defense and defenestration
Ericsson has introduced a new technology that turns the human body into a bridge between gadgets, allowing people to transfer data like they would using a USB cord or a Bluetooth connection by simply touching a device. ‘Connected Me’ would enable everyone to easily transmit information, images and codes, providing the ultimate in convenient and secure connectivity. It uses a technique called “capacitive coupling,” where the natural electrical properties of the human body are used to transmit signals with digital information. So, in the future you could be using your smartphone to pass data through your body to devices such as as electronic locks, printers, speakers and screens.

jtotheizzoe:

The Secret Life of Plankton

A new video from TEDEducation about the beautiful, mysterious food web at the smallest scales of marine life. This is like stepping onto an alien world! All life on Earth depends in some way on these varied, microscopic wonders. A few tablespoons of seawater holds more marine life than there are people on Earth.

There is grandeur in this tiny view of life. Prepare to pick your jaw up off the floor, and then smile.

thedailywhat:

Words Of Wisdom of the Day: Inspired by the acclaimed “Sagan Series,” Evan Schurr pieced together powerful statements made by world-renowned astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson that serve as an alarming wake up call to a nation that has stopped dreaming and underfunded tomorrow.

[reddit.]

sob

world-shaker:

I thought these two were some of the most interesting:

4) I have the right to cite Wikipedia as one of the sources that I use to research a subject. Just because you believe the hype that Wikipedia is full of incorrect information,  doesn’t mean that it is true — besides we all use it anyways (including you). I am smart enough to verify what I find online to be the truth.

5) I have the right to access social media at school. It is where we all live, it is how we communicate — we do not use email, or call each other. We use Facebook, Twitter and texting to talk to each other. Teachers and schools should take advantage of this and post announcements and assignments using social media — you will get better results.

omg omg, sooo interesting, so… delightfully earthshaking!

supey:

misterstibbons:

I have a lot of pictures of insect genitalia saved. 

This isn’t even an exhaustive collection. 

did you know “beetleskin” is slang for condom

thedailywhat:

The Future Ver. 2.0 of the Day: Last year, Corning introduced a hi-tech future of form and function made possible through the wonders of highly engineered glass.

This year, the company expands on its vision by looking at additional applications, both at home and in the world writ large, for its technologically advanced glass-based gadgets.

A companion video below describes each technology shown above in detail, and provides additional information on what’s possible now and what’s not possible just yet.

[thanks kate!]

oh

oh, wow.


(ps though dude those are going to get run into so much)

collapsiblepants:

ikenbot:

The Lives Within a Drop of Water

The slogan for the Nikon Small World competition is “Recognizing Excellence in Photography through the Microscope.” Feast your eyes on these images that record a different world so small that it fits into a drop of water

Follow the source link for a description on each of these microscopic beauties.

via NeatoRama

Half of invert zoology was with buckets of muddy water and things trying to escape the dissection pan, the other half was with a microscope. I will always be in awe of the sheer amount of weird stuff that exists without the vast majority of people even being aware of their existence.

aryaesque:

oldstarnewshine:

how to cut down on an enormous chunk of illegal downloading, and this is so absurdly simple that it boggles the mind:

  • make your show / movie / whatever accessible online. 
  • put ads on it so you can make money off of it, or sell a subscription to a competitive streaming service like netflix.
  • make it available
  • everywhere, meaning the country of origin and everywhere else
  • as soon as it airs (tv shows) / becomes legally available to purchase (films &cet).  not a week and a half later, not three days later, not the next morning.  as soon as.   people who are savvy about internet downloading and things are generally going to be the sort of people who hang out online and want to talk about their favorite shows as soon as they happen with their friends who are in that timezone/country.  you’ll cut down on a shitton of downloading if you just make things available legally faster.
  • square yourselves with the idea that in this age of high definition and internet streaming that seeing a film in a cinema is a premium service and should not be relied upon as a primary method of distribution.

 #this is why the illegality of piracy does not bother me #it is a necessary form of civil disobedience #it is digital revolution #if you cannot AFTEROVER TWENTY YEARS make an effort to adapt your business model #you do not deserve to be spared

world-shaker:

Old versions of popular websites.

world-shaker:

Old versions of popular websites.

roxanneritchi:

ala-away | perfectlyqueer | the42towels | astrotastic | disillusionsofgrandeur | appeasingclouds:

A new vending machine has been released which can print any book within minutes.

The Espresso Book Machine has access to 500,000 different books - the same as 23.6 miles of shelf space - and can even churn out a fresh copy of Crime and Punishment in just nine minutes.

Pages are printed at a rate of over 100 per minute and are then pressed, glued and cut to produce a pristine book.

Users simply pick the book they would like on a screen and wait for it to be printed … it certainly is a novel way of getting a new book.

This is amazing.

This is what we need to spread literacy!

WHOAAAA

I would print War and Peace soooo many times. And then just spread them around different places.

My university’s library has one of these. They are ridiculously expensive to purchase, but one can buy a public-domain book from it for $10. One of my textbooks this year was actually printed on it (though sadly I did not get the watch, which was the only reason I even bought the damn book).

I have Plans which involve this marvelous machine…

I NEED TO KNOW WHERE TO FIND ONE OF THESE SO I CAN PRINT A BOOK ON A VENDING MACHINE OMG

shhthefloorboardsarecreaking:

ramicastrocortes:

Press Play. Then click and drag the player.

Can I make this my best friend?

… stare

… stare

pinkie-pi:

rosalarian:

duessa:

wishididntknowthat:

Introducing…The URBEE - The World First PRINTED Car (WIDK)
Posted to WIDK by Emily Moore
(Daniel Bates, Daily Mail) — The world’s first ‘printed’ car has finally rolled off the printing press.
The ‘Urbee’ was made using a special printer which built up layer upon layer of bodywork - almost as if the car was ‘painted’ into existence, except using layers of ultra-thin composite that are slowly ‘fused’ into a solid.
But unlike most ‘innovations’ in cars, this one won’t break down after 5 years - Urbee is built to last 30. Project leader Jim Kor, told MailOnline today: ‘For us, this unveiling was quite a milestone.
Underneath is a petrol and electric hybrid engine which helps make it one of the greenest cars in the world.
Experts have said the car uses eight times less energy than a similar vehicle and can go can go 200mpg on the motorway.
It also has a sleek, futuristic design which makes it look like a prop from a science fiction film like the Fifth Element.
The ‘printing’ process, however, it what has attracted so much attention: it was completely different to the normal way car manufacturers build a car, which is to bolt chunks of bodywork on where they need to go.
Engineers on the Urbee instead put layers of ultra thin composite material on top of each other so they become fused together to make it 3D in a process called ‘additive layer manufacturing’.
Kor says, ‘We are a small group of designers and engineers in Winnipeg trying to make a difference.
‘Making things this way could revolutionize how we produce things. It has certainly changed my way of thinking about manufacturing.
‘This process of 3-D printing turned into ‘digital manufacturing’ would change the way we replace parts within machines.’
The Urbee, which took 15 years to make, has three wheels, two seats and a combustion engine in case of emergencies.
It can be charged for a few pence from a normal plug socket or from a small solar panel array or wind turbine.
The Urbee has a small single cylinder engine that generate a mere eight horsepower, yet it can go up to 70mph if necessary because it is so light and efficient.
Even driving around the city it can do 100mpg and Canadian firm Kor EcoLogic, which designed it, insists that it could become a viable runaround for normal people.
Project leader Jim Kor told the TEDxWinnipeg conference that the vehicle was amongst the greenest ever made.
He said the way it was printed ‘only puts material where one needs it’.
‘It is an additive process, building the part essentially one ‘molecule’ of material at a time, ultimately with no waste,’ he added.
‘This process can do many materials, and our goal would be to use fully-recycled materials.’
Although the prototype has finally been completed it will be some time before the Urbee is available to buy in car showrooms.
The team behind it still have to raise the money for a second prototype, which will be at least $1million (£610,000).
Even then it will cost up to $50,00 (£32,000) to buy new, although the price should drop if it is mass produced.
Other professions which have shown an interest in additive layer manufacturing including medicine with some suggestion that prosthetic body parts could eventually be ‘printed’ to the size and shape they are required.
Original Article

Wow, I didn’t think they were already at the point of printing complex machinery! Awesome!

My whole dashboard today has been a reminder of how we are living in the goddamn future.

pinkie-pi:

rosalarian:

duessa:

wishididntknowthat:

Introducing…The URBEE - The World First PRINTED Car (WIDK)

Posted to WIDK by Emily Moore

(Daniel Bates, Daily Mail) — The world’s first ‘printed’ car has finally rolled off the printing press.

The ‘Urbee’ was made using a special printer which built up layer upon layer of bodywork - almost as if the car was ‘painted’ into existence, except using layers of ultra-thin composite that are slowly ‘fused’ into a solid.

But unlike most ‘innovations’ in cars, this one won’t break down after 5 years - Urbee is built to last 30. Project leader Jim Kor, told MailOnline today: ‘For us, this unveiling was quite a milestone.

Underneath is a petrol and electric hybrid engine which helps make it one of the greenest cars in the world.

Experts have said the car uses eight times less energy than a similar vehicle and can go can go 200mpg on the motorway.

It also has a sleek, futuristic design which makes it look like a prop from a science fiction film like the Fifth Element.

The ‘printing’ process, however, it what has attracted so much attention: it was completely different to the normal way car manufacturers build a car, which is to bolt chunks of bodywork on where they need to go.

Engineers on the Urbee instead put layers of ultra thin composite material on top of each other so they become fused together to make it 3D in a process called ‘additive layer manufacturing’.

Kor says, ‘We are a small group of designers and engineers in Winnipeg trying to make a difference.

‘Making things this way could revolutionize how we produce things. It has certainly changed my way of thinking about manufacturing.

‘This process of 3-D printing turned into ‘digital manufacturing’ would change the way we replace parts within machines.’

The Urbee, which took 15 years to make, has three wheels, two seats and a combustion engine in case of emergencies.

It can be charged for a few pence from a normal plug socket or from a small solar panel array or wind turbine.

The Urbee has a small single cylinder engine that generate a mere eight horsepower, yet it can go up to 70mph if necessary because it is so light and efficient.

Even driving around the city it can do 100mpg and Canadian firm Kor EcoLogic, which designed it, insists that it could become a viable runaround for normal people.

Project leader Jim Kor told the TEDxWinnipeg conference that the vehicle was amongst the greenest ever made.

He said the way it was printed ‘only puts material where one needs it’.

‘It is an additive process, building the part essentially one ‘molecule’ of material at a time, ultimately with no waste,’ he added.

‘This process can do many materials, and our goal would be to use fully-recycled materials.’

Although the prototype has finally been completed it will be some time before the Urbee is available to buy in car showrooms.

The team behind it still have to raise the money for a second prototype, which will be at least $1million (£610,000).

Even then it will cost up to $50,00 (£32,000) to buy new, although the price should drop if it is mass produced.

Other professions which have shown an interest in additive layer manufacturing including medicine with some suggestion that prosthetic body parts could eventually be ‘printed’ to the size and shape they are required.

Wow, I didn’t think they were already at the point of printing complex machinery! Awesome!

My whole dashboard today has been a reminder of how we are living in the goddamn future.

that-awkward-moment-when-i:

skeetskeet-:

foreverwanking:


Reblog and then click the photo.
You can thank me later.

IF YOU HAVE A LAPTOP TURN IT SIDEWAYS !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

LOL SOMEONE DO THIS TO TUMBLR.
EVEVERYONE SHOULD DO THIS! LOL.

i moved it all around the place

that-awkward-moment-when-i:

skeetskeet-:

foreverwanking:

Reblog and then click the photo.

You can thank me later.

IF YOU HAVE A LAPTOP TURN IT SIDEWAYS !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

LOL SOMEONE DO THIS TO TUMBLR.

EVEVERYONE SHOULD DO THIS! LOL.

i moved it all around the place

vicereine:

southpawscopic:

kadardies:

hiorion:

graphospasmic:

br0mosexual:

graphospasmic:


‘roly poly’, designed by the design incubation centre at the national university of singapore, are a pair of egg-like objects  that mirror each other’s movements, even when physically separated. two people thus can sense each other’s presence  despite distances across the world: a tap of one half will create a simultaneous reaction in the other.

But what if you just threw it around all the time and like tossed it through the window and rolled it down a hill 
The other person would probably get tired of that

This was very sweet and sentimental but now I’m laughing hysterically. Like imagine the egg just picking itself up and throwing itself at the wall.

Or someone chasing an egg that’s rolling itself down a road
Calling their long-distance partner later all “okay stop that, I’ve just chased my egg into a lake, that shit is not cute”

oh my god

Ahahahaha oh my god you guys are great.

These comments. xDD I’m dying!!

this is REALLY CUTE and i want one with someone ;m;

vicereine:

southpawscopic:

kadardies:

hiorion:

graphospasmic:

br0mosexual:

graphospasmic:

‘roly poly’, designed by the design incubation centre at the national university of singapore, are a pair of egg-like objects
that mirror each other’s movements, even when physically separated. two people thus can sense each other’s presence
despite distances across the world: a tap of one half will create a simultaneous reaction in the other.

But what if you just threw it around all the time and like tossed it through the window and rolled it down a hill 

The other person would probably get tired of that

This was very sweet and sentimental but now I’m laughing hysterically. Like imagine the egg just picking itself up and throwing itself at the wall.

Or someone chasing an egg that’s rolling itself down a road

Calling their long-distance partner later all “okay stop that, I’ve just chased my egg into a lake, that shit is not cute”

oh my god

Ahahahaha oh my god you guys are great.

These comments. xDD I’m dying!!

this is REALLY CUTE and i want one with someone ;m;