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13 Jun 15:53

Mechanical Principles - a film of mechanical movements in action

by noreply@blogger.com (Dug North)

Check out this fascinating 10 minute segment of a longer piece by Ralph Steiner featuring classic mechanical movements. Many of these mechanisms can be found in the book 507 Mechanical Movements as well as the larger, but similar 1800 Mechanical Movements, Devices and Appliances.

Some interesting movements shown in the film include:
 • Counter mechanism
 • Gears engage on diagonals
 • Square gears
 • Variable speed transfer
 • Rotary to linear action with a 4 tooth cog

Here is a page on Amazon listing lots of great books on mechanical movements. Also known as "the list of awesome".



29 Apr 22:45

mumbling-mice: metallikato: Fun fact: whenever marble displays...



mumbling-mice:

metallikato:

Fun fact: whenever marble displays yellow/brown-colored stains like those above, it’s the result of the marble absorbing oils. 

From human hands.

Meaning that over the centuries, people have been grabbing this statue’s boobs. 

Oh.

29 Apr 22:45

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29 Apr 02:57

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29 Apr 00:12

ingthing: beamkatanachronicles: thepurpleeyedone: beamkatanach...

Bunker.jordan

This is fantastic... yes, I would read more of this



ingthing:

beamkatanachronicles:

thepurpleeyedone:

beamkatanachronicles:

thepurpleeyedone:

beamkatanachronicles:

appleseeddrama:

THEY HAVE THE ACE ATTORNEY OFFICIAL MANGA IN MY LAW LIBRARY I AM CRYING.

image

image

Your honor, something is amiss here!

As you are probably aware, library materials are labeled with barcodes as well as a number to determine their location on the shelf, as per the Dewey Decimal System. The books just to the left of the manga are labeled, as are the DVDs just in view on the lower shelf. Look even further behind these shelves and you’ll see that even those books are labeled! 

Ladies and gentlemen of the courtroom, I invite you to take a closer look at the volumes that are, allegedly, part of this law library! Something is missing from the spines, isn’t there?

image

Where are the bar codes?!

This is a blatant contradiction! The OP is lying— these volumes cannot, therefore, be a part of this library at all! I propose that they simply brought these materials in for the sake of the joke!! 

Only focusing on one aspect and not the whole of the issue, are we, Mr. Wright? Typical.

Your honor, if you bring your attention to the books just left of the manga, you’ll notice there’s a book (the second to the left) that also does not have a bar code.

If you examine the picture even closer—particularly the DVDs below—you’ll see that they bear bar codes, but not on the spines. No, they have them on the back and/or front of the DVDs. Of course, this method of labeling and organizing isn’t limited to products of the film industry alone.

Therefore, I’d like to propose that it is entirely possible that the manga books do, in fact, belong to the library!

image

Wh-WHAAAAT?! You’re kidding!! 

image
(Shoot, he’s got me there… Better think of something fast! Something about the books that sets them apart from—

image
…! I’ve got it!)

While that may be true, you’ve also overlooked one critical error: the titles of the books! Whether or not your hypothesis regarding the labeling system is correct, these titles aren’t alphabetized correctly! What kind of self-respecting librarian would misplace such vital books? 

Well, Edgeworth?

While it pains me to have to point out something so obvious, I suppose I’ll make an exception for you, Wright.

Clearly, one look at the titles of the books next to the manga is a tell-all of this certain library’s less-than-stellar organization skills. None of the books are in alphabetical order, I’m afraid.

They could very well be alphabetized by author and not title, but it’s a little difficult to be able to decipher that from this single picture, wouldn’t you say?

Furthermore, the manga books themselves are in numerical order, suggesting some kind of system is in place, albeit not a very good one, if the alphabetizing is off.

At the end of the day, it seems like neither of us can draw a clear conclusion from this evidence alone. Your honor, I strongly suggest a recess in which we could investigate the library itself further.

I see the issue here very clearly.

image
Due to the uncertain nature of this case, we’ll have to postpone this decision until more decisive evidence can be obtained. The court will now take a 15-minute recess.

image

(W-wait, but I’m not—)

image

WAIT!!!

I’ve got some decisive evidence for you, pal!

We investigated further into the photo. Zooming in, you can see a label on the DVD case to the bottom left.

Photo Close-up added to the court record!

As you can see, pal, you can vaguely see the words “Of Toledo Law Library” on the label!

And, considering possibilities of the rest of that label, “University of Toledo" was the first to come to my mind!

A quick search on the University of Toledo’s Online Law Library Database revealed that there ARE the comics pictured in it!

Miles Edgeworth Ace Attorney Investigations volumes 1-4 and Phoenix Wright Ace Attorney volumes 1-5!

And there’s more! 

The section these comics are filed under is the “Law in Popular Culture" Section, which matches up with the stickers on the rest of the books on that shelf: "Lowering the Bar: Lawyer Jokes & Legal Culture”, “Prime Time Law”, “Lawyers in Your Living Room!" and "Reel Justice: The Courtroom Goes to the Movies”!

Not only is it in the right section, it’s also a documented part of the Law Library’s database!

How’s that for decisive evidence?

nice

29 Apr 00:01

sofapizza: retrofuturs: 3D Printing what a time to be alive.

Bunker.jordan

i want this



sofapizza:

retrofuturs:

3D Printing

what a time to be alive.

28 Apr 23:57

hullodearie: Fake Pockets: A How To

Bunker.jordan

Seriously. Why?



















hullodearie:

Fake Pockets: A How To

28 Apr 23:35

Entertaining music These 15th-century images are from four...









Entertaining music

These 15th-century images are from four different musical books used in a church setting. The individuals who decorated these pages - the top three were likely done by the same person - obviously had a blast doing so. They show us someone taking a bite from his own nose; a red-lipped man singing with his mouth wide open; a person licking the staffs; and someone eating the last note of the tune. The heads are entertaining as they are, but their interaction with the musical setting adds to the amusement. Particularly entertaining is the person eating the last note on the page: with his perfect teeth he is about to make the song incomplete. Will he beat the book’s reader to the punch?

Pics: Aix-en-Provence, Bibliothèque municipale, MSS 1342, 1386, 1540 and 1549.

28 Apr 22:50

heartisbreaking: Rainy streets by Sandro Bisaro on Flickr.

28 Apr 22:49

3D-printed living tumors make a better model for cancer research

by Heidi Hoopes

3D printing allows researchers to create models of tumor tissue that more accurately repli...

Medical research is only as good as the model, whether you’re using one animal to stand in for another, or creating in vitro replicas of tissue and organs. A research lab at Drexel University specializing in biofabrication recently used 3D printing to create models of tumor tissue that more closely replicate real tumors than traditional 2D tissue culture. Appropriating tools in this manner could lead to a better understanding of how tumors grow, and importantly, how they die. .. Continue Reading 3D-printed living tumors make a better model for cancer research

Section: Medical

Tags: 3D Printing, Cancer, Drexel University, Tumor

Related Articles:
28 Apr 22:28

pinkrocksugar: contingent-dreams: lunar-raspberry: "And what...

Bunker.jordan

"Scythes are so old fashioned. Here, use this snake-stick!"



pinkrocksugar:

contingent-dreams:

lunar-raspberry:

"And what do we say to death?"

"Not today."

"The fuck out my face"

"Sean Bean is over there"

28 Apr 22:19

fmtownsmarty: http://i.imgur.com/SJFBsbG.gif

28 Apr 22:18

Photo





28 Apr 22:18

kilikilibobili: leupagus: Role model #every woman should have...

28 Apr 22:18

via Mike Finazzo

Bunker.jordan

#sadbuttrue

28 Apr 22:16

Photo


valeriodospina.com


valeriodospina.com


valeriodospina.com


valeriodospina.com


valeriodospina.com

28 Apr 22:15

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28 Apr 22:12

If Batman Went Steampunk, He’d Wear This Helmet

by Amy Ratcliffe

steampunk batman mask

It seems like everyone is going steampunk these days. Batman isn’t exactly the kind of guy who follows trends, but if Alfred talked him into it, he’d try and he’d probably go for a handmade mask like this one by Skinz-N-Hydez. You could build this mask and an entire outfit to go with it for a convention or a renaissance faire. Here’s what it was made from:

Hand cut and moulded. Hand painted and aged, riveted together using brass rivets to give it a steampunk vibe.

Color: dark brown and black
Material: 7-8oz Eco friendly veg tanned cowhide leather
Hardware: brass rivets and buckle

via Nerdcore

28 Apr 22:12

NASA Software Engineer Designs Smartphone Robot That Chases Toys Like A Housecat

by Rebecca Houlihan

NASA software engineer, Al Bencomo, designed and autonomous tracker robot with the help of an android. via Sean Michael Ragan of Makezine

NASA software engineer Al Bencomo of San Jose produced this very impressive example of what can be done by combining an obsolete or second-hand smartphone with open source software and auxiliary hardware. Not only does his robot automatically track and chase a rolling green ball, it avoids obstacles along the way.

Bencomo’s bot consists of the following major components:

Android Nexus S smartphone (from eBay)
IOIO-OTG board
Arduino protoshield
1/18 RC Mastadon truck with brushless motor
USB Micro Bluetooth adapter
25C 2S 1500mAh 7.4V LiPO battery
IR sensors (4)
Lynx B Pan and Tilt Kit with 2 Hitec 422 servos
Xbee shield for Arduino (optional)
RN42-XV Bluetooth module to communicate with laptop (optional)
He puts the total cost of the build at less than $400 including the (used) phone. The OpenCV (Open source Computer Vision) library does the heavy lifting on the software side. Extensive, detailed technical info about this approach to ABR (Android Based Robotics) is available here.

Read more

28 Apr 22:10

"Felting printer" creates soft 3D-printed teddy bears

by Ben Coxworth

One of the finished felt teddy bears, alongside its digital model

Ask someone to think of a 3D-printed object, and chances are they'll picture something hard ... or perhaps rubbery. Thanks to new technology developed by Carnegie Mellon University and Disney Research Pittsburgh, however, it's now possible to make soft and fuzzy 3D-printed items, using yarn instead of plastic or resin. Among the first items to be created were little felt teddy bears. .. Continue Reading "Felting printer" creates soft 3D-printed teddy bears

Section: Electronics

Tags: 3D Printing, Carnegie Mellon, Disney Research

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28 Apr 20:27

New Evidence Reveals What a "Typical" Solar System Looks Like

by George Dvorsky

New Evidence Reveals What a "Typical" Solar System Looks Like

Prior to the discovery of exoplanets, astronomers assumed that our solar system's configuration was typical. But now, some 1,715 exoplanets later, we know that we're far from ordinary. So what passes for "normal" in the annals of solar systems? Here's what we know now.

Read more...








28 Apr 20:14

The ZEGO 3D Printer - And More

by Site Admin
ZEGO overview.jpeg

Another 3D printer launched its fundraising campaign: the ZEGO. It’s a 3D printer - and a whole lot more. 

From the first glance you’d think the ZEGO is a 3D printer based on the Delta Robot approach. And it is. But here’s the interesting thing: it’s also a multi-functional robot. 

zego magnets.jpeg

The PLA-capable 3D printing extruder is but one of no less than five different attachments that can operate within the ZEGO. The attachments are coupled with magnets, making tool switching incredibly easy. In addition to the 3D printing head, the ZEGO currently offers: 

  • A pen plotting head
  • A wood burner
  • An engraver / mill head
  • A pick & place tool

If you’re reading between the lines, the combination of engraver and pick & place tools means you can essentially create your own printed circuit boards with the ZEGO. There's not many 3D printers that can do that!

It’s a very powerful device that you can pre-order on Indiegogo. The pricing is variable, but for USD$549-749 you can get a kit with two attachments. If you’re feeling wealthy, you might go for their USD$2499 fully assembled machine that includes all five heads. 

Via Indiegogo

28 Apr 16:41

Nintendo's Gameboy celebrates its 25th birthday

by Jason Falconer

The Nintendo Game Boy celebrates its 25th anniversary

This week marked the 25th anniversary of what is arguably the most important handheld game console ever made: the Nintendo Game Boy. The fondly remembered grey brick redefined when and where we could enjoy video games, and was the birthplace of many gaming franchises which are still going strong to this day. Now seems like the perfect time to review its storied history, including its predecessors, competition, and some of its stand-out software titles... Continue Reading Nintendo's Gameboy celebrates its 25th birthday

Section: Games

Tags: Anniversary, Handheld, Nintendo, Video Games

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28 Apr 16:09

c. 1968/1969: Behind the scenes of “2001: A Space Odyssey”

by Jacqui

Behind the scenes of "2001: A Space Odyssey" Behind the scenes of "2001: A Space Odyssey" Behind the scenes of "2001: A Space Odyssey" Behind the scenes of "2001: A Space Odyssey" Behind the scenes of "2001: A Space Odyssey" Behind the scenes of "2001: A Space Odyssey" Behind the scenes of "2001: A Space Odyssey" Behind the scenes of "2001: A Space Odyssey" Behind the scenes of "2001: A Space Odyssey" Behind the scenes of "2001: A Space Odyssey" Behind the scenes of "2001: A Space Odyssey" Behind the scenes of "2001: A Space Odyssey" Behind the scenes of "2001: A Space Odyssey" Behind the scenes of "2001: A Space Odyssey" Behind the scenes of "2001: A Space Odyssey" Behind the scenes of "2001: A Space Odyssey" Behind the scenes of "2001: A Space Odyssey" Behind the scenes of "2001: A Space Odyssey" Behind the scenes of "2001: A Space Odyssey" Behind the scenes of "2001: A Space Odyssey" Behind the scenes of "2001: A Space Odyssey"

28 Apr 15:53

Straw based 3D printer filament will cost half the price of PLA

PLA (polylactic acid) is kinder to the environment than other plastics as it is derived from corn stalks and not fossil fuels. Now a Chinese company has invented another eco-friendly material - straw based plasti

This article Straw based 3D printer filament will cost half the price of PLA is first published at 3ders.org.

28 Apr 15:33

Crowdfunding push to bring 36-year old spacecraft out of retirement

by David Szondy

Artist's impression of ISEE-3 on a lunar flyby (Image: NASA)

Putting classic cars on the road or classic boats on the water isn’t that odd, but what about putting a classic spacecraft back into service? The ISEE-3 Reboot Project is a crowdfunding effort aimed at reactivating a comet-chasing space probe launched in the 1970s. Using a radio telescope and a software emulator of the original control equipment to contact and reactivate the hibernating unmanned probe, the hope is to use the International Sun/Earth Explorer 3 (ISEE-3) to conduct a privately funded mission to fly by a comet. .. Continue Reading Crowdfunding push to bring 36-year old spacecraft out of retirement

Section: Space

Tags: Crowdfunding, ISEE-3, NASA, Spacecraft, Unmanned

Related Articles:
28 Apr 15:33

Aviator’s villa celebrates air space

by Phyllis Richardson
Bunker.jordan

Preeeetty

Villa for an Aviator, by Urban Office Architecture, is a home designed to simulate life in...

It may not look like an aircraft, but this house designed for an airplane pilot was conceived as a collection of aeronautical parts and is intended to simulate life in the clouds. Called "a villa for an aviator," the house in New York state was designed as a deconstructed airplane to give the owner the feel of living in spaces that are surrounded by open sky. .. Continue Reading Aviator’s villa celebrates air space

Section: Architecture

Tags: Architects, House

Related Articles:
28 Apr 05:41

1686: King James II armour

by Amanda
Bunker.jordan

Absolutely gorgeous

King James II Armour 1 King James II Armour 2
The armour is known from the record of its price, £100, to have been made by Richard Holden and delivered on 14 December 1686. It is the only finely decorated royal armour ever known to have been made by a member of the London Armourers Company, and the last.

It is an harquebusier’s armour comprising a pot, breastplate, backplate and long elbow gauntlet, essentially the same as the ordinary munition armours made for the contemporary cavalry, but of rather finer quality. Like the ordinary munition armours the cuirass bears the proof marks that attest that it is bullet proof. The whole armour is decorated with punched, engraved and originally gilt bands of trophies. The faceguard is fretted and decorated with the initials IR for Iacobus Rex and with the Royal Arms and their supporters, the lion and the unicorn. The central band on the breastplate has at the top IR separated by a crown and surmounted by a figure 2, with crossed sceptres below.

28 Apr 05:41

STAFFORD SALE HIGHLIGHTS

by The Vintagent
The twice-annual Bonhams sale at the enormous Stafford motorcycle show is always a bellweather auction, big enough, and with enough variety of machinery, to give a true indication of how the collector's motorcycle market is behaving.  Coming 5 months after the world's largest vintage bike sale by Bonhams and MidAmerica at Las Vegas, Stafford always brings out some of the best machines in the world, and thus sees some of the highest prices paid for motorcycles, anywhere. This year's roster of top Stafford sales is an interesting list, with a few unexpected names popping over the $100k mark, but I'll take the big fish in order.
One for the Vintagent's 'Top 20' auction sales, displacing...yet another SS100 for the #6 spot of Most Expensive Motorcycles in the World...
The top of the list is, as usual, a Brough Superior SS100, in this case a 1939 MX-engined model, which normally don't top price lists, being considered less collectible than the JAP-engined SS100s of the '20s and early '30s, when they could genuinely lay claim to being the fastest motorcycles in the world.  When George Brough grew fed up with his racing JAP engine's lack of development for a road-worthy motorcycle by 1934, he began using the more civilized 990cc engines from AMC, in both sidevalve (SS80) and OHV configurations (SS100).  This particular machine broke the boundaries for an MX100, being formerly the personal property of George Brough himself...and if you're going to spend a wad on a Brough Superior, you might as well buy George's!  It sold for £253,500  ($426,100).  That places it on the #6 spot of my 'Top 20' most expensive motorcycles in the world...at auction anyway.  After speaking with the new owner, I was assured he was prepared to pay 'much more' for a bike George was documented as having ridden and competed in the Edinburgh Trial upon.  So there's room for more growth at the top, but it will take more than one arch-enthusiast to get there...
Surprise of the day; a low mileage MV Agusta 750S 
Second billing goes, surprisingly, to a 1972 MV Agusta 750S, in lovely low-mileage condition (6500 miles on the clock).  Selling for a whopping £85,500 ($143,713), which is about double what I considered the going rate, the MV 750s have always seemed more collectible than rideable, as they're plenty common in people's living rooms, but not so much on the road... that's my personal 30-year survey.  They're undeniably gorgeous, and I've ridden a couple...but I think a Ducati 900SS is a better bike - faster and more nimble.  Ducati didn't win 63 World Championships with exotic 4-cylinder DOHC racers, though...so the MV wins as the stuff of dreams.
Original-paint 1914 Henderson...and my, how 100 years gives a beating to a paint job
Next up is a genuine rarity; an original paint 1914 Henderson 4-cylinder, which sold for £79,900 ($134,300).  The early 'long frame' Henderson is one of the most coveted of American motorcycles, considered a two-wheeled Deusenberg, being durable, fast, and very beautiful.  This particular machine was originally imported to Oslo, Norway, and clearly stored well.  This price reflects what it would likely fetch in the USA.
Very nice Series C Vincent Black Shadow
This 1953 Vincent Series C Black Shadow sold for £70,940 ($119,240), which is pretty much the global price for an immaculate 'C' Shadow.  This machine was originally sold to the Indian Sales Corp in San Francisco, and I wish I'd found it there!
The ultra-rare Bimota HB-1, one of 9 kits sold
The first of my 'also rans' in the 'I need to spend more than $100grand or I can't go home' category is a surprise: the first Honda-Bimota teamup, the HB-1 of 1975, Bimota's very first model, and one of only ten built between the first prototype Honda-based Bimota racer, and this machine in 1975.  Nine were sold as kits only, including this one, as Bimota weren't interested in selling complete road machines at the time (and sadly, are no longer doing thus today).  This HB-1 has an engine pumped up to 970cc, and I'm sure it still flies, although I doubt it will see much café racer time on the streets, having just been purchased for £57,500 ($96,650).
An all original 1939 Brough Superior SS80 with petrol tube sidecar
The last of the big sellers was another Brough Superior, this time a late SS80 with AMC engine and a Brough petrol-tube sidecar, as originally specified.  It's believed this machine is all original, and is in lovely shape.  It sold for £55,200 ($92,783).
If you needed an Ugly, er, Egli-Vincent, this one with new crankcases could have been yours for a bid over $33,827...
Lest you think it was all crazy money at Stafford, a perusal of the catalog shows the vast majority of machines sold were affordable, and some were downright cheap.  Just don't expect to find a big British twin for easy money nowadays - not even a Hesketh...

By the way, the 1929 Ex-Works TT Scott I featured a few weeks ago sold for £31,050 ($52,300).

28 Apr 05:41

Washington Monument: Everybody Knows

by Lyle Zapato

Owl perched atop Washington Monument

The above ominous illustration is a detail from a 1921 ad in the Washington Times for Brodt's Inc., a Washington D.C. hat seller:

Behatted men look at owl perched atop Washington Monument

The cryptosymbolic imagery of this ad is blatant to the knowledgeable paranoid: The owl is, of course, a favorite symbol of the NWO, especially the Bohemian Grove Cabal branch that manages D.C. It's perched atop the Washington Monument, which is pointed with an aluminum pyramidion that serves as a psychotronic prism for the distribution of the NWO's mind-control signals throughout the Capital (more, albeit credulous, details about the pyramidion's construction can be found here).

Naturally to the orthonoiac reader, being an ad for hats, the super-deformed Washingtonians all have their heads covered -- but really their juxtaposition to the monument/mind-control-tower informed the NWO elite controlling the psychotronic machines of state that Brodt's was the place to get their required hat-camouflaged aluminum head-shielding to avoid succumbing to their own mind-control. Presumably closer reading of the ad copy will reveal the secret watchword or hand-sign used to notify Brodt's' sales staff that one was interested in the "special hats".

Even the "everybody knows" slogan, ostensibly a harmless reference to Brodt's renowned hattery, is really a statement of the psychotronocracy's goal of ubiquitous orthonoia: "everybody knows what we make them know".

Interestingly, the Brodt's ad was repurposed later that year to promote an appearance by baseball legend "Babe" Ruth at their new 14th St. location (which caused a "near-riot") -- possibly the earliest recorded link between Major League Baseball and the mind-control satellites*.

* Yes, there were satellites in the 1920s. The Shadow Space Program was well established long before Sputnik. As all true paranoids are aware, the real hoax of the Moon landing was that it was faked on a soundstage at the USAF base on the dark side of the Moon.