John Farrier's Blog Posts

What Can You Do with 100 Pounds of Magnetic Silly Putty?


(Video Link)

The short answer is: have a lot of fun. The crew at Vat19 combined 500 cans of magnetic silly putty to create a 100-pound mound of the stuff. Then they subjected it to several reader suggestions. Hey, Vat19, what would happen if you wrapped it around a car engine, then started that engine?

-via Twisted Sifter


Urgent: Headline Awaited!


(Photo: Shubhra Gupta)

There's dire news from India. The newspaper The Indian Express warns us that "headline awaited." It declared this fact in all eight regional editions, indicating that the entire nation faces this crisis. Blah, blah, blah.

Or, more likely, the editors were unsure who was going to win the national election on that day. It is a less erroneous headline than the infamous "Dewey Defeats Truman" from the 1952 US Presidential election.

(Photo: Harry S. Truman Museum)

-via Jonah Goldberg


This Object Is, Believe It or Not, A Lounge Chair

The Italian furniture maker and retailer Gufram released this chair, the Pratone, in 1972. It lauds the Pratone as “light years away from the usual types of middle-class interior design of the” 1970s and “an icon of the anti-design revolution,” which is probably true, and possibly complimentary. If you’ve ever wanted to experience life as a miniaturized human in a world of Astroturf, this would help.

-via NotCot


The Personal Space Dress Keeps People from Getting too Close to You on Public Transportation

Are people getting just a bit too close to you while you’re on the bus or train? Last year we saw a design student in Singapore try to solve that problem with a spike-covered vest. Kathleen Marie McDermott, an artist and designer in Hong Kong, took a different approach.


(Video Link

The Personal Space Dress has proximity sensors that detect when someone or something has come too close to the wearer. They expand the folds of the dress, pushing out the border to a more comfortable distance.

It’s part of series of projects called Urban Armor. These are electronic devices that address the experiences of women in public spaces. They’re open source, so you can download the source code and instructions for free.

I’m confident that if I wore this dress, people would give me a wide berth.

-via Huffington Post


Petition to Let Cinderella Wear Flats

Disney’s 1950 animated movie Cinderella has been an enduring success for more than six decades. So the company has prudently decided to remake the film and make even more money. This time, it will be a live-action movie released in 2015. The teaser trailer consists entirely of a rolling shot of Cinderella’s famous glass slipper.


(Video Link)

Lisa Wade of Sociological Images noticed something about the shoe: the heel is ridiculously high. It’s much, much higher than the heel in the 1950 movie.


How would anyone walk in this thing?

It inspires Jia Tolentino of The Hairpin to suggest:

I like the remake where the magic is not that the shoe fits but that it looks super awesome and it's comfortable as hell, and Cinderella is like "Prince, thank you so much for giving me my shoe back, I'll call you next weekend if I have time."


The 100+ Best Pieces of Longform Journalism


(Photo: Ian Lamont)

There’s putting words on paper, there’s writing, and a world of difference between them. Longform journalism requires good writing and, specifically, good storytelling. Conor Friedersdorf of The Atlantic reads a lot of it. He’s assembled a list of more than 100 longform pieces published last year that he considers to be the best. It’s sorted into several categories, including personal essays, nature, food, and sports. There are contributions from The New Republic, the Washington Post, Grantland, Mental Floss, and many other sources. Friedersdorf, apparently, reads very widely.


The most interesting piece that I found on the list is this article by Mike Dash in Smithsonian. We've previously mentioned it. The article describes Soviet geologists discovering in 1978 a Russian family that had been living in complete isolation for 42 years in a wilderness in Siberia. Dash describes them:

The Lykov children knew there were places called cities where humans lived crammed together in tall buildings. They had heard there were countries other than Russia. But such concepts were no more than abstractions to them. Their only reading matter was prayer books and an ancient family Bible. Akulina had used the gospels to teach her children to read and write, using sharpened birch sticks dipped into honeysuckle juice as pen and ink. When Agafia was shown a picture of a horse, she recognized it from her mother’s Bible stories. “Look, papa,” she exclaimed. “A steed!”

-via Kottke


Classic Paintings of Women Photoshopped to Look Like Fashion Models

Western aesthetic traditions did not always demand that women, to be icons of beauty, must fit into size 0 outfits. Past centuries of female nudes in Western art show an acceptance of a few healthy pounds.

Of course, the women depicted in fashion magazines do not always themselves fit into such tiny sizes. They are photoshopped that way, often ridiculously. To mock this tendency, Lauren Wade, a photographic editor, altered eight classic beauties, such as Sandro Botticelli’s Venus pictured above, in the manner of the fashion publishing industry. You can view them all here.

Content warning: artistic nudity (but nothing prurient).

-via Design Boom


Smooth Move: Boy Keeps a Foul Ball, Impresses a Girl Anyway

You have to watch very carefully, but it's there. This boy knows how to charm the ladies.

This is a scene from a recent baseball game between the Texas Rangers and the Toronto Blue Jays. The boy catches a foul ball. It appears that he then gallantly offers the trophy to a pretty young lady behind him. But he actually palms that ball and hands the girl a non-game ball that he already had.

Very good. The Padawan has become the Master.

You can watch the full video here.


For Sale: Dracula's Castle


(Photo: Jason Rogers)

Now's your chance to buy a stake in Dracula's castle! Bran Castle in Romania, which has existed in various forms since the Thirteenth Century, is for sale. Prince Vlad the Impaler (1431-c.1476), the source of the Dracula legend, was imprisoned there for two months.

Much later, Bran Castle was the property of the Romanian royal family. In 1948, the royal family was stripped of its property and driven out of the country. After the collapse of the Ceausescu regime, Romania returned the castle to members of the royal family. Those three property holders are now elderly and would like to turn Bran Castle over to someone else. Mark Meyer, a representative of the sellers, described the possible future of the castle:

“Archduke Dominic and his family care very much for the castle, and it’s in far better shape now than it was when run by the government,” says Meyer. “The aim, though, is to take the whole thing a stage further, re-route the road and make Bran a destination, the kind of place people will stay for two or three days.”

There’s enough land to build a small hotel, he adds. “And we’re also installing a glass elevator that will lead to a tunnel in the mountain, with a light show featuring Dracula and the whole history of the place.

“That’s why we’d like whoever buys the castle to continue running it as a tourist destination. This isn’t just a national monument, it’s the largest and most significant attraction in Romania.”

Would you like to live in Dracula's castle?

-via Ace of Spades HQ


Law and Order: Game of Thrones


(Video Link)

In the criminal justice system of the Seven Kingdoms, the Crown is represented by two separate yet equally important groups: the City Watch, which investigates crimes and the Tribunal which prosecutes the offenders. These are their stories.

George R.R. Martin's police procedural show is wowing audiences with crime stories ripped from the headlines and compelling characters such as Det. Jaime Lannister.

Double Prizes Media made this mashup of Game of Thrones and Law & Order: SVU. Watch the opening credits and a gripping courtroom scene.

Warning: you will encounter spoilers if you're not current on Game of Thrones.

-via io9


Kana:takon--A Tiny Piece of Canada Attached to the United States

Pictured above is the border between the United States and Canada. To the south, you see the State of New York. To the north, you see the provinces of Quebec and Ontario. You'll notice that there's a slice of land north of the border that is not attached by land to Canada. Let's take a closer look.

(Images: Google Maps)

This exclave is called Kana:takon. It's less than a square mile in area. The story of how it ended up Canadian instead of American goes back to the 1783 Treaty of Paris, the first attempt to define the boundaries of the nascent United States of America. That treaty's lengthy description of the border said that this area would be divided by the middle of the St. Lawrence River to the 45°N line of latitude.

These were decisions made by people with limited knowledge of the actual geography and, by modern standards, inadequate surveying equipment. As I've mentioned previously, such problems led the United States to accidentally build a fort in Canada.

The Great Lakes and the St. Lawrence River have numerous islands. It was not always clear from the Treaty of Paris which islands belonged to which nation. But boundary commissions worked during the 1830s and resolved the outstanding issues by the 1842 Webster-Ashburton Treaty. St. Regis, as Kana:takon was known at the time, would remain Canadian.

The entire territory is part of a Mohawk Native American/First Nations community that straddles the US-Canadian border. Members of that nation cross the international border freely because the 1794 Jay Treaty permits them to do so:

It is agreed that it shall at all Times be free to His Majesty's Subjects, and to the Citizens of the United States, and also to the Indians dwelling on either side of the said Boundary Line freely to pass and repass by Land, or Inland Navigation, into the respective Territories and Countries of the Two Parties on the Continent of America (the Country within the Limits of the Hudson's Bay Company only excepted) and to navigate all the Lakes, Rivers, and waters thereof, and freely to carry on trade and commerce with each other.


(Photos: Mohawk Council of Akwesasne)

Kana:takon is a thriving community with its own school, homes, and businesses. It's easy to walk or drive into the United States. But though it's part of Canada, residents must drive through the United States to get to Canada.


Pockets and Women's Fashions

I carry a lot in my pockets and on my utility belt. It would drive me nuts to have to deal with the pocket problems that modern fashion presents to women.

My wife informs me that many items of women's clothing include not only tiny, inadequate pockets, but fake pockets. Fake! That would fill me with rage.

I wouldn't mind having a marsupial pouch, as Chris Hallbeck of Minimumble suggests. That would let me carry even more gear!


Stretched Pikachu Hide

A hunter may stretch an animal hide on a wooden rack to prepare it for further processing or for permanent display, such as this polar bear hide pictured below:

(Photo: Mike Beauregard)

Instructables member mosspossum explains that, "as an adult I don't hunt alot but my kids are avid Pokemon hunters. So I figured why not?" Indeed, this is the right way to show your support for your children's hobby.

He cut up Pikachu (hopefully getting some good meat), prepared the hide, and attached it to a ring of branches. You can find his instructions here, which are presumably applicable with other Pokémon.


A Light Switch for a Dog

The lady in the picture with the pink shirt is Heleen. She has limited mobility. Her service dog manages many of her daily tasks.

Heleen owns a lamp with a floor switch. Neither she nor the dog can operate it easily. So some of her friends built a solution: a huge light switch. You can find a basic description of it in English at Instructables or a lengthy description in German here. They used a laser cutter to make the wood components. There's a concrete block in the bottom to prevent it from tipping over.

Now when Heleen needs to turn on or off the light, she says, "Veritas" and the dog will tap the on/off lever.


(Video Link)


20,000 Bees Swarm a College Student's Car


(Video Link)

George Neal, 21, of Portsmouth, Hampshire, UK, owns a Nissan Micra. But for a while on Friday, a huge swarm of bees was in undisputed possession of it. A young queen searching for a good place to spawn a colony settled into the one of his wheel wells. About 20,000 of her friends joined her, covering much of the car. Rory Edwards, Neal's friend and the man who shot this video, cracked:

Although none of us are allergic, we thought George probably would not want his car covered in a swarm of bees. He did literally have a bee in his bonnet though.

Later, a professional beekeeper removed the queen and the colony with her.

-via Nerdcore


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Profile for John Farrier

  • Member Since 2012/08/04


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