Shared posts

05 Sep 14:52

To save on hiring expensive photographers, agents are often...



To save on hiring expensive photographers, agents are often happy to use footage provided by paranormal investigators.

Follow on Twitter @BadRealtyPhotos.

26 Aug 19:19

I'm Not (Fe)-Lyin'

26 Aug 19:18

Best Nurse Ever

monday thru friday,dogs,nurse,work

Submitted by: (via gruthsc3)

26 Aug 19:13

Writing Product Descriptions is an Awesome Job

26 Aug 19:13

Get a Job! Good Boy!

monday thru friday,dogs,work,g rated

Submitted by: (via awwww-cute)

21 Aug 00:30

The Parrot

by Doug

The Parrot

The Annoying Bird theme continues! Here are more birds.

15 Apr 23:43

The Parrot

by Doug

The Parrot

The Annoying Bird theme continues! Here are more birds.

14 Apr 00:16

Saturday April 5, 2014

by admin

12 Apr 17:56

So another week begins…



So another week begins…

11 Apr 18:40

Science teachers…



Science teachers…

11 Apr 18:31

Dog days



Dog days

11 Apr 18:29

Daily struggle every man may go through…



Daily struggle every man may go through…

11 Apr 18:28

How to pick up chicks



How to pick up chicks

11 Apr 16:24

04.06.2014

Archive
Cyanide and Happiness, a daily webcomic
10 Apr 00:29

LHC makes clear identification of a weird particle made of four quarks

by Matthew Francis

Quarks are gregarious particles, but only within limits. Protons, neutrons, and other baryons are made up of three quarks, while unstable particles called mesons are composed of a quark-antiquark pair. (An antiquark is the antimatter partner to a quark.) Nothing with more than three quarks in a single particle has been found in nature, at least under ordinary circumstances.

Since 2008, however, researchers at CERN in Europe and at Belle in Japan found hints of a four-quark particle. Those hints were confirmed today by physicists at the LHCb experiment at CERN. To discover and characterize the particle, researchers sifted through 25,000 decays of mesons resulting from more than 180 trillion collisions at the Large Hadron Collider. This object they studied, known affectionately as Z(4430)-, has provided the first unambiguous measurement of a four-quark particle; earlier experiments also provided hints about another candidate, the Zc(3900)+.

With that much data, physicists were able to determine the composition of the Z(4430)-: it consists of a charm quark, a charm anti-quark, a down quark, and an up antiquark. The "4430" part of the name indicates its mass: 4,430 million electron-volts, which a little more than four times the mass of a proton (938 million electron volts). The combination of quarks gives the Z(4430)- a negative electric charge, hence the "-" in the label. The particle is highly unstable, so none of them are expected to be seen in nature.

Read 1 remaining paragraphs | Comments

10 Apr 00:28

Handheld quantum key generators are on the way

by Chris Lee

As recent disclosures have reminded us, security is not a simple matter. Most will tell you that the weak link in the chain is us: we simply don't use good security habits. But we're only one part of a number of issues. Although passwords are weaker than they should be, a strong password used on a weak system won't be much help. There is still a lot of necessary work being done to ensure that communication between parties is strongly encrypted.

One option that has received waves of attention over the last ten years is quantum key distribution (QKD). Despite its promise of absolute security, QKD has many practical difficulties that have limited it to niche applications. Now, in a nice bit of work, researchers have shown how to implement QKD for handheld devices.

A quick recap of QKD

Light has a property called polarization, which is measured with respect to a reference frame. So, for instance, horizontally polarized light has its electric field aligned with the ground, while vertically polarized light has its electric field aligned perpendicular to the ground. In between, we can have diagonal and anti-diagonal polarized light.

Read 13 remaining paragraphs | Comments

10 Apr 00:28

Looking at the Web with Internet Explorer 6, one last time

by Lee Hutchinson

After twelve-and-a-half years, the curtain fell on Windows XP yesterday: the aged operating system transitioned out of extended support and into a long, dark, unsupported and unpatched twilight. Bespoke patches will still be made for those customers willing to pay enough money—mainly governments and large corporations with significant Windows XP installed bases—but for most of the world, XP is now officially a dead operating system.

Windows XP wasn't the only thing to be shuffled into unsupported purgatory yesterday, though. Also included in the group of applications to be dumped down the memory hole is the browser that everyone loves to hate: Internet Explorer 6.

For all its terribleness now, IE6 accomplished a pretty stunning set of achievements. It's the browser that definitively killed Netscape Navigator and ended the first great "Web Browser War." At its height, IE6 was the browser of choice for ninety percent of the Web's users. Its crushing market dominance also ensured that businesses used it internally as well as externally, developing ActiveX-based Web applications for it and further perpetuating Microsoft's ecosystem lock-in.

Read 4 remaining paragraphs | Comments

09 Apr 21:53

Mentirinhas #612

by Fábio Coala

mentirinhas_603Gente que não cumpre com os compromissos.

 

O post Mentirinhas #612 apareceu primeiro em Mentirinhas.

09 Apr 21:52

Muitirinhas #124

by Fábio Coala
09 Apr 21:52

Mentirinhas #614

by Fábio Coala

mentirinhas_605Normalmente é o que acontece quando a briga sai da internet.

 

O post Mentirinhas #614 apareceu primeiro em Mentirinhas.

08 Apr 23:01

Mattel Ucreate: A music toy for children

by drew

ucreate-music

The Mattel “Ucreate” is a $50 box that lets kids combine pre-recorded samples to “express themselves through creating their own songs.” Apart from the fact that kids have been learning to play regular musical instruments for thousands of years (which actually allow them to learn technique and music theory), the manufacturer has dropped their online support for the product, so it can no longer connect to a computer.

One of the comments, a five-star review which is definitely not fake, reads “Everyone knows that music is all the rage with kids!” Ah, yes, those kids with the bippy-bop and the puddin pops. They jimmy-jam but it’s not even music, it sounds like a burglar banging trash cans together. The kids love it though.

08 Apr 18:14

Alabama Texas fact of the day

by Tyler Cowen

 ”Revenues derived from college athletics is greater than the aggregate revenues of the NBA and the NHL,” said Marc Edelman, an associate professor at City University of New York who specializes in sports and antitrust law. He also noted that Alabama’s athletic revenues last year, which totaled $143 million, exceeded those of all 30 NHL teams and 25 of the 30 NBA teams.

Texas is the largest athletic department, earning more than $165 million last year in revenue — with $109 million coming from football, according to Education Department data. The university netted $27 million after expenses.

Other major programs such as Florida ($129 million), Ohio State ($123 million), Michigan ($122 million), Southern California ($97 million) and Oregon ($81 million) also are grossing massive dollars.

Those numbers of course are not counting the fundraising value of collegiate athletics.  There is more here, via Michael Makowsky.

Here is our previous post on higher education and athletics.

05 Apr 21:57

Before Facebook

05 Apr 18:49

A small comfort

04 Apr 23:32

Friday April 4, 2014

by admin

04 Apr 22:00

Lightning Dick: Electrify Your Crotch

by drew
04 Apr 19:22

Piercing trouble

04 Apr 00:18

The Expert, A Hilarious Sketch About the Pain of Being the Only Engineer in a Business Meeting

by EDW Lynch
Albener Pessoa

Ja passei por esta experiencia, varias vezes ... (video roubado do feed do Tadeu)

The pain of being the only engineer in a business meeting is perfectly illustrated in the comedy sketch, “The Expert.” The sketch was written and directed by Lauris Beinerts and is based on the (Russian language) short story, “The Meeting,” by Alexey Berezin.

via reddit, Daily Picks and Flicks

03 Apr 19:40

Nikola Tesla Redux - Wireless Power Finally Arrives

by Kevin Murray
via one of our top Canadian Blue Blaze irregulars...
TODAY
"We're going to transfer power without any kind of wires,"
says Dr Hall, now Chief Technology Officer at WiTricity, a startup developing wireless "resonance" technology.

"But, we're not actually putting electricity in the air. What we're doing is putting a magnetic field in the air." ...

In the house of the future, wire-free energy transfer could be as easy as wireless internet.

If all goes to WiTricity's plans, smartphones will charge in your pocket as you wander around, televisions will flicker with no wires attached, and electric cars will refuel while sitting on the driveway. (more)

YESTERDAY
In 1891, Nikola Tesla gave a lecture for the members of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers in New York City, where he made a striking demonstration. In each hand he held a gas discharge tube, an early version of the modern fluorescent bulb. The tubes were not connected to any wires, but nonetheless they glowed brightly during his demonstration. Tesla explained to the awestruck attendees that the electricity was being transmitted through the air by the pair of metal sheets which sandwiched the stage. He went on to speculate how one might increase the scale of this effect to transmit wireless power and information over a broad area, perhaps even the entire Earth. As was often the case, Tesla's audience was engrossed but bewildered. (more)

TOMORROW
No more replacing batteries in wireless bugging devices, voice recorders and spycams! 

Interesting side note... Leon Theremin invented a wireless bugging device that didn't need batteries back in the 1940's. (more)
03 Apr 17:50

Honda Mean Mower: Cortador de grama bate recorde de velocidade com 187 km/h (vídeo)

by Ricardo de Oliveira
Albener Pessoa

Eh cada uma que aparece ....

mean mower 1 700x466 Honda Mean Mower: Cortador de grama bate recorde de velocidade com 187 km/h (vídeo)

O cortador de grama Honda Mean Mower entrou oficialmente para o Guinness Book não por ser aquele que mais apara gramados ou campos de futebol, mas por ter chegado a uma velocidade que a maioria dos populares brasileiros nem sonha em chegar: 187 km/h.

A velocidade foi obtida em um teste na cidade de Tarragona, Espanha, onde foi registrado 187,6 km/h. Ele superou a marca de 141 km/h, obtida em 2010. O modelo é baseado no cortador HF2620 e foi preparado pela Team Dynamics, equipe de competição do campeonato europeu de turismo.

mean mower 2 700x466 Honda Mean Mower: Cortador de grama bate recorde de velocidade com 187 km/h (vídeo)

Rodas de quadriciclo, chassi modificado, suspensão reajustada e câmbio de seis marchas com paddle shifts foram introduzidos. O motor é um V2 de 1.000 cm3 usado pela motocicleta Honda VTR Firestorm, que pode fazer o Mean Mower ir de 0 a 100 km/h em menos de 4 segundos.

A marca japonesa chegou a dizer que o veículo poderia chegar a 210 km/h. Na função de cortar grama, o HF2620 modificado roda até 24 km/h. Não há pretensão de comercializar o veículo personalizado.

Agradecimentos ao vinoferry pela dica.

A noticia Honda Mean Mower: Cortador de grama bate recorde de velocidade com 187 km/h (vídeo) foi publicada no site Notícias Automotivas - Carros.