Category Archives: Humor and Observations

Top 25 Most Amazing Abandoned Corners of Earth

Top 25 Most Amazing Abandoned Corners of Earth

OCTOBER 10, 2013 BY  LEAVE A COMMENT

It doesn’t matter how beautiful are the new tourist destinations, those that are curious will always go to visit some historical places, and when those are abandoned and not touched by the human hand for a long time, they become a mysterious riddles.

Abandoned Isle, Netherlands

Abandoned Beautiful Places25 Top 25 Most Amazing Abandoned Corners of Earth

 

Abandoned City Near Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant, UkraineAbandoned Beautiful Places24 Top 25 Most Amazing Abandoned Corners of Earth

Boat from 2nd World War, Homebush, AustraliaAbandoned Beautiful Places23 Top 25 Most Amazing Abandoned Corners of Earth

Railway Station in PolandAbandoned Beautiful Places22 Top 25 Most Amazing Abandoned Corners of Earth

Mysterious Road Kerry Way, IrelandAbandoned Beautiful Places21 Top 25 Most Amazing Abandoned Corners of Earth

Abandoned Castle from 15 Century, Black Forest, GermanyAbandoned Beautiful Places20 Top 25 Most Amazing Abandoned Corners of Earth

Asunción, ParaguayAbandoned Beautiful Places19 Top 25 Most Amazing Abandoned Corners of Earth

“El Hotel del Salto”, ColumbiaAbandoned Beautiful Places18 Top 25 Most Amazing Abandoned Corners of Earth

Underwater Bronze Statue of Jesus Christ, Mediterranean Sea, ItalyAbandoned Beautiful Places17 Top 25 Most Amazing Abandoned Corners of Earth

Hall, West WelshAbandoned Beautiful Places16 Top 25 Most Amazing Abandoned Corners of Earth

Abandoned Building for Distillation, BarbadosAbandoned Beautiful Places15 Top 25 Most Amazing Abandoned Corners of Earth

Abandoned Domes in South-West FloridaAbandoned Beautiful Places14 Top 25 Most Amazing Abandoned Corners of Earth

Body of Crashed Plane, AntarcticaAbandoned Beautiful Places13 Top 25 Most Amazing Abandoned Corners of Earth

A Structure in CambodiaAbandoned Beautiful Places12 Top 25 Most Amazing Abandoned Corners of Earth

Fishermen House at Lake, GermanyAbandoned Beautiful Places11 Top 25 Most Amazing Abandoned Corners of Earth

Bodiam Castle, East Sussex, EnglandAbandoned Beautiful Places10 Top 25 Most Amazing Abandoned Corners of Earth

Abandoned House in Namib DesertAbandoned Beautiful Places9 Top 25 Most Amazing Abandoned Corners of Earth

Sea Supervisory Houses in EnglandAbandoned Beautiful Places8 Top 25 Most Amazing Abandoned Corners of Earth

Mill in FranceAbandoned Beautiful Places7 Top 25 Most Amazing Abandoned Corners of EarthBulgarian Communist Party HouseAbandoned Beautiful Places6 Top 25 Most Amazing Abandoned Corners of EarthAbandoned Mill from 1866, Sorento, ItalyAbandoned Beautiful Places5 Top 25 Most Amazing Abandoned Corners of Earth

Part of Olympic Object for Olympic Games 1984 in Saraevo

Abandoned Beautiful Places4 Top 25 Most Amazing Abandoned Corners of Earth

Old Factory for Russian Rockets in RussiaAbandoned Beautiful Places3 Top 25 Most Amazing Abandoned Corners of Earth

Abandoned Tunnel of Love in UkraineAbandoned Beautiful Places2 Top 25 Most Amazing Abandoned Corners of Earth

 Abandoned Theater in ChicagoAbandoned Beautiful Places1 Top 25 Most Amazing Abandoned Corners of Earth

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‘Biohacker’ implants chip in arm

If you are under 20 I am pretty sure you will see full on Trans-humans in your old age, in fact, you might become one.  The world has come along ways with prosthetic devices, biofeedback, joint replacements, transplants, blue tooths, hearing aids, and brain controlled robotics.  The synthesis of what we know as machine and human will not be the androids we have viewed in science fiction movies.  Instead, it will be humans ‘upgrading’ themselves both before and after birth.  Genetic tampering will produce a new type of human while flaws can be corrected in vitro or post partem.  

Currently, roughly 50% of Americans will die of heart failure.  Why keep your current heart if you could get a cybernetic alternative that you never have to worry will skip a beat?  Why not have two hearts if we can make them small so you have a back-up?  Early pioneers in this ‘trans-human’ change have already started.  The following story may be disturbing, but I find it more predictive than anything else. – Michael Bradley

‘Biohacker’ implants chip in arm

By Marc Lallanilla

Published November 04, 2013

LiveScience
  • biohackerchip.jpg

    Biohacker Tim Cannon had a battery-powered electronic device installed in his arm. (MOTHERBOARDTV/YOUTUBE)

Kids, don’t try this at home: A self-described “biohacker” had a big electronic chip almost as large as a deck of cards inserted beneath the skin of his arm. Without a doctor’s help. And without anesthetics.

Tim Cannon is a software developer from Pittsburgh and one of the developers at Grindhouse Wetware, a firm dedicated to “augmenting humanity using safe, affordable, open source technology,” according to the group’s website. As they explain it, “Computers are hardware. Apps are software. Humans are wetware.”

The device Cannon had inserted into his arm is a Circadia 1.0, a battery-powered implant that can record data from Cannon’s body and transmit it to his Android mobile device. Because no board-certified surgeon would perform the operation, Cannon turned to a DIY team that included a piercing and tattoo specialist who used ice to quell the pain of the procedure. [Super-Intelligent Machines: 7 Robotic Futures]

Now that the device is inserted and functioning, Cannon is one step closer to achieving a childhood dream. “Ever since I was a kid, I’ve been telling people that I want to be a robot,” Cannon told The Verge. “These days, that doesn’t seem so impossible anymore.”

The Circadia chip isn’t particularly advanced: All it does is record Cannon’s body temperature and transmit it to his cellphone over a Bluetooth connection. While this isn’t a huge improvement over an ordinary thermometer how analog! it does represent one small step forward in what will undoubtedly be a continuing march toward greater integration of electronics and biology.

Cannon is hardly the first individual to have technology implanted into his or her body just ask former vice president Dick Cheney (who had a battery-powered artificial heart implanted), or any dog with a microchip.

Some are referring to biohacking as the next wave in evolution. “I think that’s the trend, and where we’re heading,” according to futurist and sci-fi author James Rollins.

“There’s a whole ‘transhuman’ movement, which is the merging of biology and machine,” Rollins told LiveScience in an earlier interview. “Google Glass is one small step, and now there’s a Japanese scientist who’s developed the contact lens equivalent of Google Glass. And those are two things you put right on, if not in, your body. So I think we’re already moving that way, and quite rapidly.”

Cannon sees future refinements as being able to do more than just passively transmit information. “I think that our environment should listen more accurately and more intuitively to what’s happening in our body,” Cannon told Motherboard. “So if, for example, I’ve had a stressful day, the Circadia will communicate that to my house and will prepare a nice relaxing atmosphere for when I get home: dim the lights, [draw] a hot bath.”

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Most Beautiful Villages Around The World

Most Beautiful Villages Around The World

Popeye Village, is a group of rustic and ramshackle wooden buildings located at Anchor Bay in the north-west corner of the Mediterranean island of Malta. Photo by: Mosin

Village on the bank of the Niger river, Mali. Photo by: Yann Arthus-Bertrand

Hidden mountain village in Southern China. Photo by: Christian Ortiz

Mist over countryside in Southwest England. Photo by: Bob Small

Hobbiton village – “Lord of the Rings” movie location in New Zealand. Photo by: Weta Workshop

Riomaggiore is a village and comune in the province of La Spezia, situated in a small valley in the Liguria region of Italy. Photo by: James Brandon

Mountain Village, Iran. Photo by: Mohammadreza Momeni

Beautiful African sea side village. Photo by: Michael Poliza

Hallstatt, Upper Austria, is a village in the Salzkammergut, a region in Austria with 946 inhabitants. Photo by: unknown

Gásadalur village, Faroe Islands. There were only sixteen people living in village and several of the houses stand empty today. Photo by:Gareth Codd

Village located in Himalayas, Tibet. Photo by: Coolbie Re

Fort Bourtange is a star fort located in the village of Bourtange, Groningen, Netherlands. Photo by: Jan Koster

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Mammal unseen for 15 years caught on camera in Vietnam

Mammal unseen for 15 years caught on camera in Vietnam

Published November 13, 2013

Associated Press
  • Vietnam Rare Mammal.jpg

    This photo taken in 1993 and released by WWF shows a Saola in Vietnam when it was captured. Saola, one of the rarest and most threatened mammals on earth has been caught on camera in Vietnam for the first time in 15 years in September in central Vietnam. (AP/WWF)

  • Vietnam Rare Mammalbw.jpg

    This Sept. 7, 2013 photo released by WWF, shows the Saola in a forest in Vietnam. (AP/WWF)

A camera trap in a forest in central Vietnam has managed to snap a photo of one of earth’s rarest mammals, the saola, which hadn’t been seen in 15 years.

The antelope-like, long-horned ox appears to walk through dense foliage at the edge of the camera’s range in the image taken in September. Conservation group WWF released the image along with a statement Wednesday.

“This is a breathtaking discovery and renews hope for the recovery of the species,” Van Ngoc Thinh, WWF’s Vietnam director, was quoted as saying.

The animal was discovered in remote mountains near Laos in 1992 when a joint team of WWF and Vietnam’s forest control agency found a skull with unusual horns in a hunter’s home. The find proved to be the first large mammal new to science in more than 50 years, according to the WWF.

Two saola were captured in central Vietnam in 1993 but died in captivity after several months.

The last sighting of a saola in the wild was in 1998, according to Dang Dinh Nguyen, director of a saola nature reserve in Vietnam’s central province of Quang Nam.

In the area where the saola was photographed, WWF has recruited forest guards locally to remove snares and battle illegal hunting, the greatest threat to saolas’ survival, the statement said. The snares had been set largely to catch other animals, such as deer and civets, which are a delicacy in Vietnam.

Twenty years since they were first known to science, the elusive mammals remain hard to detect and little is known about them.

At best, no more than few hundred, and maybe only a few dozen, live in the remote, dense forests along Vietnam’s border with Laos, WWF said.

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H&M spokesperson: ‘Our models are too thin’

H&M spokesperson: ‘Our models are too thin’

H&M spokesperson: 'Our models are too thin'
The highly-anticipated launch of Isabel Marant for H&M has put the Swedish brand in the headlines over the last few weeks, but a new story may be keeping them there. Israeli photographer Adi Barkan has admonished the brand for featuring models that are too thin in its latest campaigns.

“No one can tell me those are healthy women. No way.” Barkan said.

To the surprise of many, a spokesperson from H&M has stepped forward to agree. Karin Bringevall acknowledged the claim: “We agree that some of our models are too thin, and it’s something we are going to look over,” spokesperson Bringevall said in an email statement Wednesday. “This is a very important issue for us and something we are working to improve.”

Barkan runs a modeling agency in Tel Aviv and was largely involved in the law passed in Israel in March 2012: to ban underweight models (with a Body Mass Index[BMI] below 18.5) from walking on runways or being featured in commercials.

The statement from H&M’s Bringevall also said that the women were not photoshopped in the photos, but that they show their natural size. Above, a photo from the Fall 2013 campaign. It is not clear yet which measures H&M plans to take to assess the models it chooses to use for campaigns, and the company will not comment via telephone. It’s refreshing to hear that H&M has acknowledged the importance of body image, which is largely influenced by the women put in magazines and on runways, as a company this large could truly make an impact on the fashion industry — if it takes the right steps.

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Cosplay Pictures for your Saturday

Lots of cool cosplay pictures – Enjoy!

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Artists Will Understand…

For all my artist friends – Did you ever find it cool that of all the most ancient works of man, the earliest and best preserved are the cave paintings?

The burly hunter would stroll in with his fresh kill, all proud and haughty, look at the artist and say -” No one cares about your stupid drawings! Why should I give you some meat for those, what about the exposure you get by having your work on my cave wall?”

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Coolness…

You may be cool, but are you Kate Upton cool where people wait in line to touch your hair or see others touch her hair?

kate upton

 

You may be cool, but are you …

ow

 

 

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Stone-tipped spears predate existence of humans by 85,000 years

Stone-tipped spears predate existence of humans by 85,000 years

By Jennifer Viegas

Digging History

Published November 14, 2013

Discovery News
  • speartip.jpg

    A sample of Gademotta pointed artifacts exhibiting micro- and macrofracture features indicative of projectile weaponry. (PLOS ONE)

Remains of the world’s oldest known stone-tipped throwing spears, described in a new paper, and so ancient that they actually predate the earliest known fossils for our species by 85,000 years.

There are a few possible implications, and both are mind-blowing. The first is that our species could be much older than previously thought, which would forever change the existing human family tree.

The second, and more likely at this point, is that a predecessor species to ours was extremely crafty and clever, making sophisticated tools long before Homo sapiens emerged.

Homo heidelbergensis, aka Heidelberg Man, lived in Africa, Europe and western Asia from at least 600,000 years ago. He clearly got around, and many think this species was the direct ancestor of Homo sapiens in Africa and Neanderthals in Europe and Asia.

The new paper, published in the latest PLoS ONE, focuses on the newly identified stone-tipped spears, which date to 280,000 years ago. They were found at an Ethiopian Stone Age site known as Gademotta.

Sahle, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of California at Berkeley’s Human Evolution Research Center, and his team analyzed the weapons. They determined that the spears were made from obsidian found near the site. The toolmakers had to craft the pointy spearhead shapes and spear shafts. They then needed to attach the points securely to the shafts. Even today, all of this would require skill, concentration and multiple steps.

Could a Steve Jobs-like innovator within the Heidelberg Man set have come up with this useful tool and production process?

Possibly, according to Sahle.

“Technological advances were not necessarily associated with anatomical changes (among Homo species),” he said. “The advances might have started earlier.”

The intelligence needed to create such tools could therefore have predated our present body type. Based on the recreations I’ve seen of Heidelberg Man (and Heidelberg Woman), they did look very much like us. They were known to have been fairly tall and muscular.

As for why innovative tools from this period are known only from this site in Ethiopia, Sahle has some ideas.

“High-quality raw materials were nearby, so those could have allowed for the full expression of technological skills,” he said.

“Second, a bigger population was supported at the site,” he continued. With more individuals around, there would have been a greater chance for the spread of innovative ideas. If there was indeed a Steve Jobs-type in the mix, he would have been able to influence more individuals and perhaps even created a prehistoric spear-making assembly line of sorts.

“Thirdly, there was a mega lake at the site,” Sahle said. “It might have attracted stable occupations there, further fueling technological advances.”

It’s not clear yet what the prehistoric ancestral humans were hunting with the spears. A mishmash of animal remains was found, but the researchers haven’t been able to tease them apart yet.

What is clear is that the spears were thrown from a distance at prey, instead of thrust into victims, Neanderthal-style.

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