Shared posts

30 Dec 08:46

Picture of the Day: Behind a Frozen Waterfall

by twistedsifter

 

BEHIND A FROZEN WATERFALL

 

behiind a frozen waterfall minnehaha falls minnesota Picture of the Day: Behind a Frozen Waterfall

Photograph by Matt Sepeta

 

Located in Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnehaha Falls can be found near the entrance to Minnehaha Park, a 193-acre park divided into two main portions: an upper section above the falls which is kept trimmed and maintained like many other city parks, and the lower section which is largely left in a natural state and popular for free climbing due to the steep terrain.

Due to the extremely cold temperatures during the winter months, the waterfall is known to freeze, creating a dramatic cascade of ice that can last well into Spring. The falls are located in Minnehaha Creek, a tributary of the Mississippi River, close to where the creek meets back with the Mississippi. [Source]

 

MattSepeta.com via sugarfalcon on Reddit

 

picture of the day button Picture of the Day: Behind a Frozen Waterfall

 

 


28 Dec 19:06

Each Pringles potato chip is a Hyperbolic Paraboloid. source



Each Pringles potato chip is a Hyperbolic Paraboloid.

source

28 Dec 19:05

Dark chocolate contains the same chemical our body secretes when...



Dark chocolate contains the same chemical our body secretes when we fall in love.

source

28 Dec 19:05

Merry Xmas! Kissing under the mistletoe is thought to spring...



Merry Xmas!

Kissing under the mistletoe is thought to spring from Frigg, the Norse goddess of love, who was associated with the plant.

source

28 Dec 19:04

Not having friends has the same health risk as smoking a pack of...



Not having friends has the same health risk as smoking a pack of cigarettes a day.

source

28 Dec 18:54

Firewall: An Interactive Fabric Surface by Aaron Sherwood

by Christopher Jobson

Firewall: An Interactive Fabric Surface by Aaron Sherwood performance art light interactive digital

Firewall is a new interactive artwork by New York media artist Aaron Sherwood created in collaboration with Michael Allison. The presentation is relatively straightforward but still visually stunning: different ‘modes’ of light are projected onto a taut membrane of spandex which then reacts kinetically in response to touch. Firewall was made using Processing, Max/MSP, Arduino and a Kinect that work in tandem to create the experience and will be used in an upcoming performance art piece involving dancer Kiori Kawai who will interact with the piece on stage. Learn more over on Sherwood’s blog. (via designboom)

28 Dec 18:48

Spiders making spiders

by Aaron Cohen
Dustin Boyer

via Prado. This is obviously spiders realizing that they aren't horrifying enough people fast enough.

super-spider.jpg

Scientists in Peru have discovered what they think may be a new species of spider which uses twigs and dead insects to build decoy spiders to trick predators.

Afterward, Torres returned to the trails near the research center. Only within a roughly 1-square-mile area near the floodplain did Torres find more spider-building spiders -- about 25 of them. "They could be quite locally restricted," he said. "But for all I know, there's millions of them in the forest beyond." The spiders' webs were crafted around face-height, near the trail, and about the width of a stretched-out hand. Some of the decoys placed in the webs looked rather realistic. Others resembled something more like a cartoon octopus.

(thanks, Alex)

Tags: science
26 Dec 03:59

Photo



17 Dec 22:40

http://www.youthewhoa.com/2012/12/image_15.html

by Tim
Dustin Boyer

img heavy post. Save them and sync them to your phone for text message adventures!

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16 Dec 18:12

Frost Flowers Blooming in the Arctic Ocean are Found to be Teeming with Life

by Christopher Jobson

Frost Flowers Blooming in the Arctic Ocean are Found to be Teeming with Life water science ocean nature ice flowers

Frost Flowers Blooming in the Arctic Ocean are Found to be Teeming with Life water science ocean nature ice flowers

Frost Flowers Blooming in the Arctic Ocean are Found to be Teeming with Life water science ocean nature ice flowers

Frost Flowers Blooming in the Arctic Ocean are Found to be Teeming with Life water science ocean nature ice flowers

These beautiful and other-worldly photographs of ice were taken last year by University of Washington graduate student Jeff Bowman and his professor Jody Deming while they worked on a study combining oceanography, microbiology, and planetary sciences in the central Arctic Ocean as part of the Integrated Graduate Education and Research Training (IGERT) program. Their single focus was the study of frost flowers, a strange phenomenon where frost grows from imperfections in the surface ice amid extreme sub-zero temperatures nearing -22C or -7.6F, forming spiky structures that have been found to house microorganisms. In fact, the bacteria found in the frost flowers is much more dense than in the frozen water below it, meaning each flower is essentially a temporary ecosystem, not unlike a coral reef. Via IGERT:

Around their research icebreaker in the central Arctic Ocean new ice grows on long open cracks that network amongst the thick floes of pack ice. Abruptly the surface of this new ice changes texture. The cold, moist air above the open cracks becomes saturated and frost begins to form wherever an imperfection can be found on the ice surface. From these nucleation points the flower-like frost structures grow vertically, quickly rising to centimeters in height. The hollow tendrils of these “frost flowers” begin to wick moisture from the ice surface, incorporating salt, marine bacteria, and other substances as they grow. The fog dissipates and the Arctic sun lights the surface of the frost flowers, initiating a cascade of chemical reactions. These reactions can produce formaldehyde, deplete ozone, and actually alter the chemical composition of the lower atmosphere. [...] Bowman and Deming have discovered that bacteria are consistently more abundant in frost flowers than in sea ice. Since microscopic pockets in sea ice are known to support an active community of psychrophiles (cold-loving microorganisms), even in the coldest months of the year, these results are encouraging.

Bowman and Deming are currently building an ultra-clean chamber where they can grow artificial frost flowers and hope that their research leads to a better understanding of how life might be able to survive in extreme conditions elsewhere in the universe. Amazing! Photos by Matthias Wietz. (via the daily what)

16 Dec 18:11

Cycle of Decay: A Sculpted Ceramic Hand that Looks Like a Carved Tree Branch

by Christopher Jobson

Cycle of Decay: A Sculpted Ceramic Hand that Looks Like a Carved Tree Branch wood sculpture ceramics anatomy

Cycle of Decay: A Sculpted Ceramic Hand that Looks Like a Carved Tree Branch wood sculpture ceramics anatomy

Cycle of Decay: A Sculpted Ceramic Hand that Looks Like a Carved Tree Branch wood sculpture ceramics anatomy

Cycle of Decay: A Sculpted Ceramic Hand that Looks Like a Carved Tree Branch wood sculpture ceramics anatomy

Cycle of Decay: A Sculpted Ceramic Hand that Looks Like a Carved Tree Branch wood sculpture ceramics anatomy

This impeccably detailed ceramic sculpture called Cycles of Decay was created by ceramicist Christopher David White who works out of Bloomington, Indiana. Even on close inspection the knotted and twisting veins of the tree branch look almost exactly like old wood, take a closer look on his website. (via sweet station)

16 Dec 18:08

http://blog.dustinboyer.com/?p=4059

by Dustin Boyer

- Birds in mexico city are using cigarette butts to line their nests because of the anti-microbial properties of tobacco.
Nature.com

- “The only good thing about Grover Norquist is he’s named after a character from Sesame Street””
Former Bush/Cheney adviser Matthew Dowd

- “Seventy percent of counties with the fastest-growth in food-stamp aid during the last four years voted for the Republican presidential candidate in 2008, according to U.S. Department of Agriculture data compiled by Bloomberg.”
– Republican-Heavy Counties Eat Up Most Food-Stamp Growth – Bloomberg

- Super weird sub Reddit Fifth Dimensional Problems

 

16 Dec 18:07

Quote of the Day: Capt Jack Sparrow

by Dustin Boyer

“The problem is not the problem.  the problem is your attitude about the problem.” – Capt Jack Sparrow

I would not be surprised if the above was fake but I’ve also sat waiting for a subway car and 1 million times wondered if it could be done.

 

16 Dec 18:07

Brief Reminder: David Petraeus

by Dustin Boyer

In the context of the the uproar over CIA director David Petraeus’s extra marital affair, I think it’s worth noting that the CIA director Alan Dulles fucked the queen of Greece one day in his coat room and it wasn’t a big deal.

16 Dec 18:07

Why Is The Sky Dark At Night?

by Dustin Boyer

A mind blowing piece by One Minute Physics.

16 Dec 18:00

Sex News: Anonymous slaps Hunter Moore, new Playboy HQ, another Apple fuckup

by violet blue
Dustin Boyer

see specifically -> Harvard College Munch. Also, interesting headline roundup of sex related news

  • In response to Revenge Porn King Hunter Moore‘s new HunterMoore.tv, a site that might make it much easier to locate, stalk and even harm anyone whose images are published there, Anonymous recently mounted #OpHuntHunter and #OpAntiBully, efforts to expose everything Mr. Moore hasn’t made public or doesn’t want the public to know.
    Anonymous Hacks HunterMoore.tv, Posts Everything Online [Updated] (Betabeat, thanks Viviane!)

  • Apple, which debuted iTunes in Russia on Tuesday along with 55 other countries, apparently had been rushing to roll out the service with programmers employing “xxx.xxx” placeholders for some fields.
    In Russia, Apple iTunes Store Serves Up Porn (XBIZ)
  • Rachel James sat down with the founder and executive director of the Museum of Sex, Daniel Gluck, to talk about the past 10 years, the politics of sex, and his newest venture, a bar called Play.
    Q&A: Daniel Gluck, executive director, Museum of Sex (SmartPlanet)

  • “If sex was once difficult to discuss openly, black sex was especially fraught. It touched on too many taboos: stereotypes and caricatures of “black Hottentots” with freakish feminine proportions; of asexual mammies or lascivious Jezebels; of hypersexual black men lusting after white women. (…)”
    Who’s Afraid of Black Sexuality? (The Chronicle Review)
  • The august flagship of the Ivy League, Harvard University, approved Friday a student group devoted to kinky sex called Harvard College Munch, a university spokesman said. The group promotes “a positive and accurate understanding of alternative sexualities and kink on campus, as well as to create a space where college-age adults may reach out to their peers and feel accepted in their own sexuality,” according to the school website.
    Harvard approves student group devoted to kinky sex on campus (CNN)
  • I’m *still* jealous that Bacchus got to see Dan Savage in person – but thankfully, Bacchus gave us this superb writeup of the experience. “After his prepared remarks, Dan took questions from the audience. These were sometimes unintentionally hilarious (for instance, the one from the self-described Republican woman who challenged Dan because she felt “bullied” by his rough-and-tumble political remarks)…”
    Dan Savage, Live And In Person! (ErosBlog: The Sex Blog)
16 Dec 17:47

“Sum Times” by Aakash Nihalani

by Myner

"Sum Times" by Aakash Nihalani

16 Dec 17:42

"It had to do with their inability to work with other members, which some people might refer to as..."

“It had to do with their inability to work with other members, which some people might refer to as the a—hole factor.”

- Leslie Shedd, spokeswoman for Rep. Lynn Westmoreland (R-Ga.), on why several conservative freshman members were ‘purged’ from House committees. (via Politico)
16 Dec 17:39

Oh shit!!!!!

by dw

16 Dec 02:22

Photo

Dustin Boyer

via Baron



16 Dec 02:22

The alphabet fades away

Dustin Boyer

via Baron

16 Dec 01:54

Friday, December 14 @ 3:28:25 am

by tfbrown69
16 Dec 01:52

Sandy Hook Elementary School Shooting

by ThunderCunt
16 Dec 01:51

On Space Time Foam: Surreal Billowing Art Installation

by Steph
Dustin Boyer

via Willow

[ By Steph in Art & Installation & Sound. ]

The science of engineering and rationalism of city planning meet visionary experimentation in art installations by Tomás Saraceno. The Argentina-born artist is known for works that imagine an alternate future for humanity in unexpected, often utopian ways. His latest work, ‘On Space Time Foam‘, is an exploration of self-sufficient aerial structures that could be made on a larger scale and inhabited by humans.

‘On Space Time Foam’ is a layered installation of translucent PVC membranes suspended nearly 80 feet above the ground. Installed at the Hangar Bicocca in Milan, Italy, the work alludes to the primordial state of matter from which the universe formed.

Visitors can access the installation either from above, to navigate it themselves, or from below, to watch as people seemingly float in mid-air. The plastic has a surface area of nearly 13,000 square feet. Walking on the surface is a tricky task, sending visitors sliding and tumbling across the plastic. “As soon as you decide to climb onto the installation, you are necessarily caught up in a play of mutual dependence,” Saraceno told Klat Magazine. “This experience helps to initiate a dialogue between people, through a body language that has no need of words.”

While it’s a fun attraction in its current form, Saraceno has big plans for the concept. He aims to translate it into a Buckminster Fuller-inspired floating biosphere above the climate change-threatened Maldives Islands, which would be fully inhabitable with solar panels and desalinated water. Saraceno will embark on a residency at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to work out the logistics of such an ambitious undertaking.

“The aim of what I do is to try to expand the range of the dialogue, to make as many people as possible aware of the extent of the impact that each of us has on others and on the environment. This is the objective of my artistic practice: awakening people to the interdependence of the different elements that make up the system in which we live—the interrelations between objects, natural phenomena and living creatures.”

See a video of the installation in action, and an interview with the artist, at Design Boom.

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Wavy WasteLandscape Installation Made of 65,000 CDs

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15 Dec 20:46

anybody seen this ? f.. aww

by Mobilum
Dustin Boyer

This is a good little sci fi short

Video: 
15 Dec 05:07

the-starlight-hotel: dotwork sleeves and back piece by Nazareno...

by delacroix
Dustin Boyer

via Mikest.













the-starlight-hotel:

dotwork sleeves and back piece by Nazareno Tubaro

I love this. And is it just the lighting or is this done in blue? I’m so used to seeing this type of stuff done in just blackwork. The blue is stunning.





15 Dec 05:04

Power Trip: 13 Creative Cord & Outlet Concepts

by Steph
Dustin Boyer

Just tryin to keep the shares alive.

[ By Steph in Gadgets & Geekery & Technology. ]

We use power outlets and extension cords every day, yet they seem to have been left behind when it comes to both aesthetic and practical improvements over the last few decades. These 13 (more) products, concepts and DIY projects include power outlets with built-in retractable extension cords, super-flat tape cords that are invisible under rugs, and modular power strips that can be customized to your electricity needs.

Super-Flat Retractable Tape Cord

This extension cord works just like a tape measure, with the cord extending from the base unit to plug into an electric outlet. Just give the tape a tug and it’ll wind back up inside the unit.

Power Bridge Hides Unsightly Plugs

We don’t really like looking at a mess of plugs in a power strip, so why have them on top? The Power Bridge by Hyukjae Chang flips the strip, keeping the visible side clutter-free. Each outlet also has an indicator light that lets you know how much power that particular device is using.

Belkin TimeOutlet

In the Belkin TimeOutlet, four quadrants corresponding to various times of day keep your lights and devices powered up only during the time that you actually use them, cutting off the power at other times.

Lithoss Frameless Switch

Light switches become design details with the Lithoss Frameless Switch, which uses piano-like keys to turn lights on and off.

Rotating 360 Multi-Outlet Strip

The variety of oddly shaped plugs makes it hard to fit all of your gadgets onto a single power strip. The Rotating 360 ensures that they’ll all fit with a modular design with individual sockets that can be rotated to the side or bottom, or removed altogether if they’re not needed.

Totally Flat Tape Cord is Perfect Under Rugs

There’s no need to tape extension cords to the floor with ugly duct tape or run them along walls and ceilings to keep them out of the way, when they’re entirely flat – and work like tape themselves. This design by Chen Ju Wei uses a sticky electrostatic paste material and circuit-printing technology to embed electric wires within a length of reusable tape that can be wiped clean when needed.

Donut Outlet Features Circular Design

Isn’t it annoying when you’re trying to plug a cable into an outlet you can’t see, and just can’t seem to line up the prongs? With the DONUT outlet, a circular design allows the plug to be inserted from any angle.

Energy-Saving Wind-Up Sockets

Sometimes you only need a light or appliance to be on for a set period of time, but you forget to unplug it afterward. The Wind Up Socket keeps that from happening with built-in timers that cut off the electricity after the chosen length of time.

Recoiling Wall Socket

The ‘Rambler Socket’ by Meysam Movahedi features a 1.5-meter extension cord on a reel that fits within the wall, eliminating the need for extension cords. When you don’t need it, it simply goes away.

E-Line Cord Wrapping System

The habit of wrapping extra cord around an appliance can burn you – literally – if you forget to unwrap it before using the item, especially if it’s something that gets hot, like a toaster or electric kettle. The cord on the E-line wrapping system is coated in such a way that it coils into a compact configuration when it doesn’t need to be stretched.

Plug Extension Cord Project

No need to reach under the desk to unplug your computer or phone charger from an extension cord. The Plug Extension Cord Project by Anton Zetocha provides a little flat piece beside the outlet that makes it easier to use one hand or even your foot to pull the plug.

Floor Plan-Shaped Light Switch

More people would turn off all the lights before leaving the house if it were more convenient. This concept is a master switch for all the lights in the house, shaped like your floorplan. You simply press the shape of the room where you want to turn off lights.

Sculptural Braided Extension Cords

If you can’t hide your extension cords, why not show them off? Design Sponge offers a DIY project that’s admittedly not practical, but makes these eyesores infinitely more visually interesting. Three ordinary power cords are wrapped in plastic tubing and then covered in colored yarn before being braided together. The result is basically a piece of art for your floor (that you’ll probably trip over more than once.)

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14 Dec 19:02

Jump Rope WIN

Dustin Boyer

This is weird but cool, via willow

gifs,jump rope,animated,stunt,oh Japan

Submitted by: Unknown

13 Dec 22:27

Yo my Chinese friend told me that the more polished and "white" a rice is, the more it's prized in Chinese cuisine. Why are Chinese people racist against Brown Rice?

What’s it like being so stupid you think this is a good joke?

13 Dec 21:39

Truth, Lies, and ‘Doxxing’: The Real Moral of the Gawker/Reddit Story (from Wired)

by zephoria

I wrote the following piece for Wired. I’m keeping it here for posterity, but check out the comments over on Wired.

Sitting U.S. President Ford was visiting San Francisco in 1975 when a woman attempted to shoot him. A former marine named Oliver Sipple grabbed the gun, preventing the assassination attempt. When the press began contacting him, he asked that his sexuality not be discussed. While Sipple was very active in the gay men’s scene in the Castro, he was not out to family or work. But Harvey Milk, a famous gay rights activist, chose to out him so the public could see that gay men could be heroes, too.

The cost to Sipple was devastating. The White House distanced itself from him, his family rejected him, and he sunk into a dark depression. He gained massive amounts of weight, began drinking profusely, and died at the ripe young age of 47. Many around Sipple reported that he regretted his act of heroism and the attention resulting from it. But for Harvey Milk, the potential social good from using Sipple’s story far outweighed what he perceived as the costs of outing him.

This is a hard moral conundrum, in part because Sipple was clearly a “good” guy who had done a good deed. But what if he wasn’t? What are the moral and ethical costs of outing people and focusing unwanted attention on them?

Two weeks ago, Gawker journalist Adrian Chen decided to unmask the infamous Reddit troll “Violentacrez” as Michael Brutsch. When Chen contacted him, Brutsch did not attempt to deny the things he had done. He simply begged Chen not to publish his name, citing the costs that publicity would have on his disabled wife. Chen chose to publish the piece – including Brutsch’s pleas and promises to do anything that Chen asked in return for not ruining his life. As expected, Brutsch lost his job and the health insurance that paid for his wife’s care; Chen reported this outcome three days later. Many celebrated this public shaming, ecstatic to see a notorious troll grovel.

Although none of his actions appeared to be illegal, it’s hard to call Brutsch a “good” guy. He had created settings where people could share deeply disturbing content. He enticed people to reveal their ugliest sides. In many ways, Brutsch was a classic troll, abusing technology and manipulating the boundaries of free speech to provoke systematic prejudices and harassment for his own entertainment. He got joy from making others miserable.

Unmasking as a Way to Regulate Social Norms

There are many different reasons to unmask people, out them, or make them much more visible than they previously were. Sometimes, the goal is to celebrate someone’s goodness. At other times, people are made visible to use them as an example … or to set an example. People are outed to reveal hypocrisy and their practices are made visible to shame them.

In identifying Butsch and shining a spotlight on his insidious practices, Chen’s article condemns Butsch’s choice of using the mask of pseudonymity to hide behind actions that have societal consequences. Public shaming is one way in which social norms are regulated. Another is censorship, as evidenced by the Reddit community’s response to Gawker.

Yet, how do we as a society weigh the moral costs of shining a spotlight on someone, however “bad” their actions are? What happens when, as a result of social media, vigilantism takes on a new form? How do we guarantee justice and punishment that fits the crime when we can use visibility as a tool for massive public shaming? Is it always a good idea to regulate what different arbiters consider bad behavior through increasing someone’s notoriety – or censoring their links?

As the Gawker/Reddit story was unfolding, another seemingly disconnected case was playing out. In a town outside of Vancouver, a young woman named Amanda Todd committed suicide a few weeks after posting a harrowing YouTube video describing an anonymous stalker she felt ruined her life. The amorphous hacktivist collective known as “Anonymous” decided to make a spectacle of the situation by publishing personally identifiable information on – “doxxing” – Todd’s stalker. They identified a 32-year-old man, enabling outraged people to harass him. Yet it appears they got the wrong person. Earlier this week, Canadian police reported that Todd’s stalker was someone else: reportedly a 19-year-old.

Needless to say, this shift in information doesn’t relieve the original target of the public shame he felt from Anonymous’ pointed finger. It doesn’t wipe his digital record clean. He has to deal with being outed – in this case, wrongly – going forward.

The ‘Koan’: Technology as Tool and Technology as Weapon

By enabling the rapid flow of information, technology offers us a unique tool to publicly out people or collectively tar and feather them. Well-meaning people may hope to spread their messages far and wide using Twitter or Facebook, but the fast-spreading messages tend to be sexual, horrific, or humiliating.

Gossip is social currency. And in a networked world, trafficking in gossip is far easier than ever before.

When someone’s been wronged – or the opportunity arises to use someone to make a statement – it is relatively easy to leverage social media to incite the hive mind to draw attention to an individual. The same tactic that trolls use to target people is the same tactic that people use to out trolls.

More often than not, those who use these tools do so when they feel they’re on the right side of justice. They’re either shining a spotlight to make a point or to shame someone into what they perceive to be socially acceptable behavior. But each act of outing has consequences for the people being outed, even if we do not like them or what they’ve done.

This raises serious moral and ethical concerns: In a networked society, who among us gets to decide where the moral boundaries lie? This isn’t an easy question and it’s at the root of how we, as a society, conceptualize justice.

Governance and the construction of a society is not a fact of life; it’s a public project that we must continuously make and remake. Networked technologies are going to increasingly put pressure on our regulatory structures as conflicting social values crash into one another. In order to benefit from innovation, we must also suffer the destabilizing aspects of new technology.

Yet … that destabilization and suffering allow us, as a society, to interrogate our collective commitments. The hard moral conundrums are just beginning.

Check out the comments at Wired