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Friday, February 27, 2009

Fish with a Cockpit



Link
Scroll down for today's pictures & links.

Fish with a Cockpit

Even if you've seen the pictures, you've got to see this video... transparent head, tubular eyes, The Pacific barreleye fish has a head reminiscent of a fighter-plane cockpit. Video courtesy Monterey Bay Aquarium (MBARI) -


url

"The Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute discovered the fish 20,000 feet beneath the ocean’s surface off California’s central coast. Although the fish had been known to exist since 1939, it was the first of its kind to be found with its soft transparent dome intact." - more info.


(photos by Monterey Bay Aquarium, National Geographic)

Today's pictures & links:

CGSociety announces winners of their "Steampunk Myths & Legends" contest

This is a spectacular link filled with sophisticated art and top-notch videos, so allow some time to browse it. Here is a winner in "individual image" category - "Steamnocchio", by Fabricio Moraes from Brazil, which perfectly captures the spirit of steampunk.



For the sheer spectacle, consider this intense work by Marcin Jakubowski: "Titanomachy - fall of the Hyperion" (click to enlarge to see incredible detail)


(images courtesy CGSociety)

See the whole feature, and don't miss some exceptional (slightly nsfw) art on other pages...

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Atmospheric Sprites

Lightning-generated "sprites" high above thunderstorms - or gigantic lightning "jets", reaching for 90 kilometers... ("including dancing red blobs with tentacles and blue jets shaped like water fountains.") Here is the appearance of a "sprite" (about 30 miles high by 30 miles wide) above a distant thunderstorm. The "sprite" is about 175-250 miles away from the camera:


(images credit: ILAN Science Team, via)

To see the video of these intense balls of energy, click here. Sometimes the energy comes down from lofty heights, and get very personal:

One witness account:
"Last summer we had an intense thunderstorm. I had just got home from work, and was removing my boots. Just then a big forked bolt of lightning struck two trees, about 75 feet apart in my yard. One of the trees is about 15 feet outside the window from where I was sitting. At that instant, a ball of light came out of the HVAC air duct near the baseboard in my room where I was. I happened to be facing that way... in less then a second it raced around the perimeter of the room, when it reached the wires coming from my PC. There was a loud spark sound, and it was gone. It fried the computer, and a lot of other electronics in the house. It was the strangest and scariest thing I've ever witnessed. It looked something like the arc from a welder, but about the size of a grapefruit." (more info)


(images via 1, 2)

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Release your inner "Calvin" snow sculptor

Expanding Calvin & Hobbes repertoire:



Calvin's nightmare:


(originals unknown)

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It's Velvet Underground all over again

Pul(sew)idth sews vintage keyboards and guitars, making soft and groovy little pillows... which very possibly produce soft, groovy sounds at night.



Every item corresponds to a certain vintage model, and there are guitars in her wooly line-up, as well.


(images credit: pul(sew)idth)

------------

Mixed fresh links for today:

If your city was nuked... - [apocalyptic]
Light Speed Tunnel - [architecture]
Recipe for Disaster: The Formula That Killed Wall Street - [wow]
Spilled Blood Pillow - [weird design]
Teenager Sound Test - [weird site]
Hilarious Job Interviews - [fun videos, language]
Wonderful Wallet Hacks - [more weird design]
Some trees have a secret... - [neat video ad]
The most extreme printer jam, source - [cool animation]
Most Beautiful Places of the World - [promotion]
Make stunning Flash websites for free! - [promotion]

------------

World Photography Awards 2009 - an opportunity for amateur photographers

If you have an interest in photography, you can afford to miss "World Photography Awards" 2009 competition results, that will be unveiled in Cannes, France. The 2009 Campaign Award is a brand new category for amateur photographers in which you are invited to enter with a single image that captures the beauty and spirit of football in unexpected places.

Enjoy our exclusive gallery of the past winners of the contest:


(photo by Howard Schatz)


(photo by Pierre-Elie de Pibrac)


(photo by Nana Ziesche)


(photo by Neil Bradfield)

Even more special is this series of images by Robin Utrecht:




(photos by Robin Utrecht)

The image should look beyond the standard snapshot of an action moment during a game and aim to capture the vibrancy, the magic, the celebration, the camaraderie and the cultural phenomenon that is football.

The deadline for this competition has been extended and DRB readers now have until 28th February 2009 to enter. Here is the link to the World Photography Awards website where you can find details on entering: www.worldphotographyawards.org

There is a fantastic prize to be won:
1. 2 VIP tickets to attend the evening gala awards ceremony in Cannes on the 16th April 2009 (including flights and two nights’ accommodation in a luxury hotel on the famous Croisette)
2. An Alpha camera + lens
3. The opportunity to be one of the photographers used in Sony’s forthcoming digital imaging campaign work.
4. 2 tickets to a South Africa World Cup game in 2010 (travel and accommodation included)


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Vintage Prams

Antique and doll prams, and some vintage postcards featuring prams... can be seen here:



(images via)

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London artists achieve a new "high"

Mark Obstfeld writes to us: "just down the road from me there's a couple of London Underground trains which have been transformed into (what I believe to be) artists' studios - the trains carriages are also situated way up above street level on what was an old bridge..."


(photos by Mark Obstfeld)

Something that belongs in William Gibson novels, in his "Bridge" trilogy....

------------

Vertigo

Speaking of bridges, this is the most breathtaking photo one could possibly make of the Golden Gate bridge (for those with fear of heights) - click on the image to get a wallpaper version.


(image credit: George Steinmetz/Corbis, National Geographic)

------------

These cats are capable of anything:




He's going to kill you...


(originals unknown)

------------

Intense

He does not look very happy with his invention, though....


(original unknown)

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COMMENTS:

3 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Um...too many zeros. How about 20,000 feet below the surface. 200,000 feet is not possible (on our planet, at least).

___  
Blogger Tulsa Gentleman said...

To quote from the article you linked to, these animals are found at "depths of 600 to 800 meters (2,000 to 2,600 feet)". That sounds a bit more reasonable. Incredible fish for sure.

___  
Anonymous Tangle said...

It's Mad-Eye!

___  

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  • "Construction of the Yusufiyah Electrical Generation Plant was started in 2001 by the Soviets"

    Круто, я точно знал что Советский Союз, нашу родную Империю Зла, перестройкой так просто не угрохать. Возможно, СССР ещё даже слегонца жив.
    Read more

  • Great post.
    The Swedish substation totally looks like "Return of the Jedi". I kept looking for Chewbacca.
    Read more

  • My Russian is pretty weak (nonexistant), but I'm willing to guess that Matthias is saying what I was going to say - that in 2001 there weren't any "Soviets", so perhaps you meant "Russians".

    Sources disagree about when it was constructed, varying from 1980 to 1989 to 1996 to 2001.

    The best explanation for that appears to be (according to RIAN), that construction started under Soviet direction in 1989, was put on hiatus for a decade after the Gulf War, and Russians went back to work on it in 2001 until conditions [and probably lack of payment] led them to leave in 2004.

    So both "Soviet" and "2001" are reasonable, just not quite in the conjunction offered.
    Read more

  • Some of these pics look straight out of Gotham City.
    Read more

  • What about the most famous London power station? Battersea!!! The one Pink Floyd took to hang the pink inflatable pig on the two front towers, for taking a picture for their album.
    Sometimes I go there and I think that it's a shame that they abandoned such a marvellous magnificent architectural beauty...
    It seems that has been recently bought and will be transformed in a shopping center (but maybe I'm wrong)
    Read more

  • wow, I mean how do you keep coming up with fresh ideas like this.
    Read more

  • That BC Hydro plant in Vancouver is amazing. I would like to see someone convert that into a resort / hotel. Even better yet, a museum.
    Read more

  • How about Marble Hill Nuclear Power Plant?
    More info

    Or how about Richmond Generating Station? More info
    Read more

  • Have you seen this?
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C5%BBarnowiec_Nuclear_Power_Plant
    Read more

  • Круто, я точно знал что Советский Союз, нашу родную Империю Зла, перестройкой так просто не угрохать. Возможно, СССР ещё даже слегонца жив.

    Actually, what Маттиас said was something more or less like this:

    Cool! I just knew that the Soviet Union, our own Empire of Evil, couldn't be destroyed so easily by perestroika. Perhaps the USSR is still alive even today.
    Read more

  • Check out OMSI's Turbine Hall. The Oregon Museum of Science and Industry is located in a building donated by the Portland General Electric company. Massive indoor space with the overhead cranes still in place. Picture here: http://www.omsi.info/visit/physics/engineerit/graphics/components/turbinehall.jpg

    and more info here: http://www.omsi.org/visit/physics/
    Read more

  • You can have a great day out at this dissused atomic power station in Germany:
    http://www.wunderlandkalkar.eu/ws/content.asp?navigationId=45&base=1&Title=Kernie's%20Familiepark
    Read more

  • here the hell is Yamantau?
    Read more

  • The Cruas cooling tower in France is definetely not abandonned...

    have a look at this pretty picture on flickr:
    http://www.flickr.com/photos/rogerjb/2218066191/
    Read more

  • Regarding the 'Skylon'; I am skeptical of websites wherein the apostrophe is abused and the HTML is invalid.
    Read more

  • At http://ec.europa.eu/environment/life/publications/lifepublications/lifefocus/documents/military_en.pdf (page 29) you will find a couple of (fairly poor) pictures of the Porton Down antscape - hectares of anthills, cheek by jowl, albeit without the geometric regularity your pictures show. Could your mounds have been "built" by insects? I imagine it would take some hundreds of years for such mounds to naturally erode away (depending on local conditions). Here in Wiltshire, UK, there are a good number of neolithic burial mounds which have survived several thousand years, and some of these would (even when "new") have been no higher than the mounds you describe. So current occupation by ants need not rule out such origins. Just a thought!
    Read more

  • But, given the pictures, the mounds aren't meticulous and regular, especially in a way defying natural creation.

    They're not all that regular and not at all meticulously laid out in the example images... the Google ones particularly make them look like an erosive artifact.

    (The seismic activity hypothesis looks pretty likely, to my eyes.)
    Read more

  • My guess would be that at one time a certain type of tree or plant grew where the mounds are, and rain eroded the areas between them, where there were fewer roots to hold onto the earth. Eventually the trees/ plants died off for some reason, leaving the mounds.
    Read more

  • Looks like a standing wave pattern to me. I wonder how the locations of these sites would map compared to sources of vibrations. Hmmm.
    Read more

  • Well it has kind of an texture like some footwear. Maybe it's the carbon footprint?

    The other thought I had that when mud dries out it leaves cracks in it (like here http://www.photos.com/en/search/close-up?oid=2710969&hoid=8f04e1d10fb5cea7a9bcc4c10ceb71ec)
    and those mountains are some sort of soil that dried up deep into ground and bigger cracks appeared. Through time wind has carved the edges off the cracks and made those bumps look smooth.
    Read more

  • To me the patterns kinda look like when water is boiling in a pot..

    Could at one point they could all have been hot springs?

    Water:
    http://soul-amp.blogspot.com/2008/01/boiling-water-photo-weird-photos-of.html

    sulfur springs:
    http://www.flickr.com/photos/kqedquest/3025698529/
    Read more

  • Goose bumps on Mother Earth as she cools down.
    Read more

  • I live near the Mima mounds in Olympia and have heard professors speculate on theories. There is zero evidence of any link to animals. We are close to the terminus of the gaciers during the last ice age. But the most reasonable hypothesis that I've heard has to do with seismic activity. If you put sand on a piece of plywood and bang rythmically with a hammer it forms into regularly spaced little mounds.
    Steve in Olympia
    Read more

  • Really big frost heaves?

    Either that or Mothra eggs.
    Read more

  • After reading this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mima_Mounds

    It seems there is likely a variety of explanations for various mounds around the world. Here in MN I've seen what pocket gophers can do.
    Read more

  • My guess would be... grass. Perhaps with some helper ants/insects/rodents/rabbits for soil fertilisation and turnover. Seeing how quickly grass can build up topsoil (for instance, over a paved path), I don't doubt that over centuries such mounds could build up. All it needs, is some positive feedback between ground surface height (above the water table, or frost zone, or dew-catching, or wind-blown dust collecting, or average sunlight levels) and rate of grass growth - and you'd get mounds. Big ones.

    Heck, it might even be something as simple as rabbits liking to sit on top of the mounds for the view, and pooping there - greener grass, more rabbits, more... etc.

    Positive feedback is a powerful effect. (Says me, the electronics engineer.)

    TerraHertz
    Read more

  • Read more

  • Of course they are natural. Just because the exact method of their formation is not yet known is no reason to jump to supernatural conclusions.

    Looks to me like an interference pattern of some sort, probably seismic.

    Your statement that natural formations "can't be as precise, orderly, or meticulous as the mounds" is breathtakingly ignorant.

    Here's an example of a different natural phenomenon creating an equally strange regular landscape: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/2665675.stm
    Read more

  • I have to agree with Bill, those look like acoustic wave patterns created by some sort of seismic activity. To indicate cause by flora or fauna, there would have to be traceable remains of either in, on, or around those mounds.
    Read more

  • As far as I have read and understood those mounds were made by indians. They used them to grow certain crops that needed a type of ground elevation, in order to get the conditions right for the crops to grow (moisture levels etc.).

    source:
    http://www.amazon.com/1491-Revelations-Americas-Before-Columbus/dp/product-description/1400032059
    (apparently this theory of those mounds being human made is supported broadly among archaeologists, and having read that book i'm also inclined to believe it to be true)
    Read more

  • Hmm, miniature giant space gophers?
    Read more

  • Ants
    Read more

  • I live near some of these and have wondered about them for years. Glad to finally have a name for them and to know no one else knows that they are either.
    Read more

  • I couldn't even start guessing what the heck these things are. I just find it funny that Canada is referred to as an "exotic locale" along with Kenya and Australia.
    Read more

  • Clearly these are NOT "Mothra eggs",
    but rather the pupae mounds left whenever Rush Limbaugh visits an area.
    When he and Sarah Palin are declared
    King and Queen, they will burst forth
    and destroy Godless heathens and organic farms the world over.
    Read more

  • I think theyre made from earthquakes when the ground is loose like sand forms these shapes when on something that vibrates at the right frequency. This could be a bigger scale of it.
    Read more

  • Where's the mystery?

    Looking at them, i'd say they're caused by the vibration of the earth (the schumann resonance)
    and fluctous interference with the cosmic hum (prana/vril/orgone/ether).

    Check out the field of Cymatics of Prof Dr. Hans Jenny.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sY6z2hLgYuY
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kWadDtIFPNs
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3csi-2Hrzhg
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_bAmjRK9wBA


    [B]Everything[/B] is a a vibration.
    Read more

  • Hey! These are the places where the Teletubbies live! I KNEW they weren't just fairy tales! :)
    Read more

  • I think they are likely the remnants
    of forests. Each mound is a root ball
    left over from a decayed tree. The root ball decayed into a pile ofcompost
    that eventually became a mound. That is why they are so consistent in form
    and the same around the world.

    virag0
    Read more

  • re:virag0 - Wow, there is a fresh look on things! )
    Read more

  • Seems like regularly spaced Pingo formation.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pingo
    Pingos form from ice lensen in periglacial climates, so it makes sense that they would be found at the edges of ancient ice caps.
    Read more

  • What Anonymous wrote sounds very plausible: "My guess would be that at one time a certain type of tree or plant grew where the mounds are, and rain eroded the areas between them, where there were fewer roots to hold onto the earth. Eventually the trees/ plants died off for some reason, leaving the mounds."

    But I am sure that scientists would easily be able to confirm this by simply digging a big hole in one these mounded areas are analyzing the soil and so forth.
    Read more

  • I have spent a bit of time looking at these mounds in Oregon and California and find that ALL 3 main theories for the mounds FAIL for the same reason, none come lose to covering the range of the mounds.

    FAR MORE MOUNDS exist in areas that

    1. are not seismically active than are.

    2. are outside the range of gophers than within (also there is no signs of gopher activity within the mounds.) This theory is stupidity squared anyway.

    3. are outside of areas of glacial wash than are in such areas.

    There is no plant or animal that even comes close to covering the entire range of the mounds.

    What they are is unknown, they have the appearance of agricultural areas and their internal structure indicates the same thing. This does not mean that is what they are, but this is the only hypothesis that cannot be easily eliminated based on range and structure. The argument against this is that no people were around to build them. Try and find solid research to support this and you may be surprised at the lack thereof.
    Read more

  • Very cool post!

    Thanks!
    Read more

  • That girl in the first picture for "construction land" looks like she's having the time of her life.
    Read more

  • I can't believe it. You missed the best one - Loveland - the sex theme park on Jeju-do in South Korea.
    Read more

  • interesting list of theme parks. I wil be checking out Disney world in a few months, hope its as good as people say it is.
    Read more

  • Its really great photos and their description. Nice job done
    Read more

  • i go to uni in kent, which is located about 3 miles from their largest site, in addition that site is also right next to one of kents largest clubs and i think its definatly time for some night-time drunken exploring
    Read more

  • it was a surprise to find the limestone heritage on this site since its not a theme park but an open air museum depicting the soft stone building traditions of Malta (i guess you have realised that im maltese! :) ) one though can try his or her hand at stone carving once you are at it.. :)
    Read more

  • Pedro's south of the border is truly one of the saddest excuses for a theme park you could see. The ONLY reason to stop there is for fireworks, or to gas up your car... If you drive to NC on I-95 you cant miss it, its literally on the border between SC and NC
    Read more

  • The big chocolate character looks weird...
    Read more

  • Wow, that airplane propeller ride looks like fun!
    Read more

  • You forgot Disney's California Adventure. A theme park with such a bad theme and so poorly executed, that it is now being remodeled and expanded at the price tag of $1 billion.
    Read more

  • awsoem! I want to go to them all just for the sheer weirdness of it all
    Read more

  • Wall, SD would fit on this list...
    Read more

  • i go to uni in kent, which is located about 3 miles from their largest site, in addition that site is also right next to one of kents largest clubs and i think its definatly time for some night-time drunken exploring
    Read more

  • Hmm...House on the Rock should be here!
    It's the most amazing!!!
    Read more

  • The link to the nazi-era color photos doesn't work. This one does.
    http://d-m-vestnik.livejournal.com/142922.html
    Read more

  • Thank you - link fixed
    Read more

  • The last photo ("Total Bliss") is Kiev, Ukraine.
    Read more

  • Cute animal the mere cat I think it was. Overall nice pics nice post thanks for it Avi.
    Read more

  • One of the best articles in the last few weeks.
    Read more

  • This is why I visit your site everyday.
    Read more

  • michael palin visited prora in his last bbc series, you just reminded me of the name. thanks!
    Read more

  • superb article!
    Read more

  • Thanks once again for a great post. The learned architectural comments highlight the decided similarities between Socialist and National Socialist art, and reinforce the insight that Nazism was in fact merely a heresy of Marxism.

    A useful comparison would be to the neo-Imperialist architecture of the new 0bama displays, beginning with the faux-Roman structures at the Denver convention. Not much changes.
    Read more

  • I like your web since long time ago and this is a very interesting article.
    Read more

  • Rob de Witt is another ignoramus who graduated at the Norris-Palin University of Political Science...
    Read more

  • Great architecture! Beautiful and clasic!
    Read more

  • I enjoyed reading / watching your article, especially as a German. I really appreciate your neutral description of German history, maybe better than some contemporary German historians do. This helps the younger people to get distance to things my generation never dealt with.
    I don't forget history, but I live in present. Great contribution, thanks!
    Read more

  • Great post!!! I like this site very much, it's very funny and informative. However, it's sad that such a great post just made the De Witt guy reinforce his wrong insights...
    Read more

  • like the first comment says, One of the best articles last weeks.

    about the Prora Rugen, There are plans to make it into a youth hostel. A dutch architect -Kempe Thill- has won a recent (2007) competition about "what to do with the building"

    here is the site:
    http://www.atelierkempethill.com/0030.html
    Read more

  • There remain huge debates as many classical buildings are still being pulled down as the unwanted "wrong kind of architecture" for a modern Germany.

    The other invented architecture, Volk, has usually been assimilated, and the only alterations one usually sees is removal of various swastikas. Hitler's personal home, tea house, and other homes in the Volk style in Berchtesgaden on the Obersalzberg were destroyed during or immediately after the war. Most other buildings in this style were just reused and accepted.

    I'd like to see another illustrated article on this invented architectural style.

    Much of Prora has recently, (2008), been sold and condos seem to be in the structures future.
    Read more

  • Grotesquely imposing structures, dwarfing the pathetic human form...didn't Albert Speer also design the Hummer?
    Read more

  • I'm happy to have given you all the opportunity to practice your condescension. I'm certain you have done sufficient research to refute my point, since you were proud enough of your opinions to post them anonymously ;-}.
    Read more

  • I always wondered about Hitlers fascination of the Romans. He was obsessed with Nordic lore, but Roman architecture.
    It was the naked men sculptures, had to be.
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  • been visiting your blog for years. nice find.
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  • Robert Hughes' "The Shock of the New" has a good discussion of totalitarian architecture, where he describes the pseudo-classical architecture as "totalitarian doric" and also observes that the buildings in the New York state government mall in Albany would like perfectly natural with hammer and sickle or swastika decorations.
    On a related note, the Beijing Olympic structures seem like a modern version of this.
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  • Thank you guys for all the info, this is why we totally enjoy comments on DRB :)
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  • Just goes to show that bad regimes can make good art and impressive architecture. It was ironic that everytime we saw a new concrete-and-steel box go up in our town... a school, or an office building, and we'd deride it as "communist looking". And yet when you compare postwar architecture of the US and the USSR, the Soviets were the ones making beautiful, impressive buildings, while it was we who were making the plain, soulless glass boxes. East Germany promoted that kind of Phillip Johnson asthetic, but the Russians knew how to make an impressive building (though often constructed poorly). I'll take the magnificent Moscow State University main building anyday over soul-sucking boxes like the Seagram Building.

    The best comment ever made about our numbing modern architecture of the postwar years was made by Tom Wolfe, when he looked at the rows of plain, glass and steel boxes of Manhattan and called it the "Rue De Regret".
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  • DesCorp - Moscow University Building perhaps needs an article in itself...
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  • Lichterdom was - according to Speers son - one of the works he was most proud of.
    Actually it was a solution to a funny problem: Four groups of the armed forces were to parade: Army, Navy, Airforce and the 'Desk-force'. The latter were not so fit for parading - out of practice and out of shape. To hide this is it was decided to make the parade at night! But the decorations were made for daylight use and Speer came up with the idea of the unusual use of searchlights. Between 1 and 200 were needed and this covered the entire German searchlight reserve. Hitler had to be asked and was delighted: Our enemies will never believe, that we use all our reserves - off course we do it.
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  • The pic of the 1937 is amazing considering it's context and time. I'd not seen it before. Thank you.

    If you've not done an article on it yet, it would be interesting to compare the architecture of the same time between the Soviet Union and the US (Germany could be included). As an example, Moscow State U's building is remarkably similar to what was happening in lower Manhattan (and Rockefeller Center).
    http://www.panoramio.com/photo/13358802

    Keep up the great work DRB.
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  • Thanks for the very interesting and informative article.

    Rob De Witt would have fit in & thrived in Germany as chief sophist at the time.
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  • This was a great detailed article. Thanks for the great work.

    James
    http://thehistorycellar.blogspot.com/
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  • The architecture featured at my Youtube channel may interest you: www.youtube.com/luddite333
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  • Wonderful piece. Thankyou. Have added outgoing links back to here from a piece on Blather which touches on this: http://www.blather.net/globaleyes/archives/2009/01/welcome_to_the_game.html
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  • When I was a kid we had a foot length of that phone cable in a cupboard. It provided all the wire for my childhood experiments.
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  • The mechanical fractals are scary fascinating.
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  • The last one reminded me of those MC Escher prints. Imagine combining Escher & fractals- whoa!
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  • Great blog
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  • Talking aboute mechanical fractals: the Vasconcelos library in Mexico:

    picture
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  • these things hurt my brain. ow.
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  • It's awesome and futuristic. Great stuff.
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  • What you expect the future to look like. It's great.
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  • Actually the first one in the Groovy Fractals by Professor Enigma set made me think of the inside of the Way from one of Greg Bear's "Eternity" books.
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  • Awesome!
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  • Great looking images, a look at what could be and my be in the future. Cool!
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  • I'm annoyed that the clearly superior side is labeled 'B' as thought it should come after 'A' in consideration. The janitor at my place of work also uses this obnoxious 'over the back' configuration, despite the many notes I have left him to rectify the situation.
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  • true. configuration A isn't just unergonomic but more complicated to use as well.
    considering that there are some TP-holding constructions with a lid on top to help in tearing individual pieces off, configuration A is clearly not the one to prefer.

    i would guess they are watchin a particulary painful stunt.

    the reason i'm thinking this is because i recognise the faces.
    on the left the half face belongs to "Steve-O", the doggy i dont know, the guy with the missing tooth is Ehren McGhehey, the one in the lower right is Dave England and the quarter face behind Dave is Loomis Fall.

    so i guess someone is breaking his own bones, slamming hard on the ground or doing some other pretty painful thing. =)
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  • I'm definitly a B-sider.

    the sheet is easier to find...AND you only touch the sheets you need.
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  • I prefer neither A nor B but instead to keep the roll off the holder altogether. Is that C or off the alphabet altogether?
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  • I never left a comment, but I f*ing love this site !!!!

    please continue !


    a french guy.
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  • B may appear more handy but usually when you try to tear the paper you either:

    a) rip apart the sheet, leaving fragments on the lid.

    b) doesn´t rip well, tube rolls and you end with more paper on your hands than you need.

    A is superior because it prevents unwanted rolling and it helps you to rip the sheet properly.
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  • This site is Awesome I havitsaved as a Favorte, and stuble acros it on my searc nd end up spendin hours Here !
    keep up the good work and don't use a wirelss keyboard as typos happen alot.
    the Wykeman
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  • If anybody knew anything about anything, they would surely see the vast difference in sanitary properties of each choice. B is superior. Be keeps the paper away from touching the wall ( which is of questionable cleanliness). If you need proof that B is superior, make note that in better hotels, the roll is in the B position, and the first sheet neatly folded into a point.

    The roll at all times should not touch any surface, so it stays sanitary. This would also insinuate, that any cat playtime with said roll would be a definite breach in sanitary condition....
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  • "note that in better hotels, the roll is in the B position"

    This is true, I worked at hotel and we had to place them in the B position. Most places I've worked which had public toilets also insist on the B position.

    You don't want to know what happens if you put it in a A position in a public toilet... Some people have no coordination when wiping their behind.
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  • Very cool - liked the time lapse of the Sun.
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