Shared posts

04 Aug 20:33

Coca-Cola Creates Modular System To Reuse Plastic Bottles

by Zeon Santos

(Video Link)

Plastic waste is a huge problem in the world today, with recycling centers struggling to figure out what to do with all the plastic bottles being thrown away every day and landfills filling up with waste that won’t degrade for hundreds, if not thousands, of years.

So what do we do with all those leftover plastic bottles? Coca-Cola has come up with a very creative way to reuse their plastic bottles- the 2ndLives cap system.

2ndLives is a set of 16 screw on sprayers, marker tips, pencil sharpeners and other useful objects that can be attached to the top of any plastic soda bottle, essentially upcycling the plastic waste and giving it new life.

So far the bottle tops are only being distributed (for free) in Vietnam, with Indonesia and Thailand to start receiving them soon, and hopefully they'll soon make their way to the U.S. because they look like a great idea!

-Via Laughing Squid

02 Jul 19:00

Real-Life Dr. Zoidberg Cosplay Is Both Terrifying And Terrific

by Meredith Woerner

Effects artist Frank Ippolito designed this AMAZING Dr. Zoidberg from Futurama costume for YouTube series "Tested"—and it was a a HUGE hit at WonderCon 2014. Well done, everyone, but please don't stand too close (you're scary).

Read more...








16 Jun 14:56

Monsters of Grok: 'band t-shirts' honoring intellectual greats

by Xeni Jardin

grokk

"Fake band t-shirts for history's greatest minds." (more…)

16 Jun 14:46

Now I Know: Eye Macs

by danlewis
In 2009 a Philadelphia high school remotely spied on students through laptop webcams, wrongfully accusing one teenager of taking drugs. 50,000 photos later, the hammer finally came down on the peeping administrators. Dan Lewis reports. Read the rest
12 Jun 15:23

15 Facts You Might Not Know about Murder, She Wrote

by John Farrier
Binaryjesus

Mendocino, CA is now on the west-coast list of places to visit.

Jessica Fletcher, a widow in a small town in Maine, writes murder mystery novels. Everywhere she goes, people are murdered. When she visits friends and relatives, people are murdered. But the quick-minded Mrs. Fletcher always solves the case and finds the culprit. This is the premise of Murder, She Wrote, a television show that ran from 1984 through 1997. Here are some bits of trivia the series.

1. At the beginning of the series, Jessica Fletcher lives at 698 Candlewood Lane, Cabot Cove, Maine 03041. Where is this fictional town? That’s unclear, but here’s a webpage that meticulously pieces together the geographic clues mentioned in the series.

2. Over its 12-year run, the series listed by title 25 mystery novels that Jessica has written, starting with The Corpse Danced at Midnight--her first book.

3. By the early 1980s, Agatha Christie’s Miss Marple character had thrived on British television for a decade. CBS wanted to create a similar series to exploit its popularity. The network created and aired a Miss Marple television movie called A Caribbean Mystery.This movie was a hit, so CBS continued to work in this direction.


4. CBS decided to create a dramatic series about a mystery novel writer who solved mysteries. They offered the lead role for Murder, She Wrote to Jean Stapleton, who played Edith Bunker on All in the Family. She declined.

5. Jessica Fletcher doesn’t drive a car. Angela Lansbury liked this “because it precludes, in a sense, the need for car chases.”

6. Lansbury had demands for the show’s tone before she would accept the lead role. “I stipulated that there should be no scenes of gratuitous violence, with blood and gore and car smashes.”

7. The house that was shot as Jessica Fletcher’s was the Blair House Inn, a bed and breakfast Mendocino, California. Pictured above is Angela Lansbury with Grover Wickersham, the owner of the inn, and his son.


8. Merchandise inspired by the show includes a board game produced in 1985. It’s played by 4-6 players, one of whom is secretly the murderer. Board Game Geek summarizes it:

One player is secretly and randomly chosen to be the murderer, the rest are detectives (Jessica Fletcher) trying to determine which player is the murderer. The murderer player wins if he/she can murder five witnesses and escape off of the game board before he/she is discovered. A detective player wins by being the first to correctly deduce the identity of the murderer, before the murderer escapes. Players mark which locations they have visited and in which order. This information, along with the living or dead status of the witnesses, is used by the detective players to deduce who is the murderer player.

9. There are also 2 computer games.


10. And several novels based on the series, ostensibly written by Jessica Fletcher and Donald Bain.

11. From 1986-1987, Murder, She Wrote was thriving in its third season. Magnum, P.I., however, was faltering in its seventh season. CBS arranged for a crossover between the two to prop up Magnum, P.I. They created a 2-part show that began on Magnum, P.I. and ended on Murder, She Wrote. The ratings for Magnum, P.I. increased slightly, but that show was cancelled after another season.

12. William Windom, who played Commodore Matt Decker on Star Trek, also played Dr. Seth Hazlitt, the town doctor of Cabot Cove on Murder, She Wrote. Producers created his character because they wanted Jessica Fletcher to regularly interact with an intellectual.

13. By the seventh season, Murder, She Wrote had fallen in the ratings. In response, Angela Lansbury took over as executive producer. She brought in a new production team, including several of her relatives. Lansbury moved the character and story from Cabot Cove to New York City. Jessica Fletcher was now an urbanite who used a computer, dressed sharp and interacted with young people. Lansbury’s efforts paid off. By the ninth season, the show was in the top 5.


14. In 1996, CBS began phasing out Murder, She Wrote. Lansbury knew that the show was ending, so she felt free to experiment. The episode “Murder among Friends” was a parody of the popular sitcom Friends. In this episode, Jessica Fletcher solved a murder on the set of a fictitious sitcom called Buds.

15. The series finale “Death by Demographics” was a jab at CBS and its decision to cancel the show. It was set at a San Francisco radio station that was changing its lineup to reflect the tastes of younger audiences.

Source:
Parish, James Robert. The Unofficial Murder, She Wrote Casebook. New York: Kensington Books, 1997. Print. 

Images (from top to bottom):
CBS, CBS, CBS, Blair House, VintageGameShow, NBC Universal, Penguin Group, CBS, CBS, CBS, NBC.

11 Jun 13:27

A Porno by Wes Anderson



A Porno by Wes Anderson

11 Jun 13:18

NSA: We're too complex to comply with law, so we're destroying evidence in EFF lawsuit

by Xeni Jardin
Binaryjesus

AKA We're too complex to be allowed to live.

FILE PHOTO  NSA Compiles Massive Database Of Private Phone Calls

The National Security Agency is using a new argument for not retaining the data it gathers about users' online activity: The NSA is just too complex.

Read the rest

10 Jun 14:29

​How To Not Crash A Motorcycle And What Will Keep You Alive If You Do

by Wes Siler on IndefinitelyWild, shared by Matt Hardigree to Jalopnik
Binaryjesus

TLDR; Gravel in a corner caused this. Enter slow, exit fast. Also, better gloves.

​How To Not Crash A Motorcycle And What Will Keep You Alive If You Do

Two of my friends hurt themselves in motorcycle crashes this weekend. Both crashes were their own damn fault. They're idiots. Here's how you can avoid being like them.

Read more...

10 Jun 13:26

Small town sheriff buys tank: "the United States of America has become a war zone"

by Cory Doctorow
In rural Indiana, police agencies with smaller budgets are buying military surplus equipment, including tanks. By and large, these counties have no formal policy about when or how they can be used against Americans. Read the rest
09 Jun 18:46

A Softer World

09 Jun 18:41

'NSA vs. USA,' anti-spying dance music video

by Xeni Jardin

An anti-mass-surveillance music video by Shahid Buttar, director of the Bill of Rights Defense Committee.

Download the extended dance floor mix. Read the lyrics (annotated with hyperlinks to help you learn more). [HT: Rainey Reitman]

09 Jun 13:31

Homebuilt Recumbent Motorcycle Racer Competes in MRA Sanctioned Event

by Paul Crowe

Original article from: TheKneeslider.com -

Original article from: TheKneeslider.com - Recumbent motorcycles are nothing new, but most (all?) efforts are focused on street legal machines. Bob Horn, though, is proof there is at least one (feet) forward thinking builder, who has been working for the past half dozen years to design, build and test a recumbent racer. His persistence and […]
06 Jun 20:13

Why I'm sending 200 copies of Little Brother to a high-school in Pensacola, FL

by Cory Doctorow
The principal of Booker T Washington High in Pensacola FL cancelled the school's One School/One Book summer reading program rather than letting all the kids go through with the previously approved assignment to read Little Brother, the bestselling young adult novel by Cory Doctorow. With Cory and Tor Books' help, the teachers are fighting back. Read the rest
03 Jun 14:09

All The Times Science Fiction Became Science Fact In One Chart

by Ria Misra
Binaryjesus

Found an error at 1962 (Waterbeds). Otherwise, good list!

All The Times Science Fiction Became Science Fact In One Chart

Not every science fiction story is meant to predict the future, but some of them have forecast future events with incredible accuracy. This timeline sketches out some of the most exciting examples of times that science fiction became fact.

Read more...








03 Jun 13:23

Beautiful shells carved with skulls

by David Pescovitz
Skull 4

Gregory Halili carves stunning skulls into shells collected in the Philippines. Gallery over at Colossal and video below (thanks, Jean Hagan!).

02 Jun 20:38

Portraits of asexual people

by Xeni Jardin

Worth checking out: this photojournalism project about people who identify as asexual.

Read the rest

02 Jun 14:23

What happens inside a dishwasher: a gopro finds out

by Rob Beschizza
I don't really know what I expected. [Video Link, via Seth Porges]
02 Jun 13:39

Toddler in Coma After Police Grenade Detonates in Crib

by Deb Belt
Binaryjesus

Protecting the shit out of you.

Bounkham Phonesavanh, nicknamed “Bou Bou,” was critically injured when a SWAT team's grenade blew up in his crib. Credit: Screenshot from WSB TV
A 19-month-old boy was critically injured when a SWAT team's grenade blew up in his crib. His family was visiting relatives after losing their home in a fire.
29 May 13:56

Mysterious announcement from Truecrypt declares the project insecure and dead

by Cory Doctorow
The abrupt announcement that the widely used, anonymously authored disk-encryption tool Truecrypt is insecure and will no longer be maintained shocked the crypto world, after all, this was the tool Snowden himself lectured on at a Cryptoparty in Hawai'i. Cory Doctorow tries to make sense of it all. Read the rest
28 May 17:34

Plush octopus backpack

by Cory Doctorow


Jen created this beautiful plush octopus backpack: want. Our kid has a plush octopus from Tokyo Disneysea that looks just like this, only smaller, that we call Doctor Octopustorow.

(via Pipedream Dragon)

28 May 14:09

This one’s for the Star Wars fans…

by Joey deVilla

jar jar abrams

Found here; I just cleaned up the phrasing and typography.

27 May 13:44

More in US die from prescription narcotics than car crashes, guns, suicide

by Xeni Jardin

More than 100 Americans die each day from prescription drug overdoses, mostly painkillers. That's more daily deaths than from car accidents, gunshot wounds, or suicides.

Read the rest
27 May 13:17

05/27/2014

by Jennie Breeden
21 May 18:15

Ebay hacked, change your password

by Rob Beschizza
Ebay says that its corporate network and databases were compromised earlier this year, and will ask its users to change their passwords. Read the rest
19 May 14:06

Bowie's takedown of Hadfield's ISS "Space Oddity" highlights copyright's absurdity

by Cory Doctorow

Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield's cover of Bowie's Space Oddity was a worldwide hit, and now it has been disappeared from the Internet, thanks to a copyright claim from David Bowie. Ironically, if Hadfield had recorded the song and sold it on CD or as an MP3, there would have been no need for him to get a license from Bowie, and no way for Bowie to remove it, because there's a compulsory license for cover songs that sets out how much the performer has to pay the songwriter for each copy sold, but does not give the songwriter the power to veto individual covers (that's why Sid Vicious was able to record "My Way").

As Blayne Haggart's Ottawa Citizen editorial points out, it's hard to make a utilitarian argument for copyright that lets musicians determine who can make Youtube videos from their songs, given that covers are such an accepted part of musical practice. As Haggart writes, "Is the world a better place now that this piece of art has officially been scrubbed from existence?" Read the rest

16 May 19:08

Love it or hate it, it'll eat you for breakfast

by ferret
16 May 14:26

Intricate 3D Printed Artworks By Joshua Harker

by Zeon Santos

The future of art lies in the third dimension, so it makes sense that 3D printers are going from simple replicators to tools for creating original works of art.

Joshua Harker is leading the way into the 3D printed age of art with his amazing sculptures, with designs that push the boundaries of what a 3D printer is capable of producing, and his works keep getting more intricate, more delicate and infinitely more difficult to print.

From the otherworldly headdress we featured here on Neatorama a while back, to fun art pieces covered in scrollwork and fanciful designs, to a bunch of intricately designed flowers that look as delicate as the real thing, Joshua’s works will make you believe in the artistic power of the 3D printer.

Read more about this amazing 3D print artist at Hi-Fructose.

16 May 13:43

Photo of NSA technicians sabotaging Cisco router prior to export

by Cory Doctorow


One of the Snowden documents published by Glenn Greenwald with the release of his new book is a photo showing an actual NSA Tailored Access Operations team sabotaging a Cisco router before it is exported, a practice reported earlier this week in a story Greenwald wrote for the Guardian.

The great irony is that this kind of sabotage is exactly the sort of thing that the USA has repeatedly accuse Chinese authorities of doing to Huawei routers, something for which we have no evidence. Unlike the photographic evidence we have here of the NSA doing this to a Cisco router. Read the rest

15 May 20:35

April 21, 2014


15 May 20:25

Massive Dose of Measles Vaccine Wipes Out Woman's Cancer

by Patch National Desk
Binaryjesus

Mayo clinic is involved so maybe this isn't bullshit?!?

Screen grab from Mayo Clinic Video
Case demonstrates potential for single-shot cure for cancer.