Showing posts with label weird news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label weird news. Show all posts

Link roundup

1. A look at Christopher Batty, head of sale for Gawker Media.

2. "A British businessman who bought the Segway company less than a year ago died after riding one of the scooters off a cliff and into a river near his Yorkshire estate." (Not from The Onion.)

3. Threadless's latest themed-competition is Tron.

*Buy Tron toys at Amazon.

Link roundup

1. How to turn your Twitter stream in an RSS feed.

2. A New Zealand elementary school has been criticized for holding a possum throwing contest. Via.

3. Excellent collection of Las Vegas Weekly covers by Benjamin Purvis. Via.

Link roundup

1. This graphic shows the incredible technological progress from the iMac to the iPhone. Via these sites.

2. The bat cave was first seen in the Batman tv serial - - they had a cave set available, but not a hangar. Also, the same link explains something I never understood about Cosmic Odyssey.

3. Here's what it's like to watch 30 great white sharks eating a 36-foot-long whale. Via.

*Buy Batman Happy Meal toys at eBay.

Link roundup

1. How to draw an ARC Trooper's helmet.

2. "A fifth child has died in Peru in an outbreak of rabies spread by vampire bats."

3. "Native Hawaiians are at greater risk of dying early compared to white Americans throughout their lifetimes. And older Hawaiians over age 65 are dying earlier than African Americans of their same age as well." Via.

*Buy dashboard hula girls at Amazon.

Link roundup

1. Katy Hargrove's sketchbook is 148 pages for $15.

2. Russia is building floating nuclear power stations to assist in its planned conquest of the Arctic. Via.

3. ESPN blowhard Woody Paige talks about the time he nearly committed suicide.

*Learn how to cope with mental illness with these books at Amazon.

Link roundup

1. Genocide wiped out a Native American group in the 800's.

2. For an event announcing Netflix's new service in Canada, Netflix hired actors to pretend to be members of the public and tell reporters how excited they were. "[E]xtras were asked to spill into the street and encouraged to 'play types, for example, mothers, film buffs, tech geeks, couch potatoes etc.'" Via.

3. Was the highly sophisticated cyber worm Stuxnet created to destroy Iran's nuclear plant? And was it already released? Via.

*Buy the Hackers soundtrack at Amazon.

Link roundup

1. The adorable Star Wars posters by Chris Bishop that I previously posted are now on sale.

2. Hunters in Oregon regularly shoot the "insulators on Google's electricity distribution poles. It's so problematic Google's moving their fibers underground."

3. It may only work in Australia, but s Plane Finder AR is an incredible-sounding iPhone augmented reality app - - point it at a plane flying above, and it'll tell the plane's destination and other information.

Link roundup

1. The NY Times editorial board opines that it's a good move to rename High Fructose Corn Syrup as Corn Sugar.

2. You can watch the season premier of Survivor Nicaragua online (yes, former NFL coach Jimmy Johnson is really part of the cast).

3. "The mystery Togo team that played Bahrain in an international soccer exhibition was made up of 'unidentified players and their shadowy handlers' and belonged to a 'mafia group' the country's sports minister told The Associated Press on Wednesday."

Link roundup

1. How to turn Altoids tins and Altoids Sours tins into barbecues.

2. "Powder found in Wyoming traffic stop not drugs, but grandma's ashes (in a plastic bag)." Via.

3. The next McDonald's Happy Meal toy is miniature Star Wars skate boards.

*Buy Happy Meal toys at eBay.

Link roundup

1. What happens if you release 100 cats in an Ikea store? Who knows, mostly the video shows closeups of people watching the cats.

UPDATE: My mistake, there's a commercial featuring the cats in action.

2. Michael Lewis looks at Greece's disastrous economic situation, which he blames on corruption and lax oversight. His focus is on a monastery reminiscent of the the one in Neal Stephenson's Anathem:
Knowing nothing else about the Vatopaidi monastery except that, in a perfectly corrupt society, it had somehow been identified as the soul of corruption, I made my way up to the north of Greece, in search of a bunch of monks who had found new, improved ways to work the Greek economy. The first stage was fairly easy: the plane to Greece’s second city of Thessaloniki, the car being driven along narrow roads at nerve-racking speeds, and a night with a lot of Bulgarian tourists at a surprisingly delightful hotel in the middle of nowhere, called the Eagles Palace. There the single most helpful hotel employee I have ever met (ask for Olga) handed me a stack of books and said wistfully how lucky I was to be able to visit the place. The Vatopaidi monastery, along with 19 others, was built in the 10th century on a 37-mile-long-by-6-mile-wide peninsula in northeast Greece, called Mount Athos. Mount Athos now is severed from the mainland by a long fence, and so the only way onto it is by boat, which gives the peninsula the flavor of an island. And on this island no women are allowed—no female animals of any kind, in fact, except for cats. The official history ascribes the ban to the desire of the church to honor the Virgin; the unofficial one to the problem of monks hitting on female visitors. The ban has stood for 1,000 years.

This explains the high-pitched shrieks the next morning, as the ancient ferry packed with monks and pilgrims pulls away from the docks. Dozens of women gather there to holler at the tops of their lungs, but with such good cheer that it is unclear whether they are lamenting or celebrating the fact that they cannot accompany their men. Olga has told me that she was pretty sure I was going to need to hike some part of the way to Vatopaidi, and that the people she has seen off to the holy mountain don’t usually carry with them anything so redolent of the modern material world as a wheelie bag. As a result, all I have is an Eagles Palace plastic laundry bag with spare underwear, a toothbrush, and a bottle of Ambien.
3. A woman fell into a wasp nest and was stung 500 times:
Rescue crews had to deal with yellow jackets even inside the ambulance, and once the unidentified woman was taken to Sturdy Memorial Hospital, hospital staff then had to handle yellow jackets in the emergency room.
Via.

*Buy Anathem at Amazon (it's like Harry Potter, but with string theory).

Link roundup

1. I think I've mentioned this before, but Auditorium is a fun, original and beautiful game.

2. Rodney King is going to marry a juror from his civil trial.

3. Batman: The Brave and the Bold for the Wii got strong reviews from Kotaku and Destructoid.

*Batman: The Brave and the Bold is 3 cents off at Amazon (seriously, they're promoting the savings).

Link roundup

1. Bow and arrow used to send phones into Brazil jail. Via.

2. Venezuela is the murder capital of the world.

3. "While some complain it is unfair, district officials have decided that the ban on short skirts on girls does not apply to cheerleaders."

Link roundup

1. "Welfare payments to children of illegal immigrants in Los Angeles County increased in July to $52 million, prompting renewed calls from one county supervisor to rein in public benefits to such families."

2. "A world-renowned Texas scientist specializing in infectious diseases who was once charged with smuggling dangerous samples of plague bacteria into the U.S. was questioned by authorities after a suspicious item found in his luggage caused a massive evacuation at Miami International Airport Thursday night."

3. Anyone who loved the old NES game 1942 will enjoy this 8Bit demake of Tom Clancy's HAWX 2. Via.

Link roundup

1. Redskins cornerback DeAngelo Hall insisted a (tall) female reporter take off her heels before interviewing him.

2. "How to Delete Yourself from the Internet." Via.

3. "Millions of songbirds are illegally killed each year for a pickled or poached bird dish known as ambelopoulia."

*Buy shoe lifts at Amazon.

Link roundup

1. From a Freakonomics interview with a malaria expert:
In the 1930s, when malariologists figured out that England’s malaria had vanished because English malarial mosquitoes preferred pig and calf blood to human blood, and the local livestock population had boomed, they called for a pig under every bed as a solution to malaria.
2. Models of the Macy's Day Parade floats designed by Takashi Murakami.

3. Beached whale that showed no signs of leaving (or dying) any time soon euthanized with explosives.

*Buy Takashi Murakami toys at eBay.

Link roundup

1. More information about the British spy, whose decomposed body was found locked inside a large sportsbag in the bath.

2. Google Code University, a collection of tutorials on languages like Python, Java and Go for relative beginners. Via.

3. "The highest paid athlete of all time was a charioteer from ancient Rome, say researchers."

*Buy Spy Dust: Two Masters of Disguise Reveal the Tools and Operations That Helped Win the Cold War at Amazon.

Link roundup

1. Great article on Owen Hart's wrestling career. It includes a list of wrestlers that died in the ring.

2. If Alfred was Batman.

3. New York's drinking water is filled with tiny shrimp. (I do not want to know whether that's true of Los Angeles, also.)

Link roundup

1. Dirpy turns youtube videos into mp3s. Via.

2. William Gibson:
RT @jrronimo: @GreatDismal Is it true that, after Neuromancer, you bought your first computer and were annoyed by it's fan noise? [Yes]
3. A middle school in Nettleton, Mississippi is apparently segregating student body positions by race.

*Preorder Zero History for 40% off at Amazon.

Link roundup

1. I mentioned this a few weeks ago, but here's more confirmation that the massive surge in Old Spice sales was due to coupons, not the ad campaign.

2. Colombians are living out the plot of a bad horror movie:
Diego Ferney Jaramillo, 16, and Eibart Alejandro Ruiz Munoz, 17, were shot dead on Aug 15 while riding a motorcycle on the outskirts of the town of Puerto Asis.

Two days later, young people in the town received via Facebook a hitlist with 69 names on it, including those of the two killed. The teenagers on the list were advised to leave town or face death.

Norbey Alexander Vargas, 19, was shot dead three days after his name appeared on the list.
3. Time4Cat: a fun little time waster, kind of like if Frogger starred a cat. Via.

*Buy vintage advertising at eBay.

Link roundup

1. "A few weeks ago, according to official and private reports, the Iranian air force shot down three drones near the southwestern city of Bushehr, where a Russian-supplied nuclear reactor has just started up. When the Revolutionary Guards inspected the debris, they expected to find proof of high-altitude spying. Instead, the Guards had to report to Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei that the air force had blasted Iran's own unmanned aircraft out of the sky."

2. Deadspin revealed that the Marlins took the people of Florida for suckers and tricked them into funding a new stadium.

3. Operators lost control of a US Navy drone for about a half hour - - it flew into restricted airspace before they got it back under control.

*Buy remote control planes at Amazon.