John Farrier's Blog Posts

Solution to Stolen Street Signs: Give Streets Boring Names

McIntosh County, Georgia is spending $17,000 a year replacing about 550 street signs that are repeatedly stolen. So County Commissioner Mark Douglas proposes that the county government give streets boring names to discourage this activity:

He says signs marking Green Acres, Boone's Farm and Mary Jane Lane are frequently stolen.

He suspects the thieves are targeting those signs because they share names with a popular TV series, a low-cost wine or, in the third case, a slang term for marijuana.


Link | Photo (unrelated) via Flickr user Team Traveler used under Creative Commons license

Pepper Spray Ring

This questionable self-defense product is called "The Stunning Ring". It contains a stinging powder that can be ejected using a latch on the side:

The spray causes inflammation of the eye capillaries and all other mucous membranes, resulting in immediate temporary visual impairment, difficult breathing, coughing, choking, sneezing, severe burning sensations to the eyes, nose, throat and skin, and nausea, with acute symptoms and discomfort lasting for 45 minutes. There is no permanent damage.


Link via Say Uncle | Photo: J&L Self Defense Products

Dalek Found in School

School children at the West Exe Learning Centre in Exeter, UK, discovered a deactivated Dalek in their school. Manager Sue Willey did not restore it, but prudently called the police:

The value of the Dalek is not known but Ms Willey estimates that the replica could be worth hundreds of pounds.

"He's a little bit damaged here and there, but he's still got to be worth hundreds," she said.

"Someone out there must know where this Dalek has come from. And if the owner doesn't come forward, maybe we could give it to some charity or organisation that can do something with him."

The school contacted police but officers say they have received no reports of a missing or stolen Dalek.

Detective Constable Caroline Prince, of Exeter's burglary team, said she would be keen to hear from anyone who might know who the Dalek belongs to.


Link via Geekosystem | Photo: This Is Devon

Frank Miller Illustrates History



Cartoonist Caldwell Tanner imagined historical events and figures as though they had been illustrated by comic book artist Frank Miller. The above scene is from October 31, 1517, and Protestant reformer Martin Luther is driving his point home about Papal abuses.

http://www.collegehumor.com/article:1809356 via Super Punch

Previously: If Frank Miller Drew Peanuts

Enormous Logan's Run LEGO Diorama



LEGO artist Keith Goldman crafted an enormous diorama of scenes from the City of 1976 movie Logan's Run. Above, a Sandman kills a Runner who's unwilling to accept Lastday. You can view 15 more pictures at the link.

Link via io9

Pistol Bayonets



James R. Rummel of Hell in a Handbasket has a post about early handgun bayonets. The Elgin Pistol Cutlass (above) was a single-shot pistol available in the U.S. in various calibers starting in the 1830s. It's basically a built-in machete that served to clear away brush while tramping out in the wilderness:

Instead the guns were designed to be used as brush cutters in dangerous territory. The heavy knife would clear away the jungle, while the pistol would be ready if enraged animals or hostile natives suddenly sprang from the bracken.


At the link, you can view pictures of a bayonet that could be fitted onto World War I-era British revolvers.

http://hellinahandbasket.net/?p=4828 | Photo: American Firearms

Pitch of Cat Calls Varies with a Cat Species' Territory

Why do lions have a loud, deep growl and house cats a high meow? It's not because of the relative size of the animals, but the relative size of their territories:

Dr Gustav Peters and Dr Marcell Peters at the Alexander Koenig Zoological Research Museum in Bonn, Germany analysed the average frequencies of long-distance calls made by 27 different species of cat.

These included the great or "roaring" cats, such as lions, tigers and jaguars, which are able to roar due to the specialised structure of their throats.

They then looked for any relationships between the cats' calls and their size, and the habitats in which they live.

Cat species that live in more open types of habitat, such as lions, servals and cheetahs, have deeper calls.

Cats living in dense habitats, such as wildcats, clouded leopards and the little known marbled cat, communicate at a higher pitch, the researchers found.


Link via reddit | Photo by Flickr user Tambako the Jaguar used under Creative Commons license

Shattered Clock Says that It's 3:55



Igor Barbashin and Daria Volokhova designed the "Shattered Clock." Numbers break apart and form together. The hour number that is the least broken represents the closest hour to the current time. The minute hand tells you, well, the current minute. So it's 3:55. The designers write:

The "Order in Chaos" clocks - is a vivid illustration of the self paradigm to overcome the anarchy in you and connect with the universe. This clock is an example of a strange relationship between order and chaos.


Link via Gizmodo

Panhandling Robot



Gimme is a robot/sculpture designed by Chris Eckert that follows people around, asking for money:

My newest art machine, Gimme is an automated panhandler that follows a viewer (or multiple viewers) around the room while relentlessly requesting donations.


Link via Make

Where's Waldo -- The Spy Thriller


(Video Link)


The Imponderables, a comedy troupe, made this parody of The Bourne Ultimatum casting Waldo of the Where's Waldo? books as the central character. His identity was erased. His past was stolen. His whereabouts are unknown. Can they find Waldo?

via Geekosystem | Official Website

Previously:
Where's Waldo? On Google Street View
Werner Herzog Reads Where's Waldo
9 Surprising Things Found in Where's Waldo? Books

Jurassic Park: The Musical



Yes, there's a musical version of the science fiction movie Jurassic Park. It was written by Phillip Malcom and Aaron Holmes. The play has been occasionally performed since 2009 by college students in Lincoln, Nebraska. It's about an hour long, and you can watch it in the links below.

Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3

via Nerd Bastards | Official Website

Yearbook Photos of 26 Science Fiction Movie Stars

Jon Cohen of the science fiction blog blastr gathered yearbook photos of 26 movie stars from that genre, such as Mark Hamil (left). Others include Chris Pine, Harrison Ford, Jean-Claude Van Damme, and Zachary Quinto.

Link

Emergency Bra

Last year, Dr. Elena Bodnar won the Ig Nobel Prize in Public Health for her Emergency Bra. Having seen first hand the devastating effects of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster, she designed it to filter out the radioactive particles found there. In the event of a similar emergency, just remove the bra and break it into two usable air filter masks.

Dr. Bodnar is thought to be currently working on a "counterpart device for men", although the configuration is unknown.

Link via Say Uncle | Official Website | Photo: Ebbra.com

If Star Wars Was Set in Edo Japan



Artist Steve Bialik created six prints that re-imagined the Star Wars universe in the Edo period of Japanese history (1603-1868). On the left, you can see Jabba with Leia, and on the right, Admiral Ackbar.

Link via Super Punch | Artist's Website

Previously: Samurai Star Wars in Edo Japan

Caffeinated Brownies

Allison Nelson has opened "A Snack in the Face" -- a bakery in Ames, Iowa that specializes in caffeinated goods. Each brownie that she sells contains 200 milligrams of pure caffeine:

"It's exactly what grandma used to bake – no high-fructose corn syrup, no partially hydrogenated soybean oil," Nelson told the newspaper. "We're not wrapping up caffeine in a health bar here. We're wrapping it up in a home-baked treat. Isn't it about time you have caffeine and it tastes good?"

Nelson and her husband, Wes, originally started out with 400 milligrams of caffeine in their brownies, according to the paper, which is about the equivalent of a large cup of Starbucks-brewed coffee. But that amount proved to be a little too potent.

"I'm lying there, staring at the ceiling at 2 a.m. and saying, 'I think that's too much,' " Wes said.


Link via MArooned | Photo (unrelated) via Flickr user dichohecho used under Creative Commons license

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Profile for John Farrier

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