John Farrier's Blog Posts

Mother Finds Her Son Naked on Google Street View

A British woman was shocked to find a picture of her naked three year-old son on Google Street View. The boy was playing in his grandmother's yard when a Google Street View car drove by and snapped his picture:

Shocked Claire, who lives on the same road as her mother, said she had no idea the pictures had been taken and accused Google of invading her son's privacy.

She said: 'I just felt sick to my stomach when I saw the naked picture of Louis on the internet. I'm angry, disgusted and upset about it - they should be checking every image before it goes up.


Link via Geekologie | Photo: Google

13 Year Old Boy Climbs Wall with Vacuum Gloves That He Built Himself

A year ago, we posted a video of a man who was able to use the suction of a vacuum cleaner to climb the side of a building. More recently, British schoolboy Hibiki Kono decided to build one for himself:

The lad, who is a big fan of the superhero, spent five months designing and making the gadget. He attached two giant suckerpads to the 1,400-watt cleaners - and uses the vacuum suction to grip the wall and support his weight.

The lad, who attends King's College School in Cambridge, said: "I used to dress up as Spiderman when I was younger and I love all the films.


Link via DVICE | Photo: Geoff Robinson Photography/News International/ZUMA Press

Make-A-Wish Foundation Builds Millenium Falcon Playhouse for Child



5-year-old Christian Bentley, who has leukemia, loves Star Wars. So the Make-A-Wish Foundation decided to build him a huge playhouse designed to look like the Millennium Falcon from that franchise. The Foundation contracted Little Mountain Productions, a custom builder of church facilities, to do the job.
Battling an ear infection, Christian appeared overwhelmed by the whole ordeal, at times rubbing his eyes and shaking his head in front of a crowd that included Star Wars characters including Storm Troopers and an Imperial Guard.

Union Public Schools' Moore Elementary School raised the roughly $5,100 it took to grant Christian's wish.

Little Mountain Productions of Tulsa, which designs and creates sets, stages, special effects and props, built the playset, a replica of the Millennium Falcon spaceship featured in the "Star Wars" movies.

The base of the clubhouse was erected by volunteers from Simmons Homes.

"This is definitely one of the most creative wishes we've ever done," said Jane Rohweder, director of development for the Make-A-Wish Foundation of Oklahoma. "The wish he had took so many people, so many volunteers to make it happen. It's really been a community effort."


Below, the first gallery link shows photos of how the playhouse was built. The second gallery link and the story link provide information about the installation of the project.

Gallery and Gallery and Story Link | Photo: Little Mountain Productions

8-Bit Baby Quilts



Etsy seller GeekUnique sells crib-sized quilts designed to resemble classic 8-bit video game characters. Her options include Mario, Luigi, Donkey Kong, Frogger, Ms. Pac-Man, Dig Dug, Link, and Q-Bert (above).

Link via technabob | Photo: GeekUnique

Want: Mr. T Crib Mobile


(YouTube Link)


The Mr. T Mobile (get it?) plays the theme music to The A-Team while five B.A. Baracus heads rotate for your baby's amusement. Sadly, this appears to be a custom job, and not mass-produced. It was made by author and comedian Shed Simove.

Nota bene: the link at the end of the video is NSFW.

via Great White Snark | Previously: Bioshock Mobile

Removing a Child's Loose Tooth. With a Rocket.


(YouTube Link)


The young son of YouTube user Bradleycharris had a loose tooth. He proposed to remove it by tying a string to model rocket and launching it into the sky. Of course, the idle wish of any child should be indulged at any time.

via reddit

Star Trek Diaper Cover



Craftster user NameThatCandy crocheted a diaper cover that looks like a uniform from the original Star Trek. Nice handiwork, but putting your child in a red shirt seems like asking for trouble.

http://geekcrafts.com/star-trek-diaper-cover/ via Geek Crafts

(cross-posted at NeatoGeek)

Questions of the Day

When I was eleven years old, my family went to Europe for a month. It was a very fast-paced trip. We went to Britain, France, Germany, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Switzerland. We once got lost and ended up in far western Austria.

Years later, my parents explained to me why they had gone to the great expense of the trip: they wanted me to have the mind-broadening experience of traveling in a foreign country. They themselves had lived in South America for two years before I was born, and my father had worked for months at a time in western Europe. These were experiences that expanded Mom and Dad's cultural awareness, and they felt that it was important for me to acquire them as well. I'm glad that they did.

Except for excursions to northern Mexico, it is financially unlikely that I shall ever again travel abroad. So I'm glad that I was able to encounter other cultures in their native environments. I want my children to have this, too.

Does international travel play a role in the education of your children?

If you could take your children anywhere in the world for a week, all expenses paid, where would you go?


Photo: NASA

The Story of Little Kettle-Head



Helen Bannerman (1862–1946) wrote children's books, some of them now quite controversial. Among them was the 1904 work The Story of Little Kettle-Head. It's about a young pyromaniac who sets herself on fire and underwent a crude cybernetic conversion to replace her destroyed head. So it's sort of like The Six Million Dollar Man, except that it probably didn't cost more than five dollars. Also, there's misogynistic mutilation by boys, aided by a father figure. All in all, a freaky work of children's literature. Enjoy.

Link via The Presurfer

A Marxist Deconstruction of the Itsy Bitsy Spider



Cartoonist Natalie Dee examined the socioeconomic commentary expressed in the lyrics of the children's song "The Itsy Bitsy Spider." Two more images at the link.

Link via reddit

Previously:
The Periodic Table of Smellements
They Set Our Castle on Fire!

Denim Diapers


(YouTube Link)


The commercial for Huggies' latest product is both funny and somewhat disturbing. Mostly funny. It's a diaper design that looks like blue jeans. The ladies (and some of the men) stop and stare and ask themselves, "What's in his diaper?"

Link (warning: sound) via Wolf Gnards

Tortoise Tea Party


(YouTube Link)

YouTube user spinningfancy recorded the playful relationship between human toddler Lula and Leonard, the African Leopard Tortoise. At 1:30 they have a tea party on the lawn.

via The Breda Fallacy

Distinctive Bacteria in Autisic Kids Could Enable Urine Test for Autism

Medical researchers at Imperial College in London found that autistic kids have a particular chemical in their urine. This finding could be used to create a simple urine test that could be used to diagnose the disease early:

Using nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy to analyse the children's urine, they found that each of these groups had a distinct chemical fingerprint, with clear and significant differences between children with autism and unrelated controls.[...]

Autism is currently diagnosed using a series of behavioural tests, and while children can show symptoms of the condition when as young as 5 months old, a clear diagnosis is not usually possible until they are age 2 or 3 years. This is problematic, because there is growing evidence that the earlier behavioural therapies for autism are started, the better the chances of children being able to lead relatively normal lives.

"If you could identify kids who were at risk much earlier by a chemical test rather than by observing the manifestation of full-blown behaviour, we could get them into therapy much earlier," says Nicholson.


Link via Popular Science | Photo: CDC

Question of the Day

Which female anime characters would serve as good role models for young girls, and why?

Image: US Renditions
(Cross-posted at NeatoGeek)

Are Video Games Bad for Children?


(YouTube Link)

The Onion News Network commentators and pundits have a good point -- many violent video games are not realistic enough to prepare children to survive in a post-apocalyptic wasteland. For example, swallowing pills that you find lying on the ground won't cure zombie bites. In fact, it may even poison you, leaving you too weak to outrun the undead hordes.

via View From the Porch

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Profile for John Farrier

  • Member Since 2012/08/04


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