Category Archives: Humor and Observations

The BEST Cyber Monday Deal EVER!

If you think this blog site has some cool stuff – wait till you read my awesome books!

At Kindle you can get the following awesome books for:

JUST  99 cents to read the novel The Travelers’ Club and the Ghost Ship – Book one in an historical adventure series.  It’s steampunk – that is science fiction adventure set in 1880.

http://www.amazon.com/The-Travelers-Club-Ghost-Ship-ebook/dp/B0060QYM2K/ref=pd_sim_kstore_1

JUST 99 cents will also get you Twisted Nightmares!  This is an awesome anthology of short poems and stories featuring horror and freaky plot lines with frightening twists.

http://www.amazon.com/Twisted-Nightmares-Michael-Bradley-ebook/dp/B00CNWVXLI/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1385974310&sr=1-1&keywords=twisted+nightmares

JUST $2.99 will get you The Travelers’ Club – Fire and Ash – Book two in the series and my best written novel yet published.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00A467QKW/ref=s9_simh_gw_p351_d0_i1?pf_rd_m=ATVPDKIKX0DER&pf_rd_s=center-2&pf_rd_r=0C111VVGZFAWSAQZEGJC&pf_rd_t=101&pf_rd_p=1630083502&pf_rd_i=507846

Nothing makes a better Christmas present for both you, your friends and family, and for me as an author, than for you to reach in your pocket (figuratively) and buy these timeless literary treasures.

Thanks!

 

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Video of Ice Moving Quickly Into Housing

This video shows ice formed on a lake being moved ashore by the waves and wind and a pretty rapid pace.  At first it is kind of cool looking, but then it starts to cave in the homes.

https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?v=218762171637718

lake ice 2 lake ice

 

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Dog Shaming Pictures for Your Monday Blues

Finding dog shaming pictures is pretty difficult.  So far, I have posted around 300 of them.  If you have any out there for me, please email me with the attachment to eiverness@cox.net.  I hope these give you a chuckle and a smile for your Monday morning blues.  (For earlier dog shaming posts, please type “dog shaming” into the search block on my home page)

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Steampunk Star Wars

Steampunk versions of Star Wars.   In an earlier post I already had steampunk AT-AT and other vehicles, so this one I focus more on other types.  I hope you enjoy them!

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World’s oldest scorpion found

World’s oldest scorpion found

By Larry O’Hanlon

Published November 27, 2013

Discovery News
  • Permian scorpion by Mary Sundstrom.jpg
    MARY SUNDSTROM
  • scorpion-trace.jpg

    Photo of the rock with the imprint of what is believed to be a scorpion. (NEW MEXICO MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY)

It may not look like much, but together with other tracks in the 280 million-year-old rocks of Prehistoric Trackways National Monument in southern New Mexico, this vague form has been identified as the one and only fossil impression of a scorpion body ever found. The scorpion rested here for a time, then scurried off, and the imprint of its body eventually turned to stone.

The age of the trace fossil, as body impressions and tracks are called, takes scorpions way back to the early Permian. That confirms that scorpions have survived a lot of gigantic mass extinction events between then and now. What’s more, seeing how the carbon dioxide levels in the Permian atmosphere were probably three times what they are today on Earth, it’s not likely anthropogenic climate change will stop these hardy arthropods either.

‘We gave it the name Alacranichnus, which means scorpion trace.’

– Spencer Lucas, curator at the New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science

“We gave it the name Alacranichnus, which means scorpion trace (alacran is Spanish for scorpion and ichnos is Greek for trace),” said Spencer Lucas, curator at the New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science (NMMNHS). The discovery was just published in the journal Ichnos: An International Journal for Plant and Animal Traces by scientist at the museum in Albuquerque.

In the paper Lucas, Allan Lerner and Sebastian Voigt describe the trace fossil as a “substantial addition to the poorly known Permian fossil record of scorpions that demonstrates that scorpions were present in the Early Permian coastal plain…. Unfortunately, there is nothing in the way of morphological characters evident from the resting trace that can help determine which particular type of scorpion made it.”

Scorpions are the oldest known arachnids, the researchers explain, with some fossils of probably aquatic scorpions dating back to the Silurian Periods about 430 million years ago. Later, in the Carboniferous (359 million to 299 million years ago), scorpions took to land. But then the fossils peter out.

“There is an extremely large gap in the North American scorpion fossil record following the Upper Carboniferous,” write Lucas and his colleagues. In fact, Permian scorpion fossils are rare worldwide, and only found in bits and pieces. There are no more North American scorpion fossils until the Middle Eocene (about 45 million years ago).

The unique new fossil will be displayed in the New Mexico museum’s upcoming Paleozoic Hall.

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Two men save shark from choking on moose

Two men save shark from choking on moose

Published November 21, 2013

FoxNews.com

He’s going to need a bigger bite.

According to CBC.ca, two Newfoundland men saved a shark from choking on a moose.

shark

Derrick Chaulk was driving by the Norris Arm North harbor and thought he saw a beached whale. But when he went closer to investigate, Chaulk realized it was a Greenland shark.And it was choking.

“[The moose] had the fur and all the liner on it — it was about 2 feet long, maybe,” Chaulk said.

Chaulk and another man, Jeremy Ball, started pulling on the moose, CBS.ca reported.

“A couple yanks and it just came right out,” he said.

shark28n-6-web

Chaulk and Ball then pushed the shark back into the water. After being still for a few minutes, water starting coming off the shark’s gills and it headed back out to sea.

“It was a good feeling to see that shark swim out, knowing that you saved his life,” Chaulk said. “There was a few people up on the bank watching and once that shark swam out and lifted his tail, and then swam all the way out, everybody just clapped.”

Greenland sharks are rarely seen on the northeast coast of Newfoundland, CBC.ca reported.

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Cosplay Pictures for Your Saturday

Your every Saturday edition of cool cosplay outfits:

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Wine cellar found in ancient palace

Raising Canaan? Wine cellar found in ancient palace hints at a sophisticated drink for banquets

Published November 23, 2013

Associated Press
  • Ancient Israeli Wine Cellar.jpg

    3,700-year-old jars were found in the ruins of a recently discovered wine cellar in a Canaanite palace that dates back to approximately 1700 B.C., near the modern town of Nahariya in northern Israel. (AP PHOTO/GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY, ERIC H. CLINE)

  • Ancient Israeli Wine Cellar 1.jpg

    George Washington alumnus Zach Dunseth carefully removes dirt and debris from ancient wine jars while excavating the ruins of a recently discovered wine cellar in a Canaanite palace in Israel that dates back to approximately 1700 B.C., near the modern town of Nahariya in northern Israel. (AP PHOTO/GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY, ERIC H. CLINE)

  • Ancient Israeli Wine Cellar 2.jpg

    The ruins of a recently discovered wine cellar in a Canaanite palace that dates back to approximately 1700 B.C., near the modern town of Nahariya in northern Israel. Researchers found 40 ceramic jars, each big enough to hold about 13 gallons, in a single room.(AP PHOTO/GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY, ERIC H. CLINE)

NEW YORK –  Scientists have uncovered a 3,700-year-old wine cellar in the ruins of a Canaanite palace in Israel, and chemical analysis shows this is where they kept the good stuff.

Samples from the ceramic jars suggest they held a luxurious beverage that was evidently reserved for banquets, researchers said.

“It’s not wine that somebody is just going to come home from a hard day and kick back and drink,” said Andrew Koh of Brandeis University. He found signs of a blend of ingredients that may have included honey, mint, cedar, tree resins and cinnamon bark.

The discovery confirms how sophisticated wines were at that time, something suggested only by ancient texts, said Eric Cline of George Washington University. He, Koh and Assaf Yasur-Landau of the University of Haifa in Israel spoke to reporters Thursday before their work was presented Friday at a meeting of the American Schools of Oriental Research.

The wine cellar was found this summer in palace ruins near the modern town of Nahariya in northern Israel. Researchers found 40 ceramic jars, each big enough to hold about 13 gallons, in a single room. There may be more wine stored elsewhere, but the amount found so far wouldn’t be enough to supply the local population, which is why the researchers believe it was reserved for palace use, Cline said.

The unmarked jars are all similar, as if made by the same potter, Yasur-Landau said. Chemical analysis indicates that the jars held red wine and possibly white wine, Koh said. No liquid was left, and he analyzed residues he had removed from the jars.

Patrick McGovern of the University of Pennsylvania, an expert in ancient winemaking, said the discovery “sheds important new light” on the development of winemaking in ancient Canaan, from which it later spread to Egypt and across the Mediterranean. He said the chemical analysis would have to be published before the ingredients of the wine could be assessed.

Curtis Runnels, an archaeologist at Boston University, called the finding significant not only in showing the sophistication of the wine, but also in suggesting that it was meant specifically for palace use. He noted that the chemical analysis showed each jar held wine from the same recipe, showing the “consistency and control you’d expect in a palace.”

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ORIGINALITY IN MARKETING: THE TOP 20 “STREET” ADVERTISEMENTS

ORIGINALITY IN MARKETING: THE TOP 20 “STREET” ADVERTISEMENTS

Sometimes invasive and annoying, urban marketing does has the potential to be innovative in how the city’s objects are used to convey a message.

BY FLOYD (TOPITO) ON JANUARY 27, 2011

There is something interesting about ads that creatively take advantage of urban space (notably from Julian Beever’s optical illusions). Clearly this domain sparks the imagination and gives way to endless innovations. This list is devoted to streets and restricts the art to the ground, further cultivating an appreciation for urban space.

1-Vijay Sales’s barbecues


2-A musical crossing

3-An orthodontist can straighten that out

4-The South African tourism office

5-The pedestrian crossing bar-code

6-NGO Aseema for children’s rights

7-Mr. Clean makes it whiter

8-McDonald fries tries to take over the world

9-Opitical illusions by Julian Beever

10-A new security system for manholes

11-A hot cup of coffee…


12- The promotion for the children’s books “The Kids Who Could Fly”

13-Fedex’s office supplies

14-Durex condoms: with “knobs” :-)

15-The new Canon: with a bigger “zoom”

16-Your cigarette butts go in the trash…

17-Made by a creative hairdresser

18-Water is life


19-Amnesty International

20-A memorial for victims of the road

Source : boredpanda.com

This post was originally published on Topito

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First 3D-printed metal gun

Texas firm makes world’s first 3D-printed metal gun

By Konrad Krawczyk

Published November 08, 2013

Digital Trends
  • 3D Printed Metal Gun.jpg

    Components for the first ever working 3D Printed metal gun. (SOLID CONCEPTS)

Depending on who you are, where you hail from, and where you stand on guns, 3D printing and related issues, this bit of news will either thrill and astound you, terrify you, or compel you to say “meh.”

But here goes: A company by the name of Solid Concepts has made the world’s first metal gun using a 3D printer.

Based out of Austin, Texas, the 3D-printed metal pistol made by Solid Concepts is based on the Browning 1911 firearm. Solid Concepts set out to make this gun in an effort to prove that they can make weapons that are fit for “real world applications.”

‘The industrial printer we used costs more than my college tuition (and I went to a private university).’

– Solid Concepts representative Alyssa Parkinson

To make the gun, Solid Concepts utilized a manufacturing process known as direct metal laser sintering, or DMLS. DMLS is a 3D manufacturing process used to make metal parts for the aerospace and medical industries. The application for DMLS in the latter example is specific to surgical tools, meaning it’s perfectly suited for the creation of precision firearms.

“The whole concept of using a laser sintering process to 3D Print a metal gun revolves around proving the reliability, accuracy, and usability of 3D Metal Printing as functional prototypes and end use products,” says Solid Concepts’ vice president of additive manufacturing Kent Firestone. “It’s a common misconception that laser sintering isn’t accurate or strong enough, and we’re working to change people’s perspective.”

While 3D printers are becoming more and more affordable all the time, don’t get the wrong idea: you can’t just slap down a couple thousand bucks for a MakerBot 3D printer and hope to make your own firearm from the comfort of your own garage.

“The industrial printer we used costs more than my college tuition (and I went to a private university),” said Alyssa Parkinson, a Solid Concepts rep. ”And the engineers who run our machines are top of the line; they are experts who know what they’re doing and understand 3D Printing better than anyone in this business.”

In other words, there’s a big difference between the gun made by Solid Concepts and the weapons made by Defense Distributed, a Texas-based firm that designed guns intended to be built using 3D printers in your home.

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