Some signs are just hilarious...

Something on the lighter side. Most signs around the world sort of co-incide with matching colours, shapes and wording - but then there are the many confusing, weird, bizarre signs, directions and instructions. 

Via Amaze | Image: Hywel Williams / Duck riders ahead! / CC BY-SA 2.0


We Might Be Living Longer Than We Should

Everybody wants to live a long, healthy life and with modern medicine, we are able to do that. Supplements, enhancements, and other medical breakthroughs that fight disease and prolong our lives are pushing our average lifespans further up. But are we putting too much focus on longevity?

Though we live longer, the implications that it has on society have been neglected or at the very least, unanticipated.

Because more people live longer, younger generations will have to support that aging population. Unless those people prepared in advance for retirement, the onus is entirely left to the succeeding generations to support their parents and grandparents.

What are the consequences for society if average life expectancy rises to 100 years, or even more? We face the prospect of an army of centenarians cared for by poorly paid immigrants. The children of these centenarians can expect to work well into their 70s, or even 80s. The world of work will alter drastically, with diminishing opportunities for the young.

(Image credit: Matthew Bennett/Unsplash)

More than that, the vision that many older generations have about their retirement years is one where they can simply enjoy their lives and spend their hard-earned money on their bucket list. They want a retirement that is "well-funded, active, and packed with experience."

But this vision of aging is wishful thinking. Many now face an old age in which the final years are spent in nursing homes. There are several societal reasons for this: increased longevity, the demise of the multi-generational extended family, and the contemporary obsession with safety.

(Image credit: sk/Unsplash)


The Sculpture That Looks Like A Real-Life Cartoon



Tom Scott visits Gibbs Farm in New Zealand, which is a huge private sculpture exhibit. The most famous work there is Horizons by Neil Dawson, a giant illusion that looks like a simple drawing. But this short video is more about Gibbs Farm than any any one piece of art. It's a unique place, that's for sure!  


When Easter Egg Trees Were A Thing in America

Decorating trees with colorful eggs was once a trend and almost became an American tradition. Brought to the US by German immigrants, it is a symbol of fertility and good luck.

However, the tradition was discontinued as it is much easier to simply put eggs in a basket than adorn a bare tree with painted eggshells. In Europe, it's a different story as people still hang eggs on trees.

Until recently, one spectacular example of an ostereierbaum ruled them all. In Saalfeld, Germany, one local couple, Volker and Christa Kraft, decorated their home garden’s massive apple tree with tens of thousands of decorated eggshells.

(Image credit: AndrewPoison/Wikimedia Commons)


The Fish by PES



The latest stop-motion masterpiece from PES, The Fish, illustrates what is happening to the marine ecosystem by showing plastic garbage turning into a fish. It's an ad for the Protect Paradise project, created for Earth Day.  -via Laughing Squid


Co-op Gaming Results in Better Office Performance?

It turns out having fun and bonding with your coworkers by playing video games, can increase productivity inside the office, researchers from Brigham Young University (BYU) found out in their study.

...newly-formed work teams experienced a 20 percent increase in productivity on subsequent tasks after playing video games together for just 45 minutes. The study, published in AIS Transactions on Human-Computer Interaction, adds to a growing body of literature finding positive outcomes of team video gaming.
“To see that big of a jump — especially for the amount of time they played — was a little shocking,” said co-author and BYU associate professor Greg Anderson. “Companies are spending thousands and thousands of dollars on team-building activities, and I’m thinking, go buy an Xbox.”

The only downside to this research, as the researchers pointed out, is that this experiment was conducted to newly-formed teams on which members knew nothing about each other.

(Image Credit: Gabe Mayberry / BYU Photo)


“Notice Me, Sen-Pie!”: McDonald’s Japan Releases Bacon Potato “Pie-sen”

Originating from the word “senpai” (which means “senior” in the Japanese language), the word “paisen” is a slang term for senpai. It is made by switching the two syllables.

McDonald’s Japan rebranded their bacon and potato pie, and there came the Bacon Potato PieSen.

Despite your sen-pie’s crusty outer layer, he has a warm, creamy centre made up of smoky bacon, creamy sauce and potato.
The Piesen will disappear around the middle of May, so let's hope he notices us before then!

Yum!

(Image Credit: McDonald’s Japan / Grape Japan)


Behind The Measles Outbreak in New York

Almost two weeks ago, the measles outbreak in New York became a public health emergency which mandates everyone in the city to get vaccinated. But the story stretches far back in 2018, from people visiting New York City who had been exposed to the disease.

Of course, recently the growing anti-vaxxer movement has been vehemently opposing MMR vaccination on the grounds that these vaccines can cause health complications, in particular the development of autism.

But the declaration from the NYC mayor brings to our attention the seriousness of the matter and why people should get vaccinated to prevent epidemics and more public health concerns from emerging.

More of this on NYU.

(Image credit: huntlh/Pixabay)


Experiencing Musical “Chills”

Have you experienced getting goosebumps from a certain part of the song that you’ve heard? It may be a certain pitch, a certain reverb, or a certain tune that would move you to tears or would make you laugh or would send shivers down your spine. This is emotional arousal through music. Through this study, the researchers proved that these chills were real, although this experience is won’t work for everyone.

In their research titled, “The Rewarding Aspects of Music Listening Are Related to Degree of Emotional Arousal,” Valorie N. Salimpoor and company stated that:

The intensity of pleasure experienced from music listening has lead some researchers to suggest that it may act upon the dopamine reward system of the brain, which is implicated in processing highly rewarding stimuli such as cocaine and amphetamines, food, and playing videogames. The assumption that music may also involve this system is largely based on brain imaging findings that have found increasing blood flow or oxygenation to striatal regions of the brain that are implicated in reward…
Assessment of emotional responses to music, particularly the ability for music to induce highly pleasurable feelings, has become a topic of interest to music researchers with practical implications for music composition, therapy, and marketing. The present data provide a direct link between emotions and pleasure in music listening, and reveal new avenues for research to examine whether strongly felt emotions can be rewarding in themselves in the absence of a physically tangible reward or a specific functional goal.

See more of this study at plos.org

Via Futility Closet

(Image Credit: Malte Wingen / Unsplash)


Secrets of Effective Parenting: Disciplining Without Shouting

Parents have a difficult time raising up our children. Oftentimes, they tend to let anger and frustration get the best of them, and then they channel that anger and frustration to their very own kids. This leads the parents to shout at their kids and say hurtful words to them. This heavily affects the children mentally and emotionally, as some researches would say. This makes them more aggressive, and these children would have violent tendencies in the future. In other words, shouting is bad.

So is there an alternative to shouting? Hopefully, yes. Readers of Goats and Soda, NPR’s blog focused on health and “all sorts of development around the world”, submit over 300 tips and tricks on how to discipline the kids without having to shout at them. Some of these tips are busting out the “Woofie”, giving the kids “The Look”, and going into “Grandma Mode.”

Why don’t you give it a look?

(Image Credit: Malaka Gharib/ NPR)


He Let the Dog Watch

Franklin Hardy managed to pull us in several directions emotionally with one Tweet. First there was sadness, then horror, then relief, then laughter. Then, of course, there was curiosity. What kind of diagnosis did the dog mistakenly have? Is the dog alright? And how did the dog feel about this misadventure? This response may have pegged it best.

You can read the entire Twitter thread here. -via Metafilter


The Photography Pioneer Who Faked His Own Death



In the 1830s, several people incependently figured out how to capture images permanently -which we call photography. Hippolyte Bayard did it in France, but got very little notice. Here's his story, including how he produced the first staged fake photo, in which he showed his own dead body. -via Digg


The Ancestor of Modern Motorized Scooter

Given the booming popularity of rideshare electric scooter in many U.S. cities, you'd be forgiven if you think that motorized kick scooter is a relatively new invention. In actuality, they've been around for over a century:

The Online Bike Museum explains that the Autoped, the first mass-produced motorized scooter ride in the U.S., was “[e]ssentially an enlarged child’s scooter with an engine mounted over the front wheel.” Though some reports claimed it could reach speeds of 35 miles per hour, the steering column operated the clutch and brake, which the museum noted made the ride “unsteady” when it pushed 20 mph. Later, a battery-operated version of the Autoped was made available when the Everready Battery Company bought the outfit.
The concept of the scooter stretches back at least a century before to 1817 and Baron Karl von Drais de Sauerbrun of Germany. After he debuted his early two-wheeled, human-powered ride, the velocipede concept was quickly spun off into bicycles, tricycles and kick scooters. Give or take a few decades, the transportation was being motorized, too, with rear treadle drives popping up in Scotland around the 1840s, according to the Encyclopedia Britannica. Come the turn of the 19th century, battery-powered machines were also entering into the fold; Ogden Bolton Jr. was issued a U.S. patent for his battery-powered bicycle in 1895.

But why didn't the motorized scooter of the early 19th century become popular?  The Smithsonian has the story behind the rise and fall of the world's first motor scooter.

(Image Credits: National Museum of American History)


Hydrogen Cars: How the "Car as Power Plant" Concept Can Help Buffer Energy Consumption and Reduce Emissions

We already have electric cars that run on batteries and thus help reduce the carbon footprint.

But now a new concept tries to step up the game by not only using hydrogen as a source of fuel, but also making the car like a mini power plant that can convert energy into electricity which will then be supplied to the power grid.

The concept comes from Esther Park Lee from Delft University of Technology (TU Delft) who recently obtained her PhD on the subject.

A fuel cell car converts hydrogen into electricity, heat and clean water. The stationary hydrogen car can also supply that electricity to the power grid and thus act as a buffer in a sustainable energy system, because the supply of energy from renewable sources such as wind and sun fluctuates.

(Image credit: Spielvogel/Wikimedia Commons)


A High School in Kentucky Hosts Classes on "Adulting"

I remember years ago, when I was in high school, I would complain to myself, “How would this subject help me in my life? I won’t use this when I grow up.” I would later answer this question for myself, and my answer would be “because the school wants to hone your creativity and critical thinking.”

But don’t you wish that there was more in high school than just writing on the board solving math equations, like being taught how to cook, or how to replace a flat tire? Hopefully a school in Kentucky does just this. Bullitt Central High School hosts “adulting” classes such as “tax filing”, “meal prep”, “love letter writing”, and “resume writing”.

Read more on IcePop.

(Image Credit: wendywatson94 / Wikimedia Commons)


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