You know this speeding ticket isn't going to end well, but I never saw that coming!
I love failblog.org.
You know this speeding ticket isn't going to end well, but I never saw that coming!
I love failblog.org.
Google Earth just released an amazing Ancient Rome layer, showing Rome at it's peak, around 320 A.D. At the time, Rome was around 1 million people. The layer includes over 6700 buildings, including over 200 high detail buildings.
Truly amazing.
I just uploaded pics to my gallery from a May 2008 trip to Charleston, SC. Yes, I'm a little behind. :-)
If you've ever tried to fly one of those cheap mini remote helicopters, you'll really enjoy this video. The first minute is the most clever. Overall it's about a minute too long, but still cute.
His helicopter has two counter-rotating main blades. Mine has only one with a tail rotor, and it's even more tricky to handle.
Popeye meets Sin City in this clever parody.
I found this via the Legend of Neil site, which is a parody of the Legend of Zelda videogame series. If you like these, then you'd also probably like The Guild, which parodies World of Warcraft.
Similar to the way that helium makes your voice higher, there is a gas that can make your voice lower. It's called sulfur hexafluoride. Adam Savage from Mythbusters demonstrates in the video below:
(via John Ahrens)
I like this unattributed quote:
An expert is someone who has made all the possible mistakes in a narrow field. A wise man is one who has made them widely.
(Edited: Oops, first version ended with "wisely" rather than "widely". Now fixed. We now return you to your regular programming)
Just watched a fantastic documentary In the Shadow of the Moon from 2006. It's a 1 hr 40 min documentary interview with ten of the Apollo astronauts. There's no narrator, just the astronauts and historical footage. The focus is their view of the overall experience, not so much the details. (watch the miniseries From the Earth to the Moon for lots of the details)
Be sure to watch through the closing credits, where the astronauts give their views on the persistent hoax theories that we did not land actually land on the Moon. I liked Charlie Duke's comment, "We've been to the Moon nine times. I mean, why did we fake it nine times if we faked it?"
All these men were interesting, but the real treat was Michael Collins' comments. He was the astronaut who stayed in orbit around the Moon while Neil and Buzz became the first men to walk on the Moon. Collins was simply spoken, animated, and funny in an understated way. Below are of some of the things Collins said in the movie:
On the day of the launch, as they got out of the van at the pad to walk to the elevator:
When you get out to the base of this gigantic gantry, it's … it's empty, there's nobody there, it's deserted. And you're accustomed to scores of workers, swarming like ants all up and down and around it, and you're in a crowd of people. And then suddenly, there's nobody there and you think, "God, you know, maybe they know something I don't know!"
Automatic speeding cameras sound good on paper — automatically catch the speeders and send them a ticket via mail, without tying up police officers. But even with people in the loop, you get problems like this hatchback "driver" in South Africa who was ticketed for exceeding the 60 km/h limit:

You can read more at http://thedailywtf.com/Articles/Traffic-Enfarcement-Camera.aspx
One commenter said the "speeder" should consider himself lucky that he was not also ticketed for tailgating.