scientists to these conclusions at BBC. -via Damn Interesting (Image source: Shed On The Moon) |
Christmas Lunacy with Jean-Luc Picard Posted: 24 Dec 2020 07:14 PM PST
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Kentucky Fried Chicken Builds Gaming Console That Keeps Your Chicken Warm Posted: 24 Dec 2020 07:14 PM PST It's the age old problem: how do you keep your snacks warm while keeping Agent 47 busy on his killing spree? Kentucky Fried Chicken has now solved that conundrum by building a console with a built-in chicken warmer. It's not exactly an original idea. Gamers have been heating food on overly hot consoles for years. But what the KFConsole does is conveniently and intentionally convey the machine's heat to the food. CNN reports: Your chicken will be kept hot thanks to a custom-built cooling system that keeps the console hardware at a regular temperature while using heat produced by its components to warm the chicken chamber. [...] The console can handle virtual reality games and offers smooth gameplay thanks to 240 frames per second frame rate and 4K display compatibility, according to details published by Cooler Master. -via Dave Barry | Photos: KFConsole |
The Particle That’s Only Available In Two Dimensions Posted: 24 Dec 2020 07:14 PM PST Meet the anyon (yes, that's how it's spelled), a one of a kind, extraordinary subatomic particle that only shows up in specific conditions. Scientists believe that this flat particle could be the key that will unlock quantum computing. The anyon only arise in realms confined to two dimensions, and at temperatures near absolute zero and in the presence of a strong magnetic field: Scientists have theorized about these flat, peculiar "particle-like objects" since the 1980s, and the very nature of them has made it sometimes seem impossible to ever verify them. But the qualities scientists believe anyons have also made them sound very valuable to quantum research and, now, quantum The objects have many possible positions and "remember," in a way, what has happened. In a press release earlier this fall, Purdue University explains more about the value of anyons: "Anyons have characteristics not seen in other subatomic particles, including exhibiting fractional charge and fractional statistics that maintain a 'memory' of their interactions with other quasiparticles by inducing quantum mechanical phase changes. Nobel Prize-winning theoretical physicist Frank Wilczek, professor of physics at MIT, gave these quasiparticles the tongue-in-cheek name 'anyon'" due to their strange behavior because unlike other types of particles, they can adopt 'any' quantum phase when their positions are exchanged." Image via Popular Mechanics |
Posted: 24 Dec 2020 07:14 PM PST Over the years, televisions have increased dramatically in size, but is it necessary? Shall we make our televisions bigger, or is time to decrease the size? If you're not a fan of big TV screens, then you might like this miniature television from TinyCircuits. You have to build it on your own, however. Introducing the $64 TinyTV DIY Kit from TinyCircuits, it comes with everything you need to assemble your own miniature television in five minutes and with no skill required. My kind of project! The TinyTV DIY Kit can store up to 4 hours of video on its microSD card, which you can control with the included remote's channel up (next video) and channel down (previous video) buttons. Or you can just do what I always do and lose the remote in the sofa and give up on ever watching TV again. The television's 3D printed console comes in white, but you can paint it whatever color you'd like for added realism. Well, what do you think? (Image Credit: TinyCircuits/ Technabob) |
Weird Al Yankovic's 9th Grade Crush Posted: 24 Dec 2020 07:14 PM PST
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Perseverance: Coming Soon to a Planet Near You Posted: 24 Dec 2020 11:23 AM PST
They named the mission Mars 2020, which was probably unavoidable but still seems unfortunate. Catch up on what the mission is all about at NASA. -via Mashable |
The Satisfaction of Mathematically Efficient Christmas Cookies Posted: 24 Dec 2020 11:22 AM PST When you make cookies in specific shapes, you roll out the dough and use a cookie cutter. There's always negative space involved, meaning leftover dough. So after you cut cookies, you gather up the leftover pieces and roll the dough out again. This is how it's done, but it's not the most efficient way to do it. Chemist Martin Lersch runs a blog called Khymos in which he explores the science of cooking. One of his projects has been to find the most efficient cookie cutter to make Christmas cookies with little to no dough left over to roll out again. He looked at it as a form of packing problem, in which a tessellated shape would be the most efficient. Others have described limitations to this kind of project.
Read about Lersch's tessellated Christmas tree cookies and why this kind of efficiency matters beyond baking, at Atlas Obscura. |
Cary Grant pilots the Millennium Falcon in Darth by Darthwest 2 Posted: 24 Dec 2020 06:02 AM PST
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