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30 Apr 01:10

Link Has a Lot of Accessories

by Amy Ratcliffe

link costume

Link is an adventurer, and adventurers need stuff to get through quests and save the day. He has a sword, shield, scabbard, and slingshot, and Instructables user makendo made them all. Though he made them as costume props, his methods actually make the items durable enough to withstand wear from playing pretend (his sons like to reenact scenes from the Legend of Zelda in the back yard). Here’s how he made Link’s shield:

Link’s round wooden shields are easier to make than his iconic Hylian shield, and they look pretty good. I cut out the circles on the table saw – my favorite table saw operation, it’s almost like magic (see video). Just attach a piece of plywood to the saw at one point, then raise the blade a few mm. Rotate around the point, and repeat until you’ve cut all the way through. I added a handle, a strap out of a bicycle inner tube, added to texture to the front with a router and a few screws or nails for interest, and painted on the emblems for the banded shield on one and for the braced shield on another (by request; there is another basic wooden shield in the game as well). I used stencils and spraypaint; the outside band of each shield used a mix of black/green/blue or black/orange for a metallic effect.

link shield in progress

Read more about making Link’s sword, scabbard, and slingshot at Instructables.

30 Apr 01:07

taikonaut: I FUCKED UP. DON’T LOOK AT ME.

Bunker.jordan

This reminds me of a certain tiny bird which lives in my house...





I'm talking about Peekaboo.



taikonaut:

I FUCKED UP.

DON’T LOOK AT ME.

30 Apr 01:06

imoutosama: yeah-see-im-clever: a republican nightmare



imoutosama:

yeah-see-im-clever:

a republican nightmare

30 Apr 01:01

Photo

Bunker.jordan

Yes please.



30 Apr 00:09

WWII Propaganda Billboards From The United States' Secret Atomic City

by Lauren Davis
Bunker.jordan

Yeah... Oak Ridge is weird. I remember seeing a lot of cast-off super-fancy equipment from Oak Ridge National Laboratory at friend's house when I visited.

WWII Propaganda Billboards From The United States' Secret Atomic City

During the 1940s, the denizens of Oak Ridge, Tennessee, worked for the Manhattan Project, developing atomic weapons in their government-owned city. They went about their daily lives in the shadows of billboards exhorting them not only to support the war effort, but also to keep quiet about their jobs.

Read more...








30 Apr 00:07

Photo

Bunker.jordan

#sadbuttrue



30 Apr 00:06

torontocomics: TCAF in Tokyo: A travelogue by Kagan McLeod! In...

















torontocomics:

TCAF in Tokyo: A travelogue by Kagan McLeod!

In Fall 2013, TCAF took its second trip to Tokyo to exhibit and promote Canadian comics authors and publishers! Joining us on this trip was Kagan McLeod, renowned illustrator and creator of INFINITE KUNG-FU. Kagan has created a carnet, a short travelogue detailing his trip to Tokyo and all it entailed! Join us every day until TCAF to see more from Kagan’s sketches and experiences! 

Are you a published artist who wants to come to Tokyo with TCAF this autumn? Join us at the information session, Sunday, May 11th, at 12pm, at The Marriott Bloor Yorkville in the “Marriot 40” room!

29 Apr 23:58

Photo



29 Apr 23:17

SCiO is made to analyze ... everything

by Ben Coxworth
Bunker.jordan

Sounds really cool! I am skeptical.

The SCiO Pocket Molecular Sensor

Wondering how nutritious that food is, if that plant needs water, or just what that misplaced pill is? Well, the makers of SCiO claim that their device is able to tell you all of those things, plus a lot more. To use it, you just scan the item in question for one or two seconds, then check the readout on a Bluetooth 4.0-linked smartphone. .. Continue Reading SCiO is made to analyze ... everything

Section: Electronics

Tags: Food technology, Kickstarter, Medication, Plants, Spectroscopy

Related Articles:
29 Apr 23:08

zohbugg: dr-ift: bl-ossomed: niick4: this is the coolest...



zohbugg:

dr-ift:

bl-ossomed:

niick4:

this is the coolest thing ive seen on this website

holy

Wait what how

what the fuck you mean how? a goddamn computer, that’s how

fuckin think this is some real bullshit like you’re confused as to how someone can hold water and a tiny ass ship are u fuckin’ kidding me

"how"

fuck u

a random computer somewhere just pooped this out on a whim, true story

oh wait no an artist or team of artists did it and part of the wow factor here is the accurate positional tracking with the live action hands which may have been done with a sheet with an asymmetrical symbol printed on it for a computer program to calculate relative position and orientation from or it may have been done another way.  most people don’t even know how the possibility i just described works or even that it exists (nor do they have any need to) and I bet this dude was asking for just such an explanation but no here’s your dumb ass leapin in waving your big stupid dick around being a condescending schmuck acting like “COMPUTERS DID IT” is descriptive in any way and not so broad as to be effectively meaningless.

why don’t you slam dunk your fucking computer into a trash can and dive in after it and pull the lid closed and sit in the darkness and sit quietly and think about the many ways in which computers allow artists, engineers, and other talented professionals to perform incredible feats of creation that would be unthinkable as recently as ten to fifteen years ago

29 Apr 22:48

Obama Exchanges Bows With A Robot, and a Right-Wing Freak Out Ensues

by Mark Strauss

Conservative pundits have a bit of an obsession with President Obama's purported habit of bowing when meeting foreign dignitaries. But, that outrage reached a new peak when our Commander-in-Chief publicly surrendered to our robot overlords.

Read more...








29 Apr 22:33

cybernetic-psychosis: N0DE W0RLD - TC4 phantomcycles by...

29 Apr 22:33

Photo



29 Apr 22:31

Lab Mice Become Stressed And Timid Around Men — But Not Women

by George Dvorsky

Lab Mice Become Stressed And Timid Around Men — But Not Women

In what is being considered a serious problem for biomedical research, scientists from McGill University have discovered that rodents become stressed and more timid when they can smell a male researcher, while the presence of a woman has no effect on them.

Read more...








29 Apr 22:31

Brain-inspired Microchips Simulate One Million Neurons In Real Time

by George Dvorsky

Brain-inspired Microchips Simulate One Million Neurons In Real Time

By modeling a circuit board on the human brain, Stanford bioengineers have developed microchips that are 9,000 times faster than a typical PC. Called Neurogrid, these energy-efficient circuits could eventually power autonomous robots and advanced prosthetic limbs.

Read more...








29 Apr 22:29

New in the Colossal Shop: Sugar Skull Spoons

by Christopher Jobson

New in the Colossal Shop: Sugar Skull Spoons spoons skulls kitchen home anatomy

Dying for a cup of coffee? Created by design shop Hundred Million, these ghastly sugar skull spoons are equal parts fun and functional. Now available in the Colossal Shop.

29 Apr 22:27

Build a Ghostbusters Proton Pack for a Costume or Ghost Emergencies

by Amy Ratcliffe

ghostbusters proton pack

I might not be afraid of ghosts (okay, I actually am), but I am a little intimidated by the thought of building a proton pack. RPF user chefbzd built two for his sons though, and he took a smart approach. He started by printing an image of the basic housing and used it as a pattern. He then built up the pack from: “styrofoam, craft foam, and random objects.”

The way the packs come together is impressive, and you can see it happen in photos over at The RPF. Other materials used in construction include:

Red gels for the cyclotron eyes and added one more coat of paint. Lights will be installed later. I also cut the motherboards, which will be attached to custom PVC A.L.I.C.E. frames for support.

ghostbusters proton pack in progress

20140330_160618_zpss6gwehkl

Read more at The RPF.

29 Apr 20:30

Read The Dirty And Scientific Limericks That Isaac Asimov Wrote

by Lauren Davis

Read The Dirty And Scientific Limericks That Isaac Asimov Wrote

When he wasn't writing science fiction, writer Isaac Asimov was composing his Lecherous Limericks, dirty little ditties he wrote for his own amusement. So what does Asimov's bawdy poetry sound like?

Read more...








29 Apr 20:30

Warner Bros. Has Nine DC Movies Planned Including Sandman and Fables

by Rob Bricken

Warner Bros. Has Nine DC Movies Planned Including Sandman and Fables

Looks like Warner Bros. is getting its act together. The Wall Street Journal reports WB has nine DC comics movies planned, including the already announced Batman Vs. Superman and Justice League films, and now confirmed movie adaptations o Sandman and Fables.

Read more...








29 Apr 20:27

SHINE – an An After-School Program that Combines Math and Dance #makereducation

by Kelly

Screen Shot 2014 04 22 at 5 26 07 PM

SHINE is an 8-week program started by MIT Graduate Kirin Sinha that provides mentoring in math from MIT students as well as dance training! Via The Boston Globe

About Shine:

SHINE is an 8-week program that combines formal dance classes with a tailored math curriculum with the overarching goal of establishing a lifelong love of mathematics and creative expression in its students. SHINE will run from March 5th to May 7th on Wednesday afternoons from 3:30pm – 5:30 pm and is held on MIT’s beautiful campus at the McCormick Hall, 320 Memorial Drive, Cambridge, MA 02139.

The program is taught by trained dance instructors and math mentors from MIT. Following a rigorous curriculum, SHINE incorporates a method of learning called ‘kinesthetic learning’ which allows students to have fun while they progress to different levels of mathematics, eventually covering all the 6th and 7th Grade Math Standards. The dance portion of classes will focus on both choreography and technique of many different dance styles.

Rathe shineMIT met07

Kirin Sinha, program founder and senior at MIT who’s majoring in theoretical math and computer science, tells the Boston Globe about why she started SHINE:

Sinha began taking ballet, tap, and jazz when she was 3 years old because, she says, she was kind of a klutzy kid. Eventually, she added classical Indian dance to her repertoire, and she now dances professionally. She has been on math teams and loves the creativity that math requires, but she thinks it was dance that gave her the self-confidence, discipline, and gumption that’s helped her succeed in very different arenas.

“You’re taught to work really hard and work through the sheer sweat and grit,” Sinha said. “That stuck with me through math.”

She began to wonder whether dance provided a way to build certain skills that were totally neglected in a traditional math class. She noticed that when she tutored students, there was a clear gender difference: Boys say they don’t understand fractions. Girls say they can’t.

A year and a half ago, Sinha launched SHINE, an unusual after school program for middle school girls that combines the two disciplines. Through hours of tutoring on hip-hop moves and fractions, the program seeks to help girls with math skills and their mindset. Sinha hopes that even just small changes to girls’ self confidence or comfort with math could yield big gains.

On a recent afternoon, the 15 girls in the session spent time learning a complicated hip-hop routine while their instructors walked them through the hops and twirls and shoulder-shimmying steps. They broke it down and practiced the sequence, first slowly and then sped-up. The girls were chatty and inquisitive, asking questions about how their hands should be placed during one move or how to get back into place quickly after the end of one sequence. Then, they went up to a sunlit room at the top of an MIT dormitory and began drawing math problems on the wall with markers and working through packets of word problems.

Read more.


Adafruit_Learning_SystemEach Tuesday is EducationTuesday here at Adafruit! Be sure to check out our posts about educators and all things STEM. Adafruit supports our educators and loves to spread the good word about educational STEM innovations!

29 Apr 20:26

“Retinal Pigment Epithelium…” A study of the effects of high voltage and household cleaning products on instant pull apart color film

by adafruit

“Retinal Pigment Epithelium…” A study of the effects of high voltage and household cleaning products on instant pull apart color film By Phillip Stearns -

Materials: Fujifilm FP100-45C Instant Color Film, various household cleaning products (bleach, vinegar, baking soda, hydrogen peroxide, salt, rubbing alcohol), 15,000 volt neon tube ballast.

Read more.

29 Apr 20:24

Andy Warhol’s Amiga computer art found 30 years later #arttuesday

by Kelly

2 Andy Warhol Campbells 1985 AWF verge super wide

Turns out pop artist Andy Warhol took a hand at digital art later in his career. Check out these images he made on his Commodore Amiga home computer back in the 1980s. via The Verge

The Andy Warhol Museum has recovered a set of images, doodles, and photos created by the seminal pop artist on a Commodore Amiga home computer. The artworks, made by Warhol as part of a collaboration with Commodore Amiga, had been stranded on Amiga floppy disks for almost twenty years after the artist saved them in the mid-1980s. They were only discovered and rescued from their obsolete format thanks to the chance viewing of a YouTube clip…

The video of Warhol’s forays into Amiga art piqued the interest of new media artist Cory Arcangel. In 2011, Arcangel contacted Tina Kukielski, a curator at the Carnegie Museum of Art. Together, they asked Matt Wrbican, the Warhol Museum’s chief archivist, if they could search for files on the artist’s disks. They were also connected to the Carnegie Mellon University Computer Club, a group, as the Warhol Museum notes, known for its collection of “obsolete computer hardware” and its “prize-winning retro-computing software development.”

The images they found include doodles, photographs, and experiments with Warhol’s existing artworks. One image is a crude recreation of his world-famous Campbell’s soup can, its proportions skewed and its colors drawn in scratchy, MS Paint-esque lines. Another piece is a three-eyed doodle on a pre-rendered version of Botticelli’s The Birth of Venus.

1 Andy Warhol Andy2 1985 AWF verge super wide

Read more.

29 Apr 20:20

Cloaked DNA devices evade the body's immune system

by Nick Lavars

The team constructed a lipid-coated nanodevice that survived the mouse immune system due t...

Researchers from Harvard University's Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering have developed a cloaked DNA nanodevice capable of evading the body's immune defenses. The design was inspired by real world viruses and could be used to diagnose cancer and better target treatments to specific areas of tissue. .. Continue Reading Cloaked DNA devices evade the body's immune system

Section: Science

Tags: DNA, Nanomedicine, Nanoscale, Nanotechnology, The Immune System, Wyss Institute

Related Articles:
29 Apr 20:18

1911: Cyril’s aero sled

by Amanda

“A snow sleigh or ice sled powered by an engine designed by Henri Coandă. The sleigh was owned by Grand Duke Cyril of Russia. Its powerplant was a piston engine which drove a ducted fan or “suction turbine”.”

Wikipedia

Cyrils Auto Sled 1

29 Apr 20:17

The Rabbit Proto 3D Prints Circuits

by Site Admin

Rabbit Proto has developed technology capable of 3D printing electrical traces - and it might be added to your existing 3D printer. 

The startup company has created a syringe-based extruder that can be added to any RepRap 3D printer capable of accepting a second extruder. The Rabbit Proto syringe extruder can be loaded with any squirtable substance, but they’re focusing on conductive ink. 

This means that a 3D print can include electrical conductive traces; you can now print simple electrical devices. In this video you’ll see them design and print  a working game controller using the new approach. 

While it’s not yet available, you can pre-order a couple of combinations: 

  • Pure Rabbit: An add-on syringe extruder and some conductive ink (USD$350)
  • Super Rabbit: A complete dual extruder containing both a syringe and plastic extruder for replacement of your existing extruder
  • Rabbit 3D Printer: A fully-assembled RepRap 3D printer including the Rabbit Proto syringe extruder. 

So far the device supports only RepRap machines, but they’ve provided a developer kit on GitHub for other manufacturers (or enthusiasts) to use to involve further machines. 

The capability is crude, to be sure, but it’s definitely a first. We can now 3D print electronic objects. 

And it’s only the beginning. 

Via Rabbit Proto

29 Apr 20:09

#1024; In which a Pen is lost

by David Malki

It was a nice pen, though. White barrel. Ballpoint. Blue ink. Said 'Marriott Amsterdam' on the side in red printing. Probably a PaperMate.

29 Apr 03:48

"hiring entry level positions"

sabotabby:

stupendous-operatic-spectacle:

thefemcritique:

taggediconic:

gypped:

requirements: 10 years experience in space station repair, masters degree in ancient serbian civilizations, unmatched knowledge of silkworm breeding, full understanding of teleportation mechanics and physics

pay: $9.50/hour

Pretty much

And no benefits, part time only

This post is out of date. It’s now an unpaid internship.

29 Apr 03:48

earthlynation: Bush Snake by Cameron Azad on Flickr.

29 Apr 03:46

Japan Is Making An Official Evangelions/Transformers Crossover

by Rob Bricken

Japan Is Making An Official Evangelions/Transformers Crossover

Oh my god. Toymaker Takara Tomy has announced that they're doing... something that involves the Transformers invading the world of Evangelion, as evidenced by this phenomenal picture of Optimus Prime decked out like Shinji's Unit-01.

Read more...








29 Apr 03:45

sixpenceee: This is glorious and even thought it doesn’t fit in...







sixpenceee:

This is glorious and even thought it doesn’t fit in the range of all the paranormal, creepy and science I usually post, I MUST share

It works like this: You tell Kitestring that you’re in a dangerous place or situation, and give it a time frame of when to check in on you. If you don’t reply back when it checks your status, it’ll alert your emergency contacts with a custom message you set up.

It doesn’t require you to touch anything (like bSafe) or shake your phone (like Nirbhaya) to send the distress signal. Kitestring is smarter, because it doesn’t need an action to alert people, it needs inaction.

MORE INFORMATION