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21 Jun 02:00

Video: Tonight Show Hashtags: #DadQuotes

21 Jun 01:58

20 essential job interview tips

19 Jun 21:23

4gifs: Labrador thinks he’s a kid. [video]



4gifs:

Labrador thinks he’s a kid. [video]

19 Jun 14:09

Casa Flotante de Benjamín García Saxe, o cómo podría ser tu casita en el árbol

by Philippe Sáez

Casa Arbol 1

No cabe duda que la arquitectura moderna está repleta de ideas innovadoras o que retomas conceptos básicos adaptados a la época actual. Tel es el caso de la llamada "Casa Flotante" del arquitecto Benjamín García Saxe ubicada en la selva de Costa Rica.

García Saxe ha estudiado arquitectura en su natal Costa Rica para cursar una especialización en los Estados Unidos. Sus proyectos están teñidos por un fuerte respeto por la naturaleza de tal manera de que cada uno de ellos sea respetuoso de su entorno y sustentable. Casa Arbol 2 La Casa Flotante retoma el concepto clásico de la casa en el árbol ya que se encuentra construida en altura, al nivel de la cima de la selva que la rodea. Compuesta por tres principales bloques, la casa tiene tres recámaras, dos baños y una piscina en desnivel. Los diferentes espacios están conectados unos a otros mediante puentes y pasillos colgantes que le dan al conjunto una mayor fluidez. Casa Arbol 3 La casa está hecha en teca y tiene un concepto totalmente abierto hacia el exterior por lo que no existen paredes ni ventanas. Para preservar algo de intimidad se han instalado persianas y techos corredizos que te permiten cerrar los espacios. Casa Arbol 4 Sin duda la Casa Flotante de Benjamín García Saxe, ubicada en Costa Rica, es una buena muestra de lo que se puede lograr en materia de respeto y adaptación al medio ambiente sin perder mucho en comodidad y lujo.

Casa Arbol 5

Via | Freshome
Decoesfera | Película Ex-Machina,el uso perfecto de la arquitectura de interior

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-
La noticia Casa Flotante de Benjamín García Saxe, o cómo podría ser tu casita en el árbol fue publicada originalmente en Decoesfera por Philippe Sáez .








19 Jun 13:29

foodffs: Easy Cheesy Chicken StromboliReally nice recipes....

19 Jun 12:39

sandandglass:Jon Stewart on the Charleston shooting:I didn’t do...



sandandglass:

Jon Stewart on the Charleston shooting:

I didn’t do my job today. I’ve got nothing for you in terms of jokes and sounds because of what happened in South Carolina. And maybe if I wasn’t nearing the end of the run or this wasn’t such a common occurrence, maybe I could have pulled out of the spiral. But I didn’t.

I honestly have nothing other than just sadness once again that we have to peer into the abyss of the depraved violence that we do to each other and the nexus of a just gaping racial wound that will not heal yet we pretend doesn’t exist. I’m confident though, that by acknowledging it – by staring into that and seeing it for what it is…We still won’t do jack shit. Yeah, that’s us. And that’s the part that blows my mind.

I don’t want to get into the political argument of guns and things. What blows my mind is the disparity of response between when we think people that are foreign are going to kill us and us killing ourselves…

If this had been what we thought was Islamic terrorism, it would fit into our [narrative]. We invaded two countries and spent trillions of dollars and [lost] thousands of American lives and now fly unmanned death machines over like five or six different counties, all to keep Americans safe. We’ve got to do whatever we can – we’ll torture people. We’ve got to do whatever we can to keep Americans safe. But nine people shot in a church, what about that? “Hey, what are you going go to do? Crazy is as crazy is, right?”

That’s the part that I cannot, for the life of me, wrap my head around. And you know it’s gonna go down the same path. “This is a terrible tragedy.” They are already using the nuanced language of lack of effort for this.

This is a terrorist attack. This is a violent attack on the Emanuel Church in South Carolina which is a symbol for the black community. It has stood in that part of Charleston for a hundred and some years and has been attacked viciously many times – as many black churches have. And to pretend that – I heard someone on the news say – “tragedy has visited this church”. This wasn’t a tornado. This was a racist. This was a guy with a Rhodesia badge on his sweater. So the idea that – I hate to even use this pun – but this one is black and white. There’s no nuance here. And we’re gonna keep pretending like, “I don’t get it, what happened. This one guy lost his mind.”

But we are steeped in that culture in this country and we refuse to recognize it. And I cannot believe how hard people are working to discount it. In South Carolina, the roads that people drive on are named for Confederate generals who fought to keep black people from being able to drive freely on that road. That’s insanity. That’s racial wallpaper. You can’t allow that.

Nine people were shot in a black church by a white guy who hated them – who wanted to start some kind of civil war. The Confederate flag flies over South Carolina and the roads are named for Confederate generals. And the white guy is the one who feels his country’s being taken away from him. We’re bringing it on ourselves.

And that’s the thing – Al Qaeda, all those guys, ISIS – they’re not shit compared to the damage that we can apparently do to ourselves on a regular basis.

I love him

19 Jun 12:21

calebdwood: Escher, Verbum in motion



calebdwood:

Escher, Verbum in motion

19 Jun 11:54

The Veolia Environnement Wildlife Photographer of the Year Competition

by dmitry

1
Commended. Photographer Richard Peters sat in his car and from a distance watched the fox hunting, just enjoying the performance. He was in Yellowstone National Park, in Wyoming, and there was snow on the ground. The fox was listening for rodents under the snow, then leaping high to pounce down on the unsuspecting prey. It was too far away to photograph, and so when it disappeared and suddenly reappeared, on a snow bank level with the car window, Richard was taken by surprise. “It was already in pounce position, and I barely had time to lift the camera before it leapt up into the air almost clean out of my field of view. I managed to get a sequence of the leap, but I love this quirky image best, which gives a real sense of just how high these wonderful animals can jump”. (Photo by Richard Peters/Veolia Environnement Wildlife Photographer)

2
Runner-up. This young male seemed blissfully unconcerned by the lightning and thunder rolling in across the Kalahari. Hannes Lochner, who was taking night shots in the South African part of the Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park, came across him stretched out beside the track. “He raised his head to stare at me a couple of times”, says Hannes, “but he wasn’t really interested in either me or the dramatic goings-on behind him.” Hannes worked fast, framing the lion against the illuminated night sky at the moment a bolt of lightning flashed to the ground. Just after I took this picture, there were a few more lightning bolts and then everything went still and dark again”. (Photo by Hannes Lochner/Veolia Environnement Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2012)

3
Runner-up. It was a night of snow that gave Owen Hearn the advantage. “After spending countless hours lying in hedges and long grass trying to photograph hares”, says Owen, “I couldn’t believe my luck when I came across this hare just meters away, crouched down in the snow”. Owen also crouched down in the snow and slowly moved forward until he was close enough to fire off four frames. “I am sure it thought it was camouflaged”, he says. Owen’s hare-stalking ground is his grandparents’ Bedfordshire farm. “I like the challenge of trying to get close to hares, as they are so alert and so fast. They have taught me a lot about fieldcraft”. (Photo by Owen Hearn/Veolia Environnement Wildlife Photographer)

4
Runner-up. Ever since Daniel Eggert first fell in love with pasque flowers, among the first flowers of spring, he had wanted to photograph them covered in hoar frost. Now it was pasque-flower time once again. He had already identified a spot of chalky grassland near his home where the plants grew, on the rim of the Nördlinger Ries crater (a meteor crater) in Bavaria, Germany. So as soon as a cold, frosty, sunny dawn was forecast, Daniel headed up the hill. “I found the ideal flowers to photograph, but I didn’t have much time”, he says, “because I knew that as soon as the sun rose, the frost would quickly melt”. He took this image just as the rising sun began to bathe the hill in a wonderful orange light. “I love the colors”, he says, “and the contrast between the warm background and the cold ice”. (Photo by Daniel Eggert/Veolia Environnement Wildlife Photographer)

5
Specially commended. The grey-headed flying fox is the largest bat in Australia – and one of the most vulnerable. Once abundant, there are now only around 300,000 left. The main threats include loss of habitat, extreme-temperature events and human persecution (roosting in numbers, eating cultivated fruit and an undeserved reputation for bearing disease brings it into conflict with people). The bat is now protected throughout its range, but its future remains uncertain. Photographer Ofer Levy spent several days in Parramatta Park in New South Wales photographing the bat’s extraordinary drinking behavior. “At dusk, it swoops low over the water, skimming the surface with its belly and chest”, he says. “Then, as it flies off, it licks the drops off its wet fur”. To photograph this in daylight, Ofer had to be in the right position on a very hot day, with the sun and the wind in the right direction, and hope a bat would be thirsty enough to risk drinking. “This required standing in chest-deep water with the camera and lens on a tripod for three hours a day for about a week in temperatures of more than 40 degrees”. (Photo by Ofer Levy/Veolia Environnement Wildlife Photographer)

6
Specially Commended. As the snow started to melt, a thick fog began to wrap itself around the forest near Sandra Bartocha’s home in Potsdam, Germany. Envisaging the photographic potential, she grabbed her camera and went straight to the forest. The scene was even more beautiful than she’d expected. “The evening sun created a glow around the tall, wet trunks of the Scots pines”, she remembers. “It was breathtaking”. She experimented with several different focal planes and lenses to try to capture the effect. Eventually, she settled on a mirrorless camera with a tilt lens, allowing her to change the layers of sharpness from parallel to horizontal, so the unsharp areas were not in front but behind and below the main focus. She played around with the focus “to keep the warm, broken light at the top of the frame and the trunks below relatively sharp”. (Photo by Sandra Bartocha/Veolia Environnement Wildlife Photographer)

7
Commended. A scattering of gecko droppings on the sunny veranda of Klaus Tamm’s holiday apartment near Etang-Sale-les-Hauts, on the French island of Réunion, had attracted some unusual-looking insects. They were neriid long-legged flies. Klaus settled down with his camera to watch as they interacted. “Every so often, a couple of males would take a break from feeding and engage in a kind of combat dance that involved spinning around each other”, he says. “They would finish by stretching up to their full one and a half centimeters, then pushing with their mouthparts, shoulders and forelegs until one gained height, before flying away or mating with nearby females. I was so impressed by the harmony in the combat dance that I ended up photographing them for several hours”. (Photo by Klaus Tamm/Veolia Environnement Wildlife Photographer)

8
Winner. Some of the tallest buildings in London surround the docklands at the heart of the business and financial district of Canary Wharf. As Eve Tucker walked along the wharf, a bird caught her eye. It was a black-headed gull, of which there are many in the city. But this one was resting on a very remarkable area of water. Eve realized that she was looking at reflections of the straight lines of the nearby office block, distorted into moving swirls. “The effect was so unusual – it gave a beautiful setting for an urban wildlife image”. Like all true photographers, Eve had noticed what others most often fail to see, even when it’s right in front of them. (Photo by Eve Tucker/Veolia Environnement Wildlife Photographer)

9
Commended. In late May, about a quarter of a million snow geese arrive from North America to nest on Wrangel Island, in northeastern Russia. They form the world’s largest breeding colony of snow geese. Photographer Sergey Gorshkov spent two months on the remote island photographing the unfolding dramas. Arctic foxes take advantage of the abundance of eggs, caching surplus eggs for leaner times. But a goose (here the gander) is easily a match for a fox, which must rely on speed and guile to steal eggs. “The battles were fairly equal”, notes Sergey, “and I only saw a fox succeed in grabbing an egg on a couple of occasions, despite many attempts”. Surprisingly, “the geese lacked any sense of community spirit”, he adds, “and never reacted when a fox harassed a neighboring pair nesting close by”. (Photo by Sergey Gorshkov/Veolia Environnement Wildlife Photographer)

10
Winner. Photographer Anna Henly was on a boat in Svalbard – an archipelago midway between mainland Norway and the North Pole – when she saw this polar bear at around four in the morning. It was October, and the bear was walking on broken-up ice floes, seemingly tentatively, not quite sure where to trust its weight. She used her fisheye lens to make the enormous animal appear diminutive and create an impression of “the top predator on top of the planet, with its ice world breaking up”. The symbolism, of course, is that polar bears rely almost entirely on the marine sea ice environment for their survival, and year by year, increasing temperatures are reducing the amount of ice cover and the amount of time available for the bears to hunt marine mammals. Scientists maintain that the melting of the ice will soon become a major problem for humans as well as polar bears, not just because of rising sea levels but also because increasing sea temperatures are affecting the weather, sea currents and fish stocks. (Photo by Anna Henly/Veolia Environnement Wildlife Photographer)


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19 Jun 11:11

Photo



19 Jun 11:10

4gifs: Oscar-worthy. [video]



4gifs:

Oscar-worthy. [video]

19 Jun 11:08

I Am Your Father

by Doug

I Am Your Father

A special gigantic comic for Father’s Day!

Here’s more quality parenting for the occasion.

18 Jun 21:00

Rambow

18 Jun 20:03

Video



18 Jun 20:01

nice, ron



nice, ron

18 Jun 16:37

This is getting out of control. (photos via imgur)





















This is getting out of control. (photos via imgur)

18 Jun 11:32

Fantastic photos of the “astronomical ceiling” at the Temple of...







Fantastic photos of the “astronomical ceiling” at the Temple of Dendera.

18 Jun 11:29

Photo



18 Jun 11:00

weemiji: Prehistoric a**hole cat.

17 Jun 22:10

Bach in Lights: The Well-Tempered Clavier Graphically Visualized Through a Twisting Gallery of Light Bulbs

by Christopher Jobson

This exceedingly clever animation by artist Alan Warburton transforms two compositions from J.S. Bach’s The Well Tempered Clavier (Prelude and Fugue in C Major) into a visual interpretation of music. Warburton used a form of graphical notation manifested as thousands of fluorescent light bulbs mounted around a gallery space and parking garage. As each light pops on in sync with the music, the bulb shape correlates with with length and pitch of each note.

You can learn more about how Warburton and a team of programmers and sound designers created the piece over on Sinfini Music who commissioned the piece. Music performed by Pierre-Laurent Aimard.

bach-1

17 Jun 20:53

Nailed it. (photo via matt89Hy)



Nailed it. (photo via matt89Hy)

17 Jun 12:40

archatlas: Studhorse Olson Kundig Architects

17 Jun 12:14

Photo



17 Jun 11:44

Instants of Icelandic Winter

by Léa

Le photographe français Loïc Le Quéré, dans sa magnifique série « A winter in Iceland », nous offre des images de la terre de glace en plein hiver, moment de l’année où l’île déploie toute l’étendue lunaire de ces paysages enneigés. Les nuits ornées d’aurores boréales, les plaines balayées par les vents, les villes et paysages vierges de toutes activités, tant d’instants uniques que peut offrir un hiver en Islande.

icelandicwinter15 icelandicwinter14 icelandicwinter13 icelandicwinter12 icelandicwinter11 icelandicwinter10 icelandicwinter9 icelandicwinter8 icelandicwinter7 icelandicwinter6 icelandicwinter5 icelandicwinter4 icelandicwinter3 icelandicwinter2 icelandicwinter1
17 Jun 11:11

4gifs: Soon. [video]



4gifs:

Soon. [video]

17 Jun 11:10

Camiones más fáciles de adelantar

by Troy

adelantamiento-camiones

Un curioso proyecto de Samsung para incrementar la seguridad en la carretera. En este caso se trata de facilitar el adelantamiento a camiones.

Un enorme panel en la parte trasera muestra la imagen que capta una cámara situada en el morro del camión, de forma que el conductor del vehículo que va a adelantar tiene una visión perfecta de lo que se encontrará cuando inicie la maniobra.

Interesante para los conductores y para los fabricantes de pantallas y cámaras. Esperemos que a los fabricantes de camiones también les guste la idea.

Visto en bitsandpieces.us

Ver más: camiones, carretera, seguridad
Síguenos: @NoPuedoCreer - @QueLoVendan - @QueLoVendanX


16 Jun 23:49

(photo via haobiantai)



(photo via haobiantai)

16 Jun 23:02

(photo via simplesimulation)



(photo via simplesimulation)

16 Jun 23:01

Halcón Milenario multiusos

by La Gusa

Halcón milenario multiusos

Que sí, que hay navajas multiusos con muchas más opciones que el Halcón Milenario, pero ninguna de ellas llega al hiperespacio con la soltura con la que él llega. Un poco cuando quiere, eso es cierto. Normalmente no se lo tenemos en cuenta porque lo compensa con su adorabilidad.

Las once funciones del Halcón Milenario incluyen destornillador y abridor, que son las únicas que sirven de algo cuando se te cala la nave y te quedas tirado en lo más profundo del espacio. Eso es todo lo que hace falta: destornillador para arreglar y abridor para tomárselo con calma. Y los años luz pasan volando.

Visto en Geekologie

Ver más: Halcón Milenario, multiusos, Star Wars
Síguenos: @NoPuedoCreer - @QueLoVendan - @QueLoVendanX


16 Jun 21:51

obviousplant: Never wash your hands.





obviousplant:

Never wash your hands.

16 Jun 14:47

The Picard Maneuver

by Doug

The Picard Maneuver

Happy Captain Picard Day!!!