Laughter Yoga: Hit play or go to Link [YouTube]
Here’s another clip: Link [YouTube]
Apparently, there is medical benefit to laughing like a crazed maniac. Here’s Yogi Ramesh showing the techniques to laughter yoga.

Here’s a cool artwork by Korean artist Zinoo Park: a Coca Cola teapot. See more here: Link

Here’s an outdoor activity for you: urban camping! Found at The West Virginia Surf Report.
This is one of my favorite list on Wikipedia: The Worst Movies Ever, which details movies that "have achieved a significant level of infamy through critical and popular consensus as being among the worst films ever made." Oh, yeah!
Of particular significance is this film, called "Manos" The Hands of Fate (1966), made by an El Paso fertilizer salesman Hal Warren [wiki], who made the film on a bet.
Dalton Ross of Entertainment Weekly wrote an in-depth yet entertaining article on why Manos The Hands of Fate sucks the big one:
During the conversation, Warren boasted that making a movie wasn’t so hard. Anybody could make a movie. Heck, even he could make one. Warren bet Silliphant that he could take a film all the way from conception to completion. Tellingly, the first outline for his master script was written right then and there on napkins. The story was standard B-grade horror — family (husband Michael, wife Margaret, and daughter Debbie) gets lost en route to a vacation and stumbles upon a horrifying fate. Less standard, however, was a half-man, half-goat character named Torgo, or the mysterious cult leader known simply as the Master who walked around sporting a robe with giant red hands on it. Perhaps the film’s first sign of ineptitude was the title itself, Manos: The Hands of Fate, which translates a tad redundantly to Hands: The Hands of Fate.

Double Mona Lisa after Warhol, Vik Muniz (1999)
Brazilian avant-garde artist Vik Muniz [wiki] created this Double Mona Lisa, inspired by a black-and-white version by Andy Warhol, out of peanut butter and jelly!
Actually, Muniz has created other artwork using delicious media, like chocolate syrup.
Last month, the Kennedy Space Center opened the Shuttle Launch Experience, an amusement-park ride that allows people to experience the feeling of a space shuttle liftoff:
The $60 million project employs seat rumblers and shakers that rattle riders through the turbulent main engine start, the firing of the solid rocket boosters and then their separation.
Air bags in each seat sink and rise to capture the sensation of extreme acceleration. The shuttle’s windshield, an 84-inch high-def screen, is enveloped in fire when the external tanks separate.
Inside the capsule, riders are subject to an onslaught of 13-channel sound, from the roar of the engines to the commander barking instructions. Low-frequency sound vibrates the riders’ chests, evoking the feeling of being unable to breathe. [...]
According to Rogers, some astronauts who have experienced the exhibit have reported it to be more realistic than some of NASA’s and the military’s own training simulators.
Here’s a crazy Korean rope-walking performance. The fun starts at mark 00:30 – what happened? You’ve got to see it to find out but here’s a hint: he probably can’t have children anymore.
Link [YouTube]
Here’s life imitating Star Trek:
A team of Canadian surgeons got a shock when the patient they were operating on began shedding dark greenish-black blood, the Lancet reports.
The man emulated Star Trek’s Mr Spock – the Enterprise’s science officer who supposedly had green Vulcan blood.
In this case, the unusual colour of the 42-year-old’s blood was down to the migraine medication he was taking.
Link – Thanks David R!
Wireless power transfer over two-meter distance, from the coil on the left to the coil on the right, where it powers a 60W light bulb. Members of the team that performed the experiment are obstructing the direct line of sight between the coils; front row: Peter Fisher (left) and Robert Moffatt; second row: Marin Soljacic; third row: Andre Kurs (left), John Joannopoulos and Aristeidis Karalis. Photo / Aristeidis Karalis
A team of scientists from MIT demonstrated a way to send electricity through the air, without wires:
Realizing their recent theoretical prediction, they were able to light a 60W light bulb from a power source seven feet (more than two meters) away; there was no physical connection between the source and the appliance. The MIT team refers to its concept as "WiTricity" (as in wireless electricity).
Link – Thanks sickb*stard!
Either place this shower curtain facing away from the tub as a funny, decorative piece. Or, face it into the tub. When your “victim” takes a shower and pulls the curtain closed, they will get a frightening surprise. A hilarious prank to play on unsuspecting guests!
Link -via J-Walk Blog
World Ocean Day has been celebrated on June 8 since 1992. The Ocean Project has a list of resources for learning more about the ocean and how important it is to all of us.
Created in 1992 at the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro – although not yet officially designated by the United Nations – World Ocean Day is an opportunity each year to celebrate our world ocean and our personal connection to the sea. The Ocean Project, working closely with the World Ocean Network, helps each year to coordinate events and activities with aquariums, zoos, museums, conservation organizations, universities, schools, businesses.
Link -via the Presurfer
We’re very excited to announce a new collaboration with Boing Boing, one of the largest and neatest blogs in the world and an on-going source of inspiration for Neatorama. Boing Boing, which started as a zine in 1988 by Mark Frauenfelder and Carla Sinclair, became a blog in 2000. Since then, three more regular authors joined the team: Cory Doctorow, David Pescovitz, and Xeni Jardin. From its beginning, Boing Boing has chronicled all sorts of strange, beautiful, and interesting things on the Web. It’s an honor to cover our pal Boing Boing and feature a weekly digest of the interesting posts from the world’s best blog. So, without further ado, here are some of the "neatest" posts on Boing Boing for the last 7 days (Note: Link in bolded title are to Boing Boing’s posts): Doo Sung Yoo’s Robotic Cow Tongues Artist Doo Sung Yoo’s artwork, titled "lie," involves putting together some cybernetic cow tongues that flail about aimlessly. Link (click on the picture to see the .m4v video) If you think that’s strange, he also made a robotic pig stomach, titled "indigestion." Link Ceramic "Replacement" Head for the Decapitated At a dig in La Tiza, Peru, archaeologists found decapitated skeleton with a ceramic jar in lieu of a head! The archaeologist also noted that the head jar is painted with the reversible image of a human face that can be seen right-side up or upside down, suggesting that the jar might have been meant as a substitute for the victim’s missing head. "The La Tiza head jar was a rather literal replacement and reflects the Nasca belief that a person needed to have a head when he entered the afterlife," Conlee said. Lost Arcade Games of the Soviet Union Four students at the Moscow State Technical University started a labor of love: restoring old and forgotten arcade games of the Soviet Union. From the late ’70s to the early ’90s, Soviet military factories produced some 70 different video game models. Based largely (and crudely) on early Japanese designs, the games were distributed — in the words of one military manual — for the purposes of "entertainment and active leisure, as well as the development of visual-estimation abilities." Wired has the story: Link Steam Trek: Steampunk Star Trek (with lots of steampunk links referenced in the post) Here’s a fantastic steampunk Star Trek parody, called "Steam Trek," made in 1994 by the Ad Hoc Film Society and directed by Dennis Sisterson. Yarr! Depp Not Photogenic in Pirate Cookie First it was Tweety and Bugs Bunny popsicles that don’t look like their characters, now the mavericks at Boing Boing are crusading against … bad cookies! Like this one: a Pirate cookie that doesn’t look like Johnny Depp. Link Do The Right Thing with Sesame Street Toys This is what the Internet is for: a parody of Do The Right Thing [wiki], Spike Lee’s 1989 movie, made with Fisher-Price Sesame Street toys. Link [YouTube] Goatse London 2012 Olympics Logo After people were shocked by the horrible, universally panned, and even epilepsy-inducing London 2012 Olympics logo was revealed, BBC held a contest where users can submit their own creation. Someone snuck this one in, a (hence yanked) goatse-inspired London 2012 Olympics Logo: Link Bradbury: Fahrenheit 451 Not about Censorship Everything you’ve learned in high school about Fahrenheit 451 was wrong, according to its author Ray Bradbury: Fahrenheit 451 is not, he says firmly, a story about government censorship. Nor was it a response to Senator Joseph McCarthy, whose investigations had already instilled fear and stifled the creativity of thousands. This, despite the fact that reviews, critiques and essays over the decades say that is precisely what it is all about. Even Bradbury’s authorized biographer, Sam Weller, in The Bradbury Chronicles, refers to Fahrenheit 451 as a book about censorship. Bradbury, a man living in the creative and industrial center of reality TV and one-hour dramas, says it is, in fact, a story about how television destroys interest in reading literature. This creepy robot, called CB2 (Child-Robot with Biometric Body), is designed to emulate the physical abilities of a 2-year-old toddler. A really, really creepy toddler. If you guess "Japan" – you’d be right! Link (with YouTube video goodness) Here’s a step by step guide on how to kiss someone passionately, courtesy of VideoJug. Like how to French Kiss: Step 5, Advanced Techniques: French Kissing. This style of kissing is not invented by the French, although they’re probably quite good at it. [...] It’s perhaps best described by what you should not do: You should try to avoid swirling your tongue aggressively like an electric eel caught in a fishing net. But equally you shouldn’t let your entire tongue go completely limp … Sadly, many of you geeks probably won’t have the chance to put it into practice. Link [VideoJug] No girlfriend? No one to kiss? Then maybe you can hunt one down by making your very own M41-A Pulse Rifle like in the movie Aliens. Anyhow, You’ll probably have the time to make one: Link They’re making a live-action version of Japanese anime Speed Racer (by the Wachowski bros. of the Matrix-fame), and USA Today has got a pic of the car. 3-Year-Old Kid Solves Rubik’s Cube in <2 Min! This Chinese girl is just 3 years old, and she can already kick my butt in solving a Rubik’s cube! This video shows her solving the darned thing in under 2 minutes. Link [YouTube] Kaden Harris of Eccentric Genius creates "unconventional contrivances for the home and office." Like, for example, a desktop catapult, trebuchet, guillotine. Some are so strange they’re indescribable. Like this thing shown on the left, called "The P’gaackan Discombobulator." What is it? Who knows! It’s fantastic nonetheless. For more of the web’s best links, definitely check out the world’s best blog: Boing Boing.
(Photo:Alexander Zaitchik)
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Here’s a VideoSift collective (user-created groups of videos) on some
For more the web’s most interesting videos, check out: VideoSift. |
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Master physicist Werner Heisenberg was one of two things: the mastermind behind the Nazi atomic bomb project, or the hero who intentionally thwarted it.
Werner Heisenberg [wiki] was born in Würzburg, Germany, on December 5, 1901, and from birth, he seemed destined to become a concert pianist. With help from his mother, Anna, Werner was reading sheet music by age 4 and conquering the masterworks on the family’s piano by the time he was 15. But Heisenberg’s musical aspirations were slowly sabotaged by the family’s book collection. His father, Albert, was a professor of Greek at the University of Munich, and Werner took a liking to rummaging through his dad’s bookshelves. Before long, the young Heisenberg decided he preferred Archimedes to Mozart, and science replaced music as his passion.
Werner spent plenty of time contemplating the classics, but that wasn’t the only trait he inherited from his father. In a novel effort to foster spirit of competition in his children, Albert regularly goaded Werner and his older brother into beating the tar out of each other. And though Heisenberg may have emerged from his eccentric childhood more than a little bruised, he also emerged disciplined, competitive, and blessed with a healthy dose of arrogance. Given his talents, Werner could have had a bright future – if not for the outbreak of World War I. At some point during those long years leading up to Germany’s defeat, and the even longer years of chaos that followed, Heisenberg became disillusioned with all things non-German. He and his peers were understandably anxious to help the nation emerge from the degradation that followed the war, but they also believed Germany was destined to be the strongest force in Europe. So when communist forces from Russia tried to pacify the country, Heisenberg was there, rioting with his friends in the streets. Despite his political activism, Heisenberg found time to earn a Ph.D. in physics from the University of Munich. (Perhaps taking a cue from his own life, his thesis was on the mathematics of turbulence.) He then went on to study atomic theory, but not in a by-the-book sort of way. Heisenberg always leaned away from classical physics. Instead, his intuition compelled him to question traditional thought. This was evident even in his early work, which focused on how atoms behave in a magnetic field. Classical theory predicted that electrons, neutrons, and protons would follow certain paths as they bailed out of a shattered atom, though most physicists couldn’t find a way to verify this claim. Part of the problem was realizing that nature is a world of chaos, not the smooth and beautiful creature scientists had always imagined. Heisenberg was one of the first to accept this new idea. His early work involved trying to apply mathematics to quanta of energy, an intimidating course of study now known as quantum theory. Although his initial attempts did not successfully prove the chaos of atoms, Heisenberg’s intuition was leading him away from traditional physics and closer to a whole new realm of thinking. The Most Important Bout of Hay Fever in History Throughout the early 1920s, Heisenberg’s reputation as a top-notch physicist spread, eventually landing him a dream job as a research associate with Danish science-superhero Niels Bohr in 1924. Bohr had already collected a Nobel Prize two years earlier and established himself as the epicenter of the physics revolution. In fact, he was half-jokingly referred to as the Pope of the field. Together, Bohr and Heisenberg formed the original odd couple. Heisenberg was quietly stubborn, while Bohr was more of a nerdy antagonist. In fact, Bohr was known to start physics discussions that famously reduced colleagues to tears. But Heisenberg took Bohr’s outbursts in stride. Most notably, he proved unflappable when Bohr challenged him to describe how subatomic particles worked mathematically. Because both men knew no one had ever come close to solving the problem, it was the physics equivalent of a double-dog dare. And Heisenberg rose to the occasion. In May of 1925, Heisenberg came down with what might be the most important attack of hay fever in history. Seeking relief from sneezing, he holed up in Helgoland, a speck of land in the North Sea. While the change of atmosphere may not have cured his allergies, it did get him away from Bohr’s pestering. And there, he rewrote the book on physics. Let’s Get Physical Heisenberg’s response to Bohr’s atomic challenge ultimately became the cornerstone of quantum physics. After years of questioning the determinism view of the universe that had ruled science for the past two millennia, Heisenberg was finally able to throw a little chaos into the mix. According to classical theory, if you knew exactly what a certain group of atoms was up to at any given instant, you could (with the right equation and enough brainpower to solve it) predict exactly what those atoms would be doing a million years in the future. But Heisenberg tore that idea apart using a complex bit of mathematics called matrix algebra. He proved that even if you know where a particle is, you can’t predict where it’s going; and if you know where it’s going, you no longer know where it is. Ultimately, the precise equations Bohr had challenged Heisenberg to come up with could never be found, and 2,000 years of determinism were suddenly dead. Heisenberg’s new theory was dubbed the Uncertainty Principle [wiki], and physicist despised it. With precision declared impossible, scientists suddenly found themselves stuck expressing outcomes in odds like cheap Vegas bookies. Reason and logic were losing cards in Heisenberg’s new game. Despite the frustration it brought his peers, Heisenberg’s Uncertainty Principle survived every shot aimed at it. Eventually, it was adopted by everyone in the physics community—with the exception of Albert Einstein. Mocking the theory’s reliance on probability, Einstein quipped, "God does not play dice with the Universe!" In response, Pope Bohr laughingly suggested Einstein should stop telling God what to do. Heisenberg won the day, as well as the 1932 Nobel Prize. Mama’s Gonna Make Everything All Right While Heisenberg was taking victory laps on the lecture circuit, a new power was rising in Germany. Adolf Hitler was steering the world toward another war, and& – one by one – physicists with Jewish ancestry were leaving Germany and Italy behind. Ignoring pleas from his friends to leave, the patriotic Heisenberg clung to the idea that he could help his homeland. He also believed Hitler might not be as bad as he seemed. It didn’t take long for that illusion to wear thin, though. Heisenberg was pegged a Jewish sympathizer for his adherence to the "Jewish physics" of Albert Einstein and Niels Bohr. In fact, threats to Heisenberg’s safety became so severe that Heisenberg’s mother stepped in on his behalf. In an attempt to pull some strings for her son, Mrs. Heisenberg contacted the mother of Gestapo chief Heinrich Himmler and expressed her concern for her dear Werner. Clearly, neither woman fully understood exactly what Heinrich did for a living, and word of Mrs. Heisenberg’s attempt to protect her son quickly reached the Reich. The physicist was now officially suspected of harboring ties to Jewish dissidents, and he was hauled into Gestapo headquarters for questioning. Soon after, he was "recruited" to help the Nazis build a nuclear bomb. The Other Uncertainty Principle
Because Heisenberg was a forced participant in the Uranium club, as the Nazi bomb project was called, no one knows what his intentions there really were. Virtually all aspects of his involvement can be interpreted multiple ways. But the most notorious example of this was Heisenberg’s 1941 trip to occupied Copenhagen to visit Niels Bohr. When Heisenberg arrived, Bohr assumed his friend was trying to lure him into blabbing Allied secrets. Instead, Heisenberg encouraged Bohr to stop his atomic research. It’s likely Heisenberg was secretly trying to warn Bohr that the Nazis were well on their way to building a bomb, but Bohr thought it was Heisenberg’s strategic attempt to limit Allied military research. Sitting in an occupied country, Bohr found this idea particularly distasteful, and a bitter argument ensued. The encounter snapped the physicists’ friendship (though it also provided the plot for the Tony Award-winning 2000 play, "Copenhagen"). Following the meeting, Bohn warned the Allies that Heisenberg was working on an atomic bomb for Hitler. The tip-off launched a frantic spy campaign, which escalated to the point that the United States and Britain both entertained plans to assassinate Heisenberg. In reality, the Allies had little to fear. Heisenberg told the Nazis that Germany didn’t have access to enough uranium for an atomic bomb, conveniently overestimating (by a huge margin) the amount needed. It’s possible he made an honest mistake in his calculations, but German documents disclosed after the war reveal the Nazis already suspected Heisenberg of intentionally leading the program astray. The truth will never be known for sure—a fitting riddle for the man who removed certainty from the universe. Coming Into His Own After the war (and with the Nazi agenda out of the picture), Heisenberg’s prestige soared, which did a lot to salvage the reputation of German science. In that respect, Heisenberg fulfilled his dream of saving a small portion of his beloved homeland. As the man behind the Uncertainty Principle, he continued to be recognized. During the Cold War, people loved hearing that atomic scientists didn’t have all the answers. In the psychedelic 1960s, they were just as happy to know there were some really far-out things happening in the universe. And, of course, there was the growing opinion that Heisenberg had saved the world from Hitler. (In the late 1930s, Heisenberg referred to the Nazis as a "spreading rot" – a phrase that would save him from much public scrutiny after the war.) Despite numerous questions, Heisenberg never gave a straight answer to why he stayed in Germany. His supporters suggest that Heisenberg never would admit to betraying his homeland by sabotaging its military program, so his silence was the only answer he could reasonably give. Throughout the 1950s, Heisenberg spent his time doing exactly what Einstein did at the end of his life – seeking a single set of equations that would describe every force in the universe. He even announced success at one point, though by late in the decade, it was clear that his theory was incorrect. Half a century later, this "Unified Field Theory" remains the great, as yet unclaimed, prize in all of physics. In 1973, Werner Heisenberg was diagnosed with cancer. The disease apparently went into remission, but returned two short years later. He died in Munich on February 1, 1976. His unofficial epitaph is a fitting reflection of the Uncertainty Principle. It states, "He lies somewhere here." |
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The article above, written by William S. Kirby, titled "A Bomb, A Qualm, and One Overprotective Mom: The Unpredictable Life of Werner Heisenberg" is reprinted with permission from mental_floss magazine (Jan-Feb 2006 issue). Don’t forget to feed your brain, subscribe to the magazine and visit mental_floss‘ extremely entertaining website and blog! |
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What do you get when you cross a Flintstones car with a Czech Skoda? This yaba-dabba-do-tastic ca with real tree trunk logs as wheels! Link – via Spluch
At YesButNoButYes, here’s a neat collection of "ninja animals" video clips (don’t miss the Black Belt Monkey!)
Link – via Miss Cellania
Here’s a neat music video "Typical" by the band Mute Math. The whole thing was made backwards!
Link [YouTube]
Ah, movie merchandise tie-ins… Here’s one for the upcoming Transformers movie, a Mr. Potato Head Transformers: Link – via smidigt
Found: the oldest shoe ever. Estimated to be over 3,000 years old!
We first believed that the shoe was only 1000 years old, but to our great surprise the analysis of the leather showed it to be 3,400 years old, says Oppland County Archaeologist Espen Finstad to Aftenposten. [...]
The shoe therefore dates back to old bronze age, roughly from 1800 to 1100 years before Christ.
Link – via Scribal Terror
The Potato Days festival in Barnesville, Minnesota has this strange event: mashed potato wrestling.
Jump into a giant pool of mashed potato and wrestle away!
Link [YouTube]
For more Bizarro goodness, visit Dan Piraro’s website: Bizarro
