@badacosplay27 shares this photo of an inventive mashup cosplay. It blends the transformed Denji from the anime and manga franchise Chainsaw Man and the much more kawaii vocaloid character of Hatsune Miku.
And if you don't understand half of the words in that sentence, then you've probably made better life choices than I have.
Researchers and engineers at the General Robotics Lab at Duke University have developed the Argus--a robot that can move in any direction. It doesn't have a back, front, or sides. It can move in any direction at once. Its central design principle is dynamic symmetry, which means that its propusive force can apply in any direction.
The video suggests sea urchins as an analogy. The Argus has 20 legs and 20 cameras, so it can move and see in any direction. If a leg or camera--or even a few of them--fail, the Argus can continue forward relentlessly hunting you across the lifeless postapocalyptic landscape of our futures. It's an unstoppable juggernaut.
Nic C is a musician who samples music from classic television programs. He takes short slices--just a few notes each--of these famous songs and uses them to compose new music that is simulatenously original and familiar.
My Modern Met informs us the UK/Ireland division of the Subway restaurant chain has created a functional sleeping bag that looks like one of its iconic sandwiches.
The art project is called "Sleeping Bag-uette." It's modeled on Italian B.M.T. sandwich, but doesn't taste as good because it's made of fabric.
The company commissioned the project to promote its food with music festival attendees.
You can see a video of the sleeping bag in action on Instagram.
Middle Ground Lighthouse lies off of Newport News in Chesapeake Bay. Though built in 1891, it remains in nightly operation. Northern Virginia magazine reports that it's also been renovated and is available for sale as a functional house.
Joe Negri had been a child prodigy as a musician and was a local star in Pittsburgh when Fred Rogers hired him to star as a recurring character on his iconic children's television show. As Handyman Negri, this musician interacted with puppets in The Land of Make-Believe and operated a music shop in Fred Rogers's* fictional neighborhood.
*"Rogers" is a singular noun and thus an "s" is necessary to indicate possession, but Fred Rogers did not follow that rule when titling his show, hence the spelling in the post title.
YouTuber Max Miller makes historic recipes and shares the results online. Recently, he posted a video about a cheesecake recipe in a book by Cato the Elder, a Roman statesman famous for ending all speeches in the Senate, regardless of the subject, by calling for the destruction of Carthage. Cato's recipe for savillum (cheesecake) can be found here.
Miller's video mentions other Roman recipes that I suspect you haven't tried yet. They're listed in Apicius, a Fifth Century AD cookbook that you can read in Latin or English.
There are three recipes for pig uterus: grilled, boiled, and, if I understand the text correctly, pickled.
Cook a pig uterus and slip it into the backpack of a friend.
In a trendy, upscale neighbhorhood of Pittsburgh close to the Allegheny River is the Pinksburgh House. It's an Airbnb that is marketed by the owners as the perfect place to stay for a girls' trip or a bachelorette party in the Steel City.
This eccentric two bedroom, one bathroom house is now listed for sale on Zillow.
Sadly, Walmart has already fixed the listing. Otherwise, it would have been possible to learn Reconstruction history in four different band sizes. Oddly, it appears that one cup size fits all for this highly specialized work.
Crystal Schenk is a multimedia artist and art professor who lives in Portland, Oregon. One of her earlier works is this 2006 sculpture titled Have and Have Not. It's a work of commentary on wealth, consumerism, and material survival.
As the saying goes, any landing that you can walk away from is a good one. A couple weeks ago, pilot Mike Raicevic performed a good landing when the engine of his Republic RC-3 seaplane (last manufactured in 1947) went out over Phoenix.
NBC 12 News reports that Raicevic had about 10 seconds to decide what to do. He spent those seconds searching for a more or less empty stretch of road and ended on Seventh Street as he nimbly dodged power lines, roadside signs, and traffic lights.
The pilot and all passengers--as well as people on the ground--escaped injury as the plane landed.
This is the Duluth Mushroom House. Sometimes it's called The Flintstones house because of its resemblance to the architecture on The Flintstones. This 5-bedrooom, 3-bathroom architectural wonder is now for sale.
Japanese Instagram user konel_bread creates amazingly realistic baked goods that look like animals and cartoon characters. In the past, we've seen their loaves that look like teddy bears with six pack abs. Now, they show something more sedate but equally charming: bagels prepared to resemble dozing wiener dogs.
A trendon X lately is to share photos of historically significant buildings that have been preserved by being repurposed by modern businesses. Not all of the descriptions are correct. For example, I've verified that a particular Chipotle was not the place where Thomas Paine wrote Common Sense. But this Publix grocery store is indeed an old government printing house.
501 Gervais Street in Columbia, South Carolina is the site of a brick building where the Confederacy printed fiat currency until February of 1865, when General Sherman burned it. It was rebuilt after the war and is now a grocery store.
It's interesting to watch these changes in real time. There's a beautiful historic building in the small town of Marion, Texas. I drive by it a few times a year. It's lately been a coffeshop, but changes every couple of years.
Every ellipse has two foci. The foci are, Khan Academy tells us, "two points whose sum of distances from any point on the ellipse is always the same."
Let's say that you build a miniature golf course shaped like an ellipse and place the hole at one focus. If you hit the ball from the other focus with a bank shot, the ball will land in the hole. If you hit the ball from any other point with a bank shot, the ball will miss the hole.
That's the premise of this video by YouTuber Constructive Chaos. He build increasingly complex combinations of ellipses to make mathematically predictable miniature golf course.