Neatorama |
- Nice Bookcase Toppers
- Chinese Chef’s Amazing Wok-Spinning Skills Go Viral Online
- This Structure Is A Flexible Living Organism In Itself
- Prohibition Whisky Found While Renovating the "Bootlegger Bungalow"
- The <i>Star Wars</i> Prequel Trilogy (Sweded)
- You've Never Seen Robots Dance Like This
- Ancient Street Food Shop In Pompeii
Posted: 30 Dec 2020 08:41 PM PST Minnesotastan has been running a series of pictures of his readers' bookcases at TYWKIWDBI. You can learn a lot about someone by looking at the books they keep and how they display them. The picture here of Bruce and Carol's bookcase also drives home how you can interact with people for years on the internet and still not know important things about them.
Yeah, they are Emmys. Seven of them. Read the rest of the story at TYWKIWDBI. |
Chinese Chef’s Amazing Wok-Spinning Skills Go Viral Online Posted: 30 Dec 2020 12:51 PM PST |
This Structure Is A Flexible Living Organism In Itself Posted: 30 Dec 2020 12:51 PM PST Mitosis (not the biological process) is a sustainable architectural concept that focuses on regenerative sustainable living and urban development. The structure, a collaboration between Amsterdam-based architecture firm GG-loop and Arup, has the ability to expand itself to accommodate more people. YankoDesign has more details: Just like flexible organism evolves to adapt to different settings, Mitosis will also be able to do that with its individual, rhomboid-shaped modules that are stacked together to create shared outdoor spaces and private terraces. The outdoor areas would be filled with enough plants to make a lush green cover which will allow the residents to reconnect with nature while offsetting the urban heat island effect – pretty 'cool', eh? These plants will also elevate the air quality levels, especially in cities while encouraging sustainable living practices of urban farming and community gardens. The terraced build provides ample natural light to both plants and apartments. The greenery will also help the existing wildlife of the area to continue having their space and coexist with the residents. "Mitosis adopts the 14 principles of biophilic design and articulates the relationships between nature, human biology, and the design of the built environment. Its construction is organic and flexible, providing large areas of urban and vertical farming, greenhouses, wildlife corridors, and integration of habitat creation, that encourage shared outdoor activities among residents," said the team in their project statement. The unique concept aims to give its residents an outdoor space along with the amenities needed to participate in environmentally friendly communal activities. Image via YankoDesign |
Prohibition Whisky Found While Renovating the "Bootlegger Bungalow" Posted: 30 Dec 2020 12:51 PM PST
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The <i>Star Wars</i> Prequel Trilogy (Sweded) Posted: 30 Dec 2020 12:51 PM PST The Knights of Renesmee, from Tauranga, New Zealand, spent three years making a shot-for-shot Sweded version of the entire Star Wars prequel trilogy. You may ask, "why?" but I have no answer for that. It's actually quite funny due to creative prop choices, wardrobe malfunctions, and the world's least expensive CGI. While these guys put their hearts and souls into this, they can't help but laugh at themselves. The 6-hour video includes The Phantom Menace, Attack of the Clones, Revenge of the Sith, and bloopers. If you don't want to watch it all at once, the YouTube page has a handy linked index for each scene. -via reddit |
You've Never Seen Robots Dance Like This Posted: 30 Dec 2020 10:33 AM PST
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Ancient Street Food Shop In Pompeii Posted: 30 Dec 2020 10:27 AM PST A new discovery has been made in Pompeii! Remains of a hot food and drink shop has been uncovered by archaeologists. The shop, also known as a thermopolium, contained 2,000-year-old food stored in deep terra cotta jars, as Reuters detailed: The front of the counter was decorated with brightly coloured frescoes, some depicting animals that were part of the ingredients in the food sold, such as a chicken and two ducks hanging upside down. "This is an extraordinary find. It's the first time we are excavating an entire termopolium," said Massimo Ossana, director of the Pompeii archaeological park. Archaeologists also found a decorated bronze drinking bowl known as a patera, ceramic jars used for cooking stews and soups, wine flasks and amphora. Image via Reuters |
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