It's not a water slide or a snow slide, unfortunately. The Devil's Slide is an unusual rock formation east of Ogden, Utah. The limestone ridges are 12 meters high, 4.5 meters apart, and a very long 245 meters long, straight up the mountain.
It's the site of a ghost town of the same name, which is sad because Devil's Slide sounds like a totally awesome town name. I'd consider moving there for the sole purpose of claiming that as a home address.
Tony Potter, a magician, used his skills at optical illusion (and presumably sorcery) to design this wine rack called the Pinetti. Each one is carefully crafted with red oak, stained with Danish Oil, then magically enchanted. Like a bad house guest, it can make your wine disappear. All you have to do is view the rack from the right angle.
This novel teapot of Chinese orgin has two chambers. You can see that when you look down the spout:
So put regular tea in one chamber and poisoned tea in the other. Pour as needed.
Each chamber has a small hole hidden on the other side. Covering one hole prevents liquid from leaving its chamber. But how? Redditor AjBlue7 explains:
Yes the reason why water flows through a spout is because there is a second hole in the back where air can come in and push the water out of the container. If there are no external forces but gravity working on a liquid there is a high chance that the molecular bonds will be able to resist the gravity trying to pull it out of a spout. Also it is important that air can't get past the liquid through the main spout. So this teapots spout has the equivalent of 2 straws branching out from the main hole, and the spouts much maintain a thin strawlike tunnel all the way down to the base of each reservoir. The connection of the straw and reservoir happens at the bottom of each to decrease the possibility of air being able to get past the water in the straws. Air is lighter than liquid so any air trapped in the back of the reservoir before putting your finger over the hole will always stay separated and not force the water out of the container.
This is one of the main principles at work in diving bells, where they trapped air underwater in a big metal bell. To fill the bells with more water they had heavy barrels with a hole on the bottom to let water in, as the barrel sank water would trap the air in the barrel compressing it naturally as it sank. On the top of the barrel there was a hose that hung on the outside, as long as the end of the hose was lower than the barrels hole that let water in, the air would remain trapped. Then they would raise the hose up and into the diving bell allowing for the barrels compressed air to transfer into the diving bell. Oh and they also had a valve on the top of the diving bell to release "hot" air, aka the CO2 byproduct from the divers breathing.
Television has been around in some form since 1923. Thousands of programs have come and gone. If you're a producer and you want to think of an original concept, then you've got to dig. You got to think to think outside the box. You've got to teach dogs how to fly airplanes, then film and broadcast the results.
Dogs Might Fly is a new program that will air on the British channel Sky 1. It exists to answer an essential question: are dogs intelligent enough that, with proper training, they could fly airplanes?
Secluded at a mansion in the Sussex countryside, the 12 rescue dogs have been put through their paces by animal behaviour experts, who believe that the cognitive abilities of the most intelligent pets can be directed towards flying a plane. […]
Carole Hawkins, creative director of Oxford Scientific Films, said the series would test in a “safe and controlled way” the question of whether a highly intelligent dog could take control of an aircraft.
The experts will assess how the dogs response to stimuli and sensations designed to acclimatise them to their high-flying challenge. Their head for heights will be tested by being sent to the top of a London landmark in high-rise lift and they will be strapped in for a spin around the Thames on a speedboat. Each dog will be found a new home at the series conclusion. The six-part Dogs Might Fly begins in a fortnight.
The Twitter feed @AwfulFantasy writes pithy fantasy stories using tortured metaphors, misplaced characters, and realistic but undesired scenarios. Jake Young of Dorkly rounded up 1d10 of the best and then paired them with appropriate fantasy art.
The artist at Aro Tattoo in Itaewon, Korea appear to apply her work with not a needle, but a soft brush. You can almost feel the pedals of these flowers that blend so smoothly with the skin. You can see more photos at her Instagram feed.
Are you fond of sheep? Then you need to get to New Zealand to experience this in person. Aerial photographer Tim Whittaker compiled this footage of sheep in the Hawke’s Bay region of the North Island. The herd moves like an enormous, shape-shifting organism. It’s soothing to watch the mass of the sheep squeeze through gates and settle into new forms.
A good notebook in your pocket inspires you to jot down your thoughts. It summons forth the inner workings of your mind that otherwise might be lost in the moment. It can thus be a precious possession.
For José Naranja, a Moleskine notebook isn’t just a handy tool for everyday carry, but a work of art. He crafts elegant notebooks with hand-penned words and illustrations around other pieces of paper that he pastes in.
UPDATE 2/18/15:On Facebook, Rebecca Wilson points out that this article is 2 years old! I should have noticed that, but didn't.
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Everyone is showing up to Deadpool’s wedding on the cover of issue #27, which is coming out on Wednesday. Look, there’s Forbush Man on the left! And Squirrel Girl is one of the maids of honor! They’re among 232 Marvel characters on the cover, of which Guinness World Records considers 224 to be significant. So artist Scott Koblish wins a world record for the largest number of comic book characters on a single issue cover. It was a daunting task, but Koblish and his colleagues diligently completed it:
“When artist Scott Koblish proposed this cover layout to me, I thought he was crazy," said Deadpool editor Jordan White, below left. "But it’s the kind of crazy you have to respect. I think there’s no better testament to both his insanity and the amazing cover he and colorist Val Staples produced than an officially recognized world record.”
You can see a much larger version of the cover here.
My first thought was that this might be a not-terrible dating strategy. If, let’s say, 25% of those girls are single and 1% are interested, that’s a chance of getting dates with 2.235% of them. That’s better odds than anything I managed in high school.
But that’s not what Hayden Godfrey, 17, of Sky View High School in Smithfield, Utah had in mind. He already has a girlfriend. She’s in the above photo. Rather, he noticed that many girls at his school felt disappointed when they didn’t get any attention from boys on Valentine’s Day. His mother told ABC News:
"That broke his heart on Valentine's Day," she told ABC News today, calling her son a "sensitive soul." She added: "He wanted every girl to feel joy."
So he decided to give each and every one of them a carnation.
Hayden has been planning this project for 3 years. And for the past year and a half, he’s been saving money from his job as a cook at a restaurant and a bagger at a grocery store to be able to afford the $450 necessary:
Godfrey ordered the flowers to his home three weeks in advance and enlisted the help of about 20 friends to help him process and cut the 24-inch stems after they arrived. He gave the carnations one day to bloom before loading them all into his parents' van to bring them to Sky View High School Thursday.
His girlfriend of six months and fellow classmate, 18-year-old Lilyan Sharp, called Godfrey's gesture "very special" and said every girl walked out of school with a "giant smile on their face."
For millennia, humanity has been plagued with the need to stand up. Standing up is one of the worst aspects of work. It would be much nicer if you could remain seated and your chair would move where you need it to move.
Nissan is making progress toward this noble goal, but only accidentally. Its self-parking office chair project is designed to promote its self-parking cars. Wired reports that the chairs are tracked by cameras, which guide the chairs back into home position. Clapping activates the motors, which could make applause-filled presentations fun.
Now offices and conference rooms can be tidier. Just clap your hands and the chairs that your slothful co-workers have left sprawled over the room will move back into their proper places.
This is Koyuki, a Scottish Fold cat from Yokohama, Japan. Rocket News 24 says that his name translates as "light snow," but his disposition clearly says that he's a "bone-chilling blizzard." Tardar Sauce the Grumpy Cat looks like he's disappointed in you. Koyuki looks like he's about to kill you.
When is an appropriate time to play the bagpipes to strangers? What is the appropriate location? If you answered "McDonald's at 3:40 in the morning," then there are at least 2 men in Scotland who agree with you.
Calum Graham and Allan Gilruth had just been to a wedding. They were hungry, and so went to a McDonald's in Perth, Scotland. Both were wearing full Scottish regalia, and one--Gilruth--had a set of bagpipes. He was in a celebratory mood, and so decided to play them.
Another diner commented his disapproval with this decision. Naturally, Gilruth punched him. The Courier quotes prosecutor Jim Eodanable:
“One of the parties made a comment which was taken the wrong way and Mr Gilruth punched the complainer. He falls to the ground and on the way down strikes his head off a seat in the booth.
“That complainer’s friend then comes over to assist and the second accused then steps forward and swings a punch at him. The blow was deflected but it does strike the complainer.
“Fortunately for all concerned the injuries were not serious. Police were contacted.”
Graham and Gilruth were fined for their defense of public order. The lout who spoke ill of the bagpipes apparently escaped punishment.
Amy of the food blog Oh, Bite It does provide an actual recipe. But you don't need one. You can just look at the photo, find the necessary ingredients, and get started:
Layer and pile…pile and layer…
Keep doing this until you’re satisfied with yourself..
You don't want to be that guy lying on his deathbed at 46 thinking, "Hey, I should have had those Kit Kat nachos, but I decided to be healthy instead." That kind of attitude gets you nowhere in life.