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2021/02/26

Neatorama

Neatorama


The Tea Kettle Ring

Posted: 25 Feb 2021 11:16 PM PST

I really like this cute silver ring by Etsy seller Astha. When viewed from the right angle, it looks like a high quality piece of dollhouse furniture resting on your hand, offering a hospitable cup to guests.

-via Arsenic in Shell

Emotional Support Rabbits

Posted: 25 Feb 2021 08:55 PM PST

2020 indeed has been a challenging year for all of us, and it is thanks to those around us that we were able to survive the previous year. 

One of the many things that have greatly helped people during 2020 are emotional support animals, such as dogs, cats, and rabbits. CNN covers the story of Finn and Budgie: two bunnies that gave great emotional support to their humans.

Read about their heartwarming stories over at the site.

(Image Credit: Erin Scannell/ CNN)

Duck!

Posted: 25 Feb 2021 08:54 PM PST

When the time comes that you find yourself holding a duck, and someone shouts "duck!", make sure that you do lower your head and not just laugh about it; you might get hurt if you don't.

(Image Credit: Funny Vines/ YouTube)

The Gas Hose Incident

Posted: 25 Feb 2021 08:54 PM PST



She's upset that these guys were following her and trying to get her attention. They just wanted to alert her of the gas hose she's dragging. Real or staged? Yeah, getting this embarrassment on video seems too good to be true, but it's also behavior that doesn't seem too out of the ordinary to have happened somewhere. It reminds me of the movie Trains, Planes, and Automobiles, when a car tried to flag down our heroes going the wrong way on the highway. -via Digg

Aga Khan Museum Acquires This Gigantic Lego Sculpture

Posted: 25 Feb 2021 09:55 AM PST

The Toronto museum has acquired a sculpture made from 100,000 pieces of Lego. Hopefully it doesn't get accidentally dropped, because imagine rebuilding the sculpture, let alone picking up the scattered Lego pieces! The huge sculpture was created by Ghanian-Canadian artist Ekow Nimako, who envisioned the ancient trading an ancient trading town in Mauritania one thousand years in the future: 

Kumbi Saleh was the centre of the trans-Saharan trade route at the height of the Ghana Empire, boosting cultural diffusion between Africa, the Middle East, Asia and Europe.
The work was the centrepiece of Nimako's 2019 solo exhibition Building Black: Civilisations at the museum. It was commissioned as a response to the museum's concurrent archaeological show Caravans of Gold, Fragments in Time, which explored ancient trades routes in the Sahara and their cross-cultural impact, including their role in the spread of Islam.
The acquisition "enhances the museum's ability to tell global stories about the contributions of Muslim civilisations across time", says the museum's curator, Michael Chagnon. And it boosts the institution's other efforts to spotlight Islamic studies, like a newly launched podcast series exploring Muslim arts and culture.
"His being a Toronto-based artist was also critical to our decision," Chagnon says. "The museum is a cultural hub for our neighbourhood and part of our work—and part of any museum's work—must be to support local artists."

Image via The Art Newspaper 

Oldest Domesticated Dog In The Americas

Posted: 25 Feb 2021 09:55 AM PST

A fragment of bone found in a southeastern Alaskan cave believed to be from a large mammal has been debunked. With new DNA evidence, the bone shard was given a new identity. The fragment, also known as PP-00128, did not belong to a bear but to a 10,150-year old ancient dog: 

"Ten or twenty years ago, we would have looked through a pile of bone fragments and not seen this," says Durham University archaeologist Angela Perri, who was not involved in the new study. "This is a nice example of what can be done with some of these advanced methods," she adds, noting that mass screening of archaeological material can turn up new clues that might otherwise be missed. Advances in how ancient DNA is extracted, corrected for any modern contaminants and sequenced have allowed researchers to quickly assess the genetics of organisms much faster than ever before, building a growing database that can be used to detect broader patterns. The more ancient DNA that's recovered, analyzed and placed in the database, the bigger the sample researchers have to work from when trying to understand how organisms—be it dogs or humans— relate to each other.

Image via The Smithsonian

This New Laser-Cutting Tool Could Reduce Industry Waste

Posted: 25 Feb 2021 09:55 AM PST

In an effort to reduce the large amounts of leftover materials (which usually end up as waste) produced by the laser-cutting process in the industry, researchers from MIT's Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Lab (CSAIL) have developed a new tool called Fabricaide. The tool could help designers save time and resources on their projects.

"By giving feedback on the feasibility of a design as it's being created, Fabricaide allows users to better plan their designs in the context of available materials," says Ph.D. student Ticha Sethapakdi, who led the development of the system alongside MIT Professor Stefanie Mueller, undergraduate Adrian Reginald Chua Sy, and Carnegie Mellon University Ph.D. student Daniel Anderson.
Fabricaide has a workflow that the team says significantly shortens the feedback loop between design and fabrication. The tool keeps an archive of what the user has done, tracking how much of each material they have left. It also allows the user to assign multiple materials to different parts of the design to be cut, which simplifies the process so that it's less of a headache for multi-material designs.

Learn more about this tool over at TechXplore.

Cool!

(Image Credit: Massachusetts Institute of Technology/ TechXplore)

The Best GameCube Games Of All Time

Posted: 25 Feb 2021 09:55 AM PST

The Nintendo GameCube is something I'm not really familiar with, a console that I usually forget when someone asks me to list the Nintendo consoles I know in chronological order. I didn't grow up with any console except for my current Nintendo Switch, but some consider the old game console to be 'the middle child in every aspect it could've been.' The GameCube was actually more powerful than Sony's PS2, and most of its good features were underappreciated. SVG features some of the better games that make playing the console worthwhile. If you're like me, curious to know about the games that the console featured, check their full list here. What's your favorite GameCube game? 

Image via SVG 

So How Do You Emulate NES, SNES, And Nintendo DS Games?

Posted: 25 Feb 2021 09:55 AM PST

If you don't have the older consoles but would like to play some of the games made for those game consoles, surely you've heard of emulation! Emulators are available on Android (sadly not on iPhones), and could run NES, SNES, or Nintendo DS games. It's easy to find the right emulator just by searching the Play Store. But how do you download the games you'd play on your emulator of choice? Android Center has got you covered! Check their full guide to Android emulation here. 

Image via Android Central

Rare Half-Male, Half-Female Cardinal Photographed

Posted: 25 Feb 2021 09:53 AM PST

Jamie Hill spotted a northern cardinal that was bright red on the right side, and brownish white on the left side. The Pennsylvania resident spotted the rare bilateral gynandromorph, a bird divided right down the middle, half male and half female," behind a residence in Warren County, Pennsylvania: 

He'd been alerted to it by a friend of the homeowner, who wanted to remain anonymous, and Hill didn't want to reveal the exact location.
He said the rare cardinal "behaved totally normal." But, in theory, he said that it could mate with either a female or male cardinal, depending on which of its hormones were active during mating season.
A similar bird recorded by an Erie couple was featured in a National Geographic article in January 2019. That bird, which was red on one side and brown on the other, was spotted and photographed by Jeffrey and Shirley Caldwell.

Image via USA Today 

The Battery Invented 120 Years Before Its Time

Posted: 25 Feb 2021 09:53 AM PST

At the turn of the 20th century, Thomas Edison experimented with an electric car. It was not the first electric car, but Edison's battery was different. This battery had its drawbacks, one which may turn out to be a benefit 120 years later.

Edison had outfitted his car with a new type of battery that he hoped would soon be powering vehicles throughout the country: a nickel-iron battery. Building on the work of the Swedish inventor Ernst Waldemar Jungner, who first patented a nickel-iron battery in 1899, Edison sought to refine the battery for use in automobiles.

Edison claimed the nickel-iron battery was incredibly resilient, and could be charged twice as fast as lead-acid batteries. He even had a deal in place with Ford Motors to produce this purportedly more efficient electric vehicle.

But the nickel-iron battery did have some kinks to work out. It was larger than the more widely used lead-acid batteries, and more expensive. Also, when it was being charged, it would release hydrogen, which was considered a nuisance and could be dangerous.

In the 21st century, you've heard about the possibilities of hydrogen power. The problem is that it's difficult to produce hydrogen. A research team from Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands are revisiting Edison's nickel-iron battery to assess its function in both power storage and hydrogen production, and the results so far look pretty good. They named their version of the battery the "battolyser," a gadget that Batman would be proud to use. Read about the potential of the battolyser at BBC Future. -via Damn Interesting

Catzilla

Posted: 25 Feb 2021 08:28 AM PST

Matt McCarthy describes his own cats as sweet and cuddly creatures, but on the day when he saw his cats play with a bug that entered his home, McCarthy remembered something about cats: they are apex predators. A thought then crossed his mind: "How would cats react to me and my wife if we were that small?" This resulted in the creation of these photos which depict giant cats in various cities.

See the photos over at Sad and Useless.

Would you be scared if a giant cat suddenly appeared in your city?

(Image Credit: Sad and Useless)

The Great Smog of 1952

Posted: 25 Feb 2021 08:27 AM PST

You might have never heard of the Great Smog of 1952, or you may have been introduced to it by an episode of The Crown on Netflix, like I was. While London is notoriously foggy, it was infinitely worse than usual on December 5, 1952, when a combination of fog and air pollution reduced visibility to only a few feet.     

The smog smothered the city for five days. Transportation came to a virtual standstill. Flights were grounded and trains cancelled. Only the Underground was running. Ambulance services were affected, leaving people to find their own way to hospitals. The fog even seeped indoors though windows and doors. Plays and concerts were cancelled because the audience were unable to see the stage.

Remarkably, there was no panic as Londoners were accustomed to fog. But the death toll increased. Most of the victims were the very young and the elderly with pre-existing respiratory problems. Estimates of how many people died during that period vary from 6,000 to as high as 12,000.

The smog was produced by a combination of weather, geography, and several sources of air pollution. Read about the factors that produced the smog and what's been done about them at Amusing Planet.

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