John Farrier's Blog Posts

This High-Tech CPR Dummy Has "Working Genitalia"

Medical-X is a company in the Netherlands that produces technologically advanced medical testing and training equipment. Edgaget visited the company's booth at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas where the Adam-X doll was on display.

Adam-X is, like Data from Star Trek: The Next Generation, fully functional. He has "working genitalia", which is, of course, essential for proper CPR training. He can produce either urine or blood depending upon the situation.

Above the belt, Adam-X offers other simulated responses, including flushed cheeks, dilated pupils, a swollen tongue, pressurized blood vessels, deflated lungs, and extremities that turn blue if you don't save him quickly enough. He's the ultimate tool for simulated medical emergencies.

-via paige


This Woman Has the World Record for the Loudest Nose Whistle

Lulu Lotus is a children's book author and illustrator from Canada. Her books focus on teaching children the importance of being kind to each other and animals. They do not -so far- teach children how to whistle with their noses.

Nose whistling is skill that Ms. Lotus has carefully honed like a blade since childhood. She used it while growing up to play pranks on her teachers. From the above video, you can see why: when she whistles, there is no change in her facial expressions. It's a silent, ninja-like art.

Guinness World Records has declared her nose whistle, which measures at 44.1 decibels, the loudest in the world. That is approximately as loud as a bird call.

-via Born in Space


The Yammening

Twitter user @boople_snoot is an artist, cosplayer and . . . some other things that I can't figure out. Her profile uses the terms "cybertard" and "jestercore". Anyway, @boople_snoot is, shall we say, not conventional.

This eccentricity shows in her ongoing project to prank workers at her local Walmart. Normally, I'm not a fan of "pranking" people that one doesn't know, especially when they're working. But this prank is truly harmless. In involves just leaving a packaged yam on the customer service desk.

This eventually led to a confrontation with managers at the Walmart.


At 92 Years Old, This Professional Model Has the Longest Career

Oddity Central introduces us to the astonishing career of Carmen Dell'Orefice. Although there are fashion models who are older than her, they began their careers later in life. Ms. Dell'Orefice, on the other hand, was discovered at the age of 13, began working at 15, and has continued as a fashion model until the present. She's the longest-working runway model.

How does she look so young at 92? Last year, she told The Sun that she eats right, starting the day with only water, lemon juice, and a priobiotic yogurt. Dell'Orefice also walks regularly for exercise and uses little makeup to ensure that her skin can breathe. Let us follow her example and perhaps we will more like her and less like Yoda as we age.

Photo: Carmen Dell'Orefice


The Original Plan Was for Counselor Troi to Have Four Breasts

Commander Deanna Troi, a main character on Star Trek: The Next Generation, was known for her sex appeal. One of her early, decidedly casual uniforms, showed a fair amount of cleavage until Captain Jellico brought her up to regulation standard. And in one famous scene, actress Marina Sirtis was most definitely not wearing a bra.

Gene Roddenberry, who created both Star Trek and Star Trek: The Next Generation was a man that, shall we say, was in touch with his libido. When developing The Next Generation, he wanted Troi to have four breasts instead of the more commonly encountered two.

Patrick Stewart mentioned this fact in his recently-published memoir Making It So. I've confirmed it in the 1994 book Star Trek Where No One Has Gone Before: A History in Pictures. The great Dorothy Fontana herself had to talk Roddenberry out of the idea (110).

Continue reading

The Famous Chicago Rat Hole

Winslow Dumaine, a comedian, writer, and artist in Chicago, tweeted that he recently made a pilgrimage to the famous Chicago Rat Hole.

This is one of the Windy City's most famous tourist attractions, second only to the Art Institute of Chicago for drawing crowds.

The origins of Chicago Rat Hole are shrouded in mystery. Legend holds that while the concrete for this sidewalk at 1918 West Roscoe Street was being poured, a rat fell in, forever marking the sidewalk with an imprint of its own body. Other Chicagoans contend that it was a squirrel, not a rat.

Either way, people come to the site to reverently venerate the departed rodent. In this way, by connecting to the past and a sense of place, they center themselves for work of the present and future.

UPDATE 1/9/24: Dumaine's tweet has gone viral and how a local news station is reporting on the Chicago Rat Hole.


Robot Plays Charades... Really Well

Robots are gradually replacing we organic humanoids, leaving fewer and fewer roles for the fleshy ones to complete and serve a purpose--aside from biomass fuel, of course. But that's hardly a satisfactory existence for most humans.

New Scientist brings us the latest warning in the looming robopocalypse. Human engineers intentionally built a robot paired with an advanced artificial intelligence that uses a large language model to help the robot interpret text instructions. When robot receives the instructions, it physically demonstrates them in remarkably realistic forms.

It can basically perform charades, which means that this party can immediately replace you as a source of entertainment at the party tonight.

-via Born in Space


Amazingly Realistic Steamed Buns Puffing Up

Steam buns fluffing up
byu/VariousBasket125 inoddlysatisfying

Mima, a woman in China, began making steamed buns during the COVID-19 lockdown in her country. Her site is in Chinese, but Google Translate helps us in English. She uses vegetable and fruit juices and powders, as well as food coloring in pens and squid ink powder to create astonishingly realistic buns resembling animals (especially seafood), fruits, everyday objects, and characters.

I'm especially impressed with how her durian fruit replica splits like a real durian to reveal the pulp inside. On her site, you can view individual process videos. The lips are amazing since they are anatomically correct not only on the outside of the mouth, but the inside as well.

-via Laughing Squid


Twins Born Minutes Apart in Different Years

At the Virtua Voorhees Hospital near Camden, New Jersey, baby Ezra Humphrey was born at 11:48 PM on New Year's Eve. His twin brother, Ezekiel Humphrey was born at 12:28 AM on New Year's Day. That's just forty minutes apart or, as a rough estimate, an entire year.

CBS News reports that the timing coincidences keep piling up. Their mother, Eve, was born in December. Their father, Billy, was born on New Year's Eve. The twins have an older brother named Hezekiah, who turns three on January 3. So the whole family has clustered their birthdays at the same time of the year.

-via Massimo


It's 2024, So We're Now Living in A Boy and His Dog

The 70s was a weird time to be alive, I tell you. You had to be there to get the zeitgeist that mixed humor, despair, and, above all else, exhaustion with believing in anything that we had been told.

The science fiction of the era extrapolated where the young people of that era would be in old age. So there were a lot of post-apocalyptic and dystopian visions. The 1974 film Zardoz was set in the year 2023. The 1975 film A Boy and His Dog was set in 2024. So that's where we are now.

The movie comes from a culture in which thermonuclear destruction is not simply warned against, but accepted as inevitable. It is obsessed with sex, but also skeptical of finding happiness through it. Hence it depicts a young man and his telepathic dog--twisted versions of idealized Americana--roaming the wastelands in search of food and sex.

Enjoy 2024.

-via Weird Universe


Hellenistic War Elephants May Have Gone into Battle Drunk

The use of tamed elephants in human warfare dates back to at least the Sixth Century BC in what is now India and were used by the Chinese as late as the Fifteenth Century AD in what is now Vietnam. In the ancient Mediterranean, various peoples made use of war elephants until the Roman Republic developed effective tactics for dealing with these living tanks that were terrifying, but logistically demanding upon armies using them.

Hellenistic (Greeks from Alexander the Great until the Roman conquest) empires used war elephants. In a recent article published in The Classical Quarterly, Silvannen Gerrard of the University of Manchester assesses evidence that the Greek handlers of war elephants got them intoxicated prior to combat.

In addition to textual evidence from the Maccabean Revolt, she considers the staggering amount of alcohol that scientists say would be necessary to get a full grown elephant drunk. Would it be practical for an army on the move to carry that much wine for this purpose? Furthermore, how do elephants behave while drunk? An army with drunk elephants in its midst may experience negative outcomes.

After also evaluating evidence from Indian sources, Gerrard concludes that although the Hellenistic armies attacking the Maccabeans may have used drunk elephants, this was unlikely to be the standard practice at the time.

Image: Heinrich Leutemann

-via Theo Nash


Kinder of Berge: Liechtenstein's Only Feature Film

The tiny Principality of Liechtenstein is, on a per capita basis, a very wealthy nation. But with a population of only 39,000 people, there are certain features common among larger nations that it lacks, such as airports, an army, a currency, and even embassies in foreign lands. It also lacks a film industry centered within the nation, producing movies by and for Liechtenstein and employing primarily its own citizens.

Nonetheless, there is one feature-length film that can be considered a truly Liechtensteiner film in that it was shot within that nation and tells a story that takes place there. The 1958 film Kinder der Berge tells the story of a Liechtensteiner woodcarver who experiences a miracle attributed to a statue of the Virgin Mary that he carves.

The actors were primarily German and Swiss, with the main character portrayed by the acclaimed Swiss actor Maximilian Schell. But a prince and princess of this alpine monarchy also make appearances to give this film a definite Liechtensteiner flavor.

I've embedded a clip from the film.


Love Honk -- The Musical Application of the Car Horn

Dreams have long inspired the creative energies of people. Salvador Dali found much of his inspiration in unconsciousness, such as Dream Caused by the Flight of a Bee around a Pomegranate a Second before Waking. Richard Adams, the author of the novel Shardik, developed much of his story in dreams. David Burge, the inventor of the fart joke, experiences empoweringly lucid dreams.

Similarly, three months ago, Sarah F1330 developed an entirely new genre of music in a dream that she had. She imagines long car horn blasts taking leadership of musical tracks. She dubs this revolution "Love Honk." Enjoy its majesty.


76 Logical Fallacies Explained in 11 Minutes

YouTuber The Paint Explainer uses MS Paint to create simple illustrations to help explain complex concepts, such as logical fallacies. In this video, he quickly and succinctly explains 76 formal and informal fallacies, some of which I've never heard of before.

Within this category is the Texas Sharpshooter Fallacy, which imagines a sharpshooter firing at a wall and then drawing targets about the bullet holes. This is a failure of inductive reasoning in which a person searches for data to support assumptions while ignoring contrary data.

This is a great list and I'm especially glad that The Paint Explainer includes the Fallacy Fallacy, in which someone concludes that if an argument contains a fallacy, it must be incorrect. This is what I've seen people with a partial education in rational thinking do in order to shut down discussion.

-via Laughing Squid


2 City Workers Caught Building Secret Fort at Work

Query: how long could Miss Cellania and I do this at the Neatorama corporate campus before we were caught?

A lot would depend upon the facilities themselves. For these two men (of course) in Nara, Japan, their workplace in waste management offered opportunities. A grease pit built into the floor could be covered over and the spacious interior (2 meters by 4) offered an ideal place to slack off. According to the Japanese-language news source Asashi, the men recieved a two month suspension from employment for their misuse of city facilities and equipment.

-via Spoon & Tamago, which comments "God forbid men have a hobby."


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