-
Excellent set! Thanks :)
Read more
-
Nice one as always. Many thanks.
Read more
-
http://farm1.static.flickr.com/148/344289245_b1c41d3fb8_o.jpg
is not a robot.. there's a Blob of green alien inside.. the shell is just it's transport machine...
Read more
-
Not just Japan.The cylons of Battlestar Galactica fall into the robot+girl catagory.
Read more
-
picky picky picky. Why can't people just enjoy these images for what they are? a robotic shell is still a robot of sorts. How do you know it doesn't have a seperate A.I of it's own?
Read more
-
I'm sorry that the name of Earle Bergey, who was responsible for those iconic robot attacks girl images was left off the list. He more than any other pulp artist, for establishing this genre.
Read more
-
No recent US girl and robot iconography? I beg to differ: just look at stuff by the artist Coop (coopstuff.com)
Read more
-
Wow, truly an amazing trip down memory lane!
Read more
-
disappointing
Read more
-
HOT!!!
Read more
-
"Lost In Space" sitcom showed some of this aesthetic, with a twist of paedofilia. Do you remembre the robot and penny dialogues?
Read more
-
The most recent robot + girl example I can think of was in the Transformers cartoon between a girl and a plane.
Read more
-
The last of the "home intrusion" shots shows a tanker that has plowed through 3 buildings. This was taken in New Zealand, and it should be noted that the occupant of the last house was home at the time and narrowly avoided injury when the milk truck crashed into his lounge. (He was protected by the recliner he was sitting in.)
Read more
-
Many years ago, my cousin was driving through Kansas one winter and spun out onto the grassy median. A crazy ride, but the car stopped upright with occupants unharmed. A pause, and then a Pepsi truck fell on her car.
Pictures were taken so that they could move the truck (and she could get at her cat and birds, all of which turned out unharmed. Her French horn was not so fortunate. The pictures are very interesting, since the only thing not crushed was the driver's seat. (Alas, they have been swallowed in the backlog of my mother's online journal and I can't locate them at this time.)
My mother captions the pictures as "Taking the Pepsi Challenge."
Read more
-
interesting stories... thanks
Read more
-
I was looking at that German truck with the tube; The tube is the truck's own load which came from behind through the cab because of some abrupt braking.
Read more
-
the tanker through the ice is the drivers fault,it is a petro haul truck and the driver was told the ice was to thin for the weight he was hauling.he decided to go anyway and was charged,this was a truck from alberta canada
Read more
-
The ice road tanker incident occured crossing the Mackensie River at Fort Providence. It was early in the season before the ice thickened and the road was restricted to 4000kg. The driver missed or ignored the limit sign but still managed to drive his 40,000(?) kg truck several hundred meters before sinking. From the NWT DOT website. 2001?
Read more
-
Good info guys, I updated the post.
Read more
-
The first "Drowned" photo appears to be Interstate 10 somewhere in Houston Tx, in 2001 a tropical storm flooded much of the city, leaving underpasses such as the one shown with as much as 20 feet of water in them.
Read more
-
Love the site.
Put these coordinates into Google Maps, and you can see the machines in the satellite view.
latitude: 55.26821191135916
longitude: 38.81821632385254
I have too much time on my hands.
Read more
-
Wow! Those old machines make my welder's heart go pitty-pat! I make "found" metal art and those babies would keep me busy for a whole lotta years. Looks like the Russian countryside is pretty, doesn't it?
Read more
-
Forests in Central Russia have much in common with old English forests, quiet small rivers, practically pristine lakes and rolling hills. Not bad, but there are some creepy places, ghost villages and weird strangers. Be prepared for lots of surprises.
Read more
-
These are really spectacular photos! I spent a summer touring Russia with an orchestra, and I saw a great number of hulking Soviet relics dotting the countryside.
Read more
-
These photos are fantastic! This old machines are fearful and marvellous!
Read more
-
I can barely look at some of those pix - some ppl have no fear of heights!!
Great collection!
Read more
-
As this post about dangerous roads has evolved into a Norway fjords article, I feel the need to share this cute video from YouTube on BASE jumping - ladybanana will be able to see some more people with no fear at all!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hAWrt1dwbSY
Read more
-
THIRD!
Read more
-
Thanks for the link to my "When Sermons Go Awry" page! You're right. Traffic rockets!
Good thing I got my site back up and running last night!
Rich.
BlogRodent Read more
-
Passo Stelvio is often used in Giro d'Italia - it's incredible, people actually race there on bikes.. Where a normal man would have problems getting there by car ;)
Read more
-
Maybe the first post of a new serie "The Most Beautiful Road of the World" ?
Read more
-
Wowie! What breathtaking shots! I don't have a fear of heights, but a couple of those pictures made me gasp out loud! I would really like to know how those bicyclists manage those drops! wild
Read more
-
Amazing photos, once again. I have to visit some of these places, truly breathtaking.
Read more
-
The road between Villard Notre Dame and Villard Reymond in the French Alps west of Grenoble and south of Vizille is the scariest road I have ever driven, period, and I have driven some very scary mountain roads (to say nothing of driving over a bridge in Costa Rica that we had to help repair in order to get over it).
Just getting up to Villard Notre Dame was hair-raising, with a poorly-maintained, dark, rock-strewn tunnel. The death road itself hadn't been maintained in years, and there was at least one place where I know our right-side tires were not 100% on the roadway, and there was at least--at least!--at thousand-foot sheer drop to our right. But we couldn't back up, couldn't turn around, could only press forward hoping that the road would not get any narrower because of rockslides & all. Had there been, we would have had to hire some kind of heavy-duty helicopter to airlift our car to a safe place. Or abandon it forever.
The moral is, if you arrive at a road with gated entrance, and there's a sign there stating "if you take this road, your auto insurance is not applicable," you should really, truly take a different route, no matter how much you hate the thought of back-tracking.
Read more
-
mofembot:
Thank you for the great comment... I will definitely investigate and include in following issues. Cheers.
Read more
-
The boulder wedged into the cliffs with two people standing on it is Kjerag Bolten not Pulpit Rock (Preikestolen.
Read more
-
Wow that Lysebotn Hairpin sequence gives me o very mixed feeling indeed...
After diving my motorcycle down from the visitors center, the "normal" curve in between two hairpins suprised me and I crashed quite hard.
I suppose a angel was on my shoulder: after kicking back the bent parts of my bike I was able to drive on, down trough the underground hairpin.... wow.
Jan Los - NL
Read more
-
Check the road on Saba - NA
Read more
-
Great collection of roads there. An odd one I'd like to add is the Nürburgring Nordschleife. It's a racetrack that's open to the paying public. Anyone willing to risk his (in rare cases also her) life can book laps and do so with his own ride. It is dubbed the green hell because it goes on for 20 kilometers through wooded hills, often including rain or fog. It is said that there is one fatality per week. Most of these would me motorcyclists.
There is the scary story of a biker that had an accident throwing him and his machine into the woods. Although not killed in the crash, he died there because nobody noticed the accident.
Although it's not a road for transportation I think it's worth a mention.
There are also some pretty scary roads in morocco crossing the atlas mountains. These include dangerous traffic as well.
Read more
-
oweh, this is an interesting tip - will see if it fits in next part. Thank you!
Read more
-
here's the Russian biker video
http://www.azfreeride.com/?q=node/276
Crazy!
Read more
-
The first project looks very much like the studenthousing for the technical university in Delft, the Netherlands.
http://www.duwo.nl/eCache/ENG/1/764.html
Read more
-
Those Reversible Destiny units don't look handicap accessible by any means. what an interesting concept, though.
Read more
-
I don't think it started in 1970. I saw a modular housing development in Montreal in 1967, called Habitat. Google "habitat 67 montreal" and click on images.
Read more
-
thanks Alan,
I updated the post
Read more
-
These are the good looking ones. There are some shipping container ones that are elegant as well. This link is a rather grim reality:
http://www.photomichaelwolf.com/100x100/
100 10' x 10' apartments in Hong Kong.
Read more
-
I see nothing grim about the pics in the michaelwolf link. Humble--yes. Spartan--absolutely. But grim--only to the eyes of a spoiled westerner who associate the size of one's living space with his/her self-worth. Many of the rooms featured there are probably cleaner and more orderly than your apartment noh?
Read more
-
My father made a pedestal for a sundial by taking several natural rocks and stacking them to find a way that they would balnce before cementing them in place. He said there was no reason to have gravity working against him.
Read more
-
Good day.
to insert ...
http://igrushka.kz/vip56/intraf.php
http://igrushka.kz/vip56/intraf2.php
http://igrushka.kz/vip56/intraf3.php
author: Tom Tit
Read more
-
Thank you Sergei
I think we've covered these in our
first post :)
Read more
-
Bill Dan, rock balancing artist:
http://billdan.blogspot.com/
Read more
-
Wow, its very great.
Read more
-
If we look carefully at the bottle with two cardboard rings balanced on it, about halfway down, there's a small nail supporting the right side of the bottle. It's not as much of a balancing demonstration as first meets the eye.
Read more
-
The gas powered pogo stick was actualy manufactured, at least in limited numbers. I've seen one.
Read more
-
It was called "The Hop Rod". Here's the website, with video, even.
http://www.thehoprod.com/
Read more
-
I have an inventor dad, Then married an inventor husband (w/patent & pat pend) and sons... It is like being on one of those pogo sticks all the time!!! Great stuff! I was laughing out loud all alone- Is that normal? Jan C.
Read more
-
Brilliant, I especially loved the “inflatable floating furniture”. It MUST be made!!
www.loveinventions.com
Read more
-
Fairly recently, there were monks constructing a mandala in a Midwest airport... and a toddler who got away from his mother came and kicked his way through it! I can just imagine how mortified she must have been, but it sounds like the monks handled it gracefully and philosophically.
Read more
-
haha... yes, peace of mind is the whole idea.
Read more
-
The toddler "attack" occurred at Union Station in Kansas City, MO. I used to work across the street and watched the monks construct these several times.
They use long, hollow metal sticks with ridges. They rub wooden sticks across the ridges to coax the sand out a grain at a time.
Read more
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home