John Farrier's Blog Posts

How the Shopping Cart Revolutionized the Way We Shop


(Photo: Oklahoma Historical Society)

A century ago, grocery shopping in America was very different from the way that it is now. Customers approached clerks who worked behind counters and asked for specific items. The clerks measured out the desired goods, then handed them to the customers, who placed them in handbaskets.

This necessarily created a limit on how much money a customer could spend because he could carry only as much as he could hold in a basket.

Late one night, Sylvan Goldman, a grocer in Oklahoma, suddenly had an idea for a solution: what if you stacked two baskets on top of each other and put them on wheels?

Goldman built a dozen carts and placed them in his grocery stores. They were, though practical, not popular. Women protested that they already had enough of pushing carts--that is, baby carriages--around. Men took the idea that they needed help carrying heavy loads as an affront to their masculinity.

Goldman found a solution: he hired attractive-looking actors to walk around his stores with shopping carts. This made using them socially acceptable. Zachary Crockett explains at Priceonomics, where he traces the history of this invention:

Finally, Goldman enlisted his own employees (and hired a team of actors — both men and women) to push the carts through his stores with beaming smiles, picking items off shelves with ease. Before long, herd mentality took hold: shoppers gradually began to accept and cherish the cart.

Once his stores were thriving with merry cart-pushers, Goldman filmed his success and showed it to other grocers. Soon, the carts were in high demand: Goldman sold them for $7 each, and quickly amassed a two year backorder.

Goldman and other inventors refined the shopping cart design to include telescoping baskets that fit within each other, thus saving space. The shopping cart became ubiquitous across the country and the world. Eventually, it became iterally iconic of consumerism:

-via NotCot


Dan Webb's Surprising Wood Sculptures

Dan Webb is an artist in Seattle. He works in several different media, but it's his wood sculptures that are the most striking to me. For example, I Love You looks like a light balloon wafting in the breeze, but it's made of wood and steel.

Many of his other sculptures are carved so that they look only partially excavated from the wood, creating an appealing juxtaposition between the refined and the raw. Here's one called Rock that it totally ready to rock:

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Save Yourself from Being Executed by Beating the Executioner in a Foot Race


(Image: Victoria and Albert Museum)

It's Istanbul in the Seventeenth Century. You, a nobleman of refined peerage and accomplishment, have been invited to visit the Sultan in the Topkapi Palace. As the Grand Vizier of the wealthy and powerful Ottoman Empire, this not a surprise, as you have visited there often.

When you arrive at the palace, you are, according to custom, served sherbet. In the past, the sherbet has always been white. But now it is red. Your blood runs as cold as the sherbet because you know what the color means: the Sultan has ordered your execution.

The gardener steps forward to carry out the duty traditionally given to him.

But wait! There's still a way out. According to Ottoman law, you may escape execution by outrunning the gardener/executioner in a 300-yard foot race. Smithsonian magazine describes this custom maintained by the Ottoman Empire for centuries:

For a grand vizier, however, there was still a chance: as soon as the death sentence was passed, the condemned man would be allowed to run as fast as he was able the 300 yards or so from the palace, through the gardens, and down to the Fish Market Gate on the southern side of the palace complex, overlooking the Bosphorus, which was the appointed place of execution. [...]

If the deposed vizier reached the Fish Market Gate before the head gardener, his sentence was commuted to mere banishment. But if the condemned man found the bostanci basha waiting for him at the gate, he was summarily executed and his body hurled into the sea.

-via VA Viper


NASA Finally Creates a Planetary Defense Coordination Office

(Image: TriStar Pictures)

In the glorious 1997 action movie Starship Troopers, insect-like aliens began their war against humanity by diverting an enormous asteroid to impact on and destroy the city of Buenos Aires, killing over 8 million people. 19 years later, the United States government is finally taking the bug menace seriously.

NASA has created and poured money into a new task force called the Planetary Defense Coordination Office. This organization is responsible for developing effective means of defending our homeworld from asteroid strikes. The Christian Science Monitor reports:

It will be a costly operation. NASA's program for tracking asteroids and other objects in near-space ran on $4 million in 2010, but it received $20.4 million in 2012, and the budget doubled to $40 million in 2014, according to a NASA statement. The 2016 US budget provides $50 million to set up a Planetary Defense Coordination Office. […]

A planetary defense system gives NASA a ready answer for the next time news reports of too-close asteroids alarm the populace.

"While there are no known impact threats at this time, the 2013 Chelyabinsk super-fireball and the recent 'Halloween Asteroid' close approach remind us of why we need to remain vigilant and keep our eyes to the sky," John Grunsfeld, an administrator for for Washington-based NASA Science Mission Directorate, said in a NASA report.

-via Ace of Spades HQ


Man Romantically Dances with Excavator


(Video Link)

He was a man. She was an excavator. Theirs was a forbidden love. In this touching yet tragic ballet, our hero meets the earth mover of his dreams. They dance with passion and grace. In a brief idyllic moment, they enjoyed the fullness of love.

This is Modern Daydreams 1: Deere John, a short film by choreographer Mitchell Rose and and the Body Vox dance company. Savor this bittersweet story. Then watch Islands in the Sky, the fourth film in the series, which is a cherrypicker-based bromance.

-via Laughing Squid


These New Chess Pieces Would Make the Game a Lot More Fun

Zach Weinersmith of the webcomic Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal has some great ideas to spice up chess. We've seen some clever variants, such as a cylindrical board and a suicide bomber piece. But Weinersmith has made even greater improvements with pieces that behave in very different but not insurmountable ways.

You can view them all here. Gortak the World-Eater is the best of the all.


Homo Homini Lupus

(Wrong Hands/John Atkinson)

Are we really so different? Crows and chimpanzees can use tools. Dogs can ponder their existence. And cats can give their kittens really dumb names like Fluf'y. We are not so removed from the brutality of the animal kingdom, nor animals from our allegedly higher life.


Clever Invention: Webbed Swimming Fingers

They're more compact than webbed swimming gloves, but accomplish much of the same effect. Trend Box sells these palm-less slip-on swimming aids. They increase water resistance and thus speed while swimming. And if they were transparent or painted to look like hands, they could create the impression that you actually have webbed fingers, which would obviously be an advantage in job interviews.

-via Dude I Want That


Fashion Trend: Furry Fingernails

Do you want to stand out in a crowd? Do you want people to stare at you in public? Of course you do! That's why you are a fashion trend setter. And the latest weapon in your arsenal for public attention is the furry fingernail.

Cosmopolitan reports that Jan Arnold, the director of the CND nail polish company, debuted a line of furry fingernails at the recent Libertine Fall/Winter fashion show. Each one is a dab of fake fur held in place with CND brand nail polish.

They're fabulous!

-via Geekologie


A Smell-Based Dating Service

Step 1: wear a t-shirt for 3 days and 3 nights without deodorant.

Step 2: mail the shirt to Smell Dating.

Step 3: Smell Dating will mail you swatches from, uh, aromatically-enhanced t-shirts submitted by other users. Smell them.

Step 4: ask Smell Dating to connect you with a person whose smell you find appealing. Mutual matches will receive contact information.

That's Smell Dating, a project by artist Tega Brain. Right now, it's an experiment limited to 100 people in New York City. But it may take off and become a big thing. Tega Brain argues that the human sense of smell is an excellent way to discern relationship compatibility:

The olfactory apparatus is a nontrivial source of information and the extent of its impact on our social lives is currently unknown. However when it comes to long-term romantic partnership it may actually be riskier to ignore the powerful signal of scent than to rely on it. Smell researchers even speculate that high contemporary divorce rates may be related to the overuse of deodorants and the underuse of our natural olfactory intelligence.

-via David Thompson


What the Heck Is Going on in This Medieval Manuscript Illustration?

The Bodleian Library at Oxford houses a 1436 manuscript of Cosmographia Scoti. It is of either Italian or French origin. Among its many illustrations is this bizarre image.

What is it?

My best guess is that this drawing shows an amphibious assault craft used by cattle during a general bovine uprising. It's like a medieval Higgins boat. It was notably unsuccessful because the submerged ram in the bow tended to cause the boat to run aground too far out from the beach, thus exposing the cattle to longbow fire while they swam to the beach. In short, this design failed because it tried to do too much.

Cows are yummy, but they're terrible at naval architecture.

-via Via Angus


Melisandre from Game of Thrones Attends Seth Meyers's Baby Shower


(Video Link)

On Game of Thrones, people refer to Melisandre as the Red Woman due to her red hair and clothing and bloodthirsty means of acquiring power. She'll stop at nothing to advance herself and, for the moment, the cause of the true king Stannis Baratheon.

She and late night talk show host Seth Meyers went to college together. So when Seth and his wife held a baby shower, Seth invited Melisandre.

Melisandre understands how to dominate people. But as you can see from this sketch from Late Night with Seth Meyers, she's less skilled at small talk with strangers. Well, it's that or the other guests can't understand the terrors of the night.

-via Laughing Squid


Poké Ball Gown

Cosplayer Dani Skye made and wore this delightful punny dress to Katuscon in the DC area. She caught her boyfriend with it, who danced with her at the con ball. That was a challenge because, Skye explains, "the dress is quite poofy so it was hard to get close to my boyfriend to dance."

You can see more photos of her dress here.

-via Fashionably Geek


Edible Spoon Maker Takes the Bread Bowl Concept Even Further

It's a nifty idea that could be good for entertaining guests. Serve soup in bread bowls alongside these bread spoons. Just trim canned dough in the shape of a spoon, slip it inside the Edible Spoon Maker, and bake it for a few minutes.

The underside of the spoon is ridged to make it easier to break off pieces and eat the spoon once you're done with the rest of your food. Try different flavored doughs in the spoon maker to accent the soup.

-via That's Nerdalicious!


Chewbacca Actor Posts Pages of the Original Star Wars Script

Peter Mayhew, the actor who played Chewbacca in Star Wars, owns a copy of an early script for the movie that eventually became Episode IV. At the time, it went by the title The Adventures of Luke Starkiller. He's tweeting photos of the pages of the script and promises that he's got a big announcement coming up.

The script includes an early vision of R2-D2 that is quite diferent from his eventual form:

Artoo is a short claw-armed tripod. His face is a mass of computer lights, surrounding a radar eye. 

A tripod Artoo might have had an easier time with stairs.

-via io9


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