Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Derinkuyu, the mysterious underground city of Turkey


In 1963, an inhabitant of Derinkuyu (in the region of Capadocia, central Anatolia, Turkey), demolishing a wall of his house-cave, discovered astonished that behind the same was a mysterious room that never had seen; this room took to another one, and this one to another one and another one. By chance the underground city of Derinkuyu was shortage, whose first level could be excavated by hititas around year 1400 a.C.

Top 10 craziest concept car designs


“The raddest thing about concepts cars is that all bets are off. Designers don’t need to worry about safety standards, practicality, reliability, weather, parking, door handles, engines – anything at all, really. They just reach into their childhood dreams and create pure fantasy with no need for restraint. And that lack of restraint is key here, as we present you with the top ten craziest concept cars ever.”

VIA: -UNIQUE DAILY-

World's largest fossil site unearthed


Scientists claim to have uncovered the world’s largest haul of dinosaur fossils in China. They recovered some 7,600 fossils from a 980ft-long pit near Zhucheng city in the eastern province of Shandong in a dig lasting seven months. The finds at the site - dubbed ‘Dinosaur City’ - include the remains of a 65ft hadrosaurus, possibly a record size for fossils of the duck-billed species.”

Sunday, December 28, 2008

Blood bucket lamp


"The $226 Blood Bucket Lamp (our name) celebrates the holidays with flowing crimson that's in the perpetual state of just almost spilling all over your floor. Sure, you could pretend that it's supposed to be paint—there's a bucket and everything. But when you wake every night in a cold sweat, your face glowing red from the nightlight...well, we told you so."

Not to be confused with the 1959 black humor cult classic -A BUCKET OF BLOOD- .

Saturday, December 27, 2008

14 Creatively Different Modern Door Designs


"In our rush to renovate our dream house with the craziest and most creative that modern design can conjure up, we’re liable to forget how we enter and leave it. If you are thinking that modern door design is a matter of open-and-shut conventional thinking, these 14 examples should put you in the right frame of mind."

Thursday, December 25, 2008

In the Dark...

Here are two principles about shadows:

  1. They don't pass through opaque objects. Your shadow can fall on a wall, but not through it.
  2. Light must strike an object in order to cast a shadow. If you're in the shade, you have no shadow.

Right? But now suppose the sun is behind you and you're contemplating a butterfly:

http://usera.imagecave.com/upsidebackwards/3130134873_f695f317fd.jpg

The shadow under the butterfly is not cast by you (Principle 1), and it's not cast by the butterfly (Principle 2). So what's casting it?

"This is a genuine problem," writes philosopher Robert Martin. "The rules for shadows aren't inconsistent, but they are empirically inadequate — there are phenomena they do not fit."

VIA: -FUTILITY CLOSET-

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Friday, December 19, 2008

Vintage alien landscapes by Kazuaki Saito


In the early 1970s, artist Kazuaki Saito’s fantastic alien landscape illustrations graced the covers of SF Magazine, Japan’s first successful and longest running science fiction periodical.

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

DIY Brain Machine


It’s definitely on the trippy side, but Mitch Altman’s DIY Brain Machine uses sound and LED light pulses to induce brain states that range from meditative to hallucinatory.

Glow in the Dark Graffiti


Kids, vandalism is BAD, but this Glow in the Dark Graffiti available at Generate makes for intriguing “artistic” endeavors; it comes with a bright LED light near the nozzle to charge the paint.

VIA: -THE AWESOMER-

Monday, December 15, 2008

Scientist says he has found oldest spider web


The tiny tangled threads of the world's oldest spider web have been found encased in a prehistoric piece of amber, a British scientist said Monday. Oxford University paleobiologist Martin Brasier said the 140-million-year-old webbing provides evidence that arachnids had been ensnaring their prey in silky nets since the dinosaur age. He also said the strands were linked to each other in the roughly circular pattern familiar to gardeners the world over.

SEE ALSO: -Unraveling the Wonders of Spider Silk-

Thursday, December 11, 2008

The Notorious Bettie Page

At least she lived to a ripe old age, though still sad that a woman known for her vibrant and energetic beauty would spend the last week of her life in a coma. Rest in Peace Bettie, you were the best and will be missed. :'(

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Bettie Page, the brunet pinup queen with a shoulder-length pageboy hairdo and kitschy bangs whose saucy photos helped usher in the sexual revolution of the 1960s, has died. She was 85.

Page, whose later life was marked by depression, violent mood swings and several years in a state mental institution, died Thursday night at Kindred Hospital in Los Angeles, where she had been on life support since suffering a heart attack Dec. 2, according to her agent, Mark Roesler.

Memorial continued:
http://www.latimes.com/news/obituaries/ ... 0709.story

Monday, December 8, 2008

Saturday, December 6, 2008

Junk Bots


Colombian Mario Langer has a thing for robots; his junkbots seem to be made from all manner of salvaged components, including mouses, webcams, suction cups and alligator clips.

The Walking Bike


As ridiculous as it looks, this Walking Bike by Max Knight actually works; it’ll get you around town with kicks to spare, although its bumpy ride is ill advised for hemorrhoid sufferers.

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Top 25 comic book battles


Welcome to Comic Book Resources' Top 25 Comic Book Battles, as voted on by the readers of Comic Book Resources!

We asked our readers to pick their favorite battles that took place in comic books and hundreds responded with great enthusiasm!

See Also: -11 Awesome Comic Book Hideouts-

Upsidebackwards Episode # 1

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*Episode #:
ONE (-download link-)

*Air Date: 12/4/08

*Duration: 15 min 48 sec

*Topics: Introductions past, present, future. Obama Bin Laden and the changing of America's diaper. The inevitable zombie apocalypse.

*Featured Band: Poker Face

Saturday, November 29, 2008

Sunday melodies...

3 things, please check it out...

1

2

3

And a 4th thing if you made it this far. :)

10 mall massacres with robots, freaks and monsters


Black Friday! Even its name conjures visions of a horrifying battle for survival in the most hostile environment known to humanity — the overcrowded shopping mall. But it could be worse. Science fiction has given us several stories of death and destruction in malls. Just to console you as you battle crowds today, here's our rundown of the 10 deadliest fictional mall massacres of all time.

10 futuristic laptop designs


Technology grows too fast and to keep ourselves synchronized with the modern trends, we must take into account every progress whether that may be of past or of the future. Compiled below is a list of the most futuristic concept laptop designs, some of which have won achievement awards while the rest are just too cool to know about.

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Bioluminescent vegetation from another world


"To see yourself on an alien planet, you need go no farther than Cornwall, England. That’s where lighting designer Bruce Munro has placed his outdoor installation, “Field of Light.” Thousands of fiber optic cables topped with acrylic orbs illuminate the countryside, giving the impression that the field is populated with bioluminescent vegetation from another world."

While you're at it, why not check out my song -FIELD OF LIGHT- which I recorded a couple years back... ;o)

The Ancient and Modern Diversity of Bats


Bats are the only mammals that can fly. Scientists have therefore been eager to learn how they evolved from their terrestrial ancestors. Until recently, however, even the oldest fossil bats still looked essentially like modern bats. New fossils have revealed a species that is helping to connect the dots between bats and their nonflying forebears. Findings from genetics and developmental biology have further illuminated bat origins, elucidating their place in the mammal family tree and the process by which the bat wing may have evolved.

Monday, November 24, 2008

Watched Underwater by a Robotic Tuna


When you think of autonomous, unmanned spy vehicles, you probably imagine the telltale shape of a small aircraft overhead, and the suspicious sound of whirring propellers. Spy vehicles, however, aren't just for the sky anymore. The U.S. Navy has funded the development of an autonomous, unmanned vehicle shaped like a fish and capable of covering up to three times the distance of a typical UAV using the same battery. It's called GhostSwimmer, and it'll be entering

Saturday, November 22, 2008

Researchers Make New Electronics -- With A Twist


They've made electronics that can bend. They've made electronics that can stretch. And now, they've reached the ultimate goal -- electronics that can be subjected to any complex deformation, including twisting.

Friday, November 21, 2008

It's confirmed: Matter is merely vacuum fluctuations


Matter is built on flaky foundations. Physicists have now confirmed that the apparently substantial stuff is actually no more than fluctuations in the quantum vacuum.

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Amazing mechanical elephant


This amazing mechanical design was made out of transmission parts, electrical conduits, plumbing pipes and 20-gauge cold rolled steel. It is 36" x 36" x 18" and weighs about 85 pounds.

How evolution can affect an entire group


Worker ants of the world, unite! You have nothing to lose but your fertility. The highly specialized worker castes in ants represent the pinnacle of social organization in the insect world. As in any society, however, ant colonies are filled with internal strife and conflict. So what binds them together? More than 150 years ago, Charles Darwin had an idea and now he's been proven right. -ARTICLE CONTINUED-

Monday, November 17, 2008

Bob the Builder goes nuclear


I wish Vanadium Corp. of America had actually produced this stunning nuclear-powered road-maker in the early 1960s.

Just imagine the thrill of terraforming America's beautiful but useless rural hills into productive ribbons of concrete at the touch of a single button. Sadly, they probably feared the arrival of mass-produced personal aircars before this magnificent eco-mangler could be rushed into production.

Unearthed in the Plan 59 archives

VIA: -RETRO THING-

The world’s most super-designed data center


This underground data center has greenhouses, waterfalls, German submarine engines, simulated daylight and can withstand a hit from a hydrogen bomb. It looks like the secret HQ of a James Bond villain.

And it is real. It is a newly opened high-security data center run by one of Sweden’s largest ISPs, located in an old nuclear bunker deep below the bedrock of Stockholm city, sealed off from the world by entrance doors 40 cm thick (almost 16 inches).

Sunday, November 16, 2008

RED Scarlet/Epic


RED’s Scarlet/Epic is a modular, build-it-yourself camera system which allows you to shoot video from 3K @ 120FPS to 28K @ 30FPS and stills from 4.9 MP to a whopping 261 MP.

VIA: -THE AWESOMER-

Saturday, November 15, 2008

5 ways that 'Sandman' changed the world


This week saw the 20th anniversary of the release of the first issue of The Sandman, Neil Gaiman's now-classic fantasy series that rewrote the rules of mainstream comics more than once in its' 75-issue run. Without Sandman, we may never have seen comics like Fables, Y: The Last Man or The Invisibles... but on the other hand, we probably wouldn't have had to suffer through the CGI Beowulf movie, either. To celebrate Morpheus' 20th birthday, we look at five ways in which entertainment is different because of comics' favorite dream god.

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Ubercool "Mexican walking fish" nearing extinction


We're saddened to learn that the alien-looking Axolotl salamander (Ambystoma mexicanum), aka Mexican walking fish or Mexican water monster, is seriously threatened with extinction because of habitat destruction and water pollution.

Eyeball of doom!!!


Spooky Daddy’s -EYEBALL OF DOOM- is a bit too soft for world domination, but we do want one for our office; there’s nothing quite like 3′ wide, all-seeing eye to brighten up your day.

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Food chain friends...


It’s never too early to get your kids used to the idea that it’s a dog eat dog world out there … and FAO Schwarz (who knows how *hard* retail stores have it these days …) can help. Behold the "Food Chain Friends":

Food Chain Friends are from Daro, a small green planet much like Earth was 200 million years ago. Daro teems with wildlife, and its exceptionally social and gracious species flourish in a complex - but oddly, very friendly - ecosystem. They’re friends. They eat each other. It’s a complicated relationship!


VIA: -NEATORAMA-

Sunday, November 9, 2008

Physicists use "BlackMax" to search for extra dimensions


A team of theoretical and experimental physicists, with participants from Case Western Reserve University, have designed a new black hole simulator called BlackMax to search for evidence that extra dimensions might exist in the universe. -READ MORE-

Saturday, November 8, 2008

Specter in the Veil?


Is that a ghostly specter in the night sky? Actually that’s part of The Veil Nebula, recorded through filters that show emissions from hydrogen atoms in red and oxygen atoms in greenish hues.

APOD has more details (and of course, larger photos): Link

VIA: -NEATORAMA-

Cool "Atomic Punk" car design


-CLICK IMAGE FOR FULL GALLERY-

Friday, November 7, 2008

Tiny skeletons examine behavior and evolution


“Farmer presents herself the conjurer of, rather than the maker, of these ‘creatures’ examining their behavior and evolution. ‘A bid to reignite childlike curiosity has witnessed the emergence of a species of miniature skeletal creatures resembling the human form’. The new works will continue to investigate this fictional world where the behavior of these fairies becomes increasing sinister as they mutate, mimic and torture the insects around them.”

Celebrating 100 posts!


Celebrating the centennial post here at 'The Black Hole's Ledge', why not take The Caveman Challenge? Find your place on our 'caveman-o-meter' by completing the seven evolutionary challenges. Each challenge allows you to move along the evolutionary scale from ape to man.

Shamed by you English?

A couple of hilarious parody advertisements I scanned from Alan Moore's old 1963 comic series. Including, Are you Shamed by you English? & Must I lose My Mind?

Monster Ghost


I can’t even count the number of times a giant monster crony who obeys my every command could have been useful to me. Free “Peeping Skeleton Hands” too? Sign me up!

Universal Declaration Of Human Rights Flies Into Space


“All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a sprit of brotherhood”, states Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR). Sixty years after its adoption by the United Nations General Assembly at the Palais de Chaillot in Paris on 10 December 1948, the Declaration is ready to take a journey into space: destination the International Space Station, and more specifically, ESA’s Columbus laboratory.

-FULL ARTICLE-

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Gold nanostar shape of the future


Rods, cones, cubes and spheres – move aside. Tiny gold stars, smaller than a billionth of a meter, may hold the promise for new approaches to medical diagnoses or testing for environmental contaminants. While nanoparticles have been the rage across a wide spectrum of sciences, a new study by Duke University bioengineers indicates that of all the shapes studied to date, stars may shine above all the rest for certain applications.

Another one from -PHYSORG-

Following the leader is a real drag


From the Tour de France to NASCAR, competitors and fans know that speed is only part of the equation. Strategy -- and the ability to use elements like aerodynamic drafting, which makes it easier to follow closely behind a leader than to be out in front -- is also critical. But in some cases, drafting happens in reverse: It's the leader of a pack who experiences reduced drag, while the followers encounter more resistance -- and have to expend more energy to keep up.

More at -PHYSORG-

Sunday, November 2, 2008

Man in the Dark


Click image to play...

Ten things you don't know about Black Holes


Ah, black holes. The ultimate shiver-inducer of the cosmos, out-jawing sharks, out-ooking spiders, out-scaring… um, something scary. But we’re fascinated by ‘em, have no doubt — even if we don’t understand a whole lot about them.

Read it all at -DISCOVER MAGAZINE-

Internet collaboration still in infancy: Wikipedia founder

"What we haven't seen yet in video is large-scale collaborative projects."

Off the top of his head Wales suggested a 90-minute collaborative web video created by interviewing people from all around the world, giving their views on the war in Iraq.

He joked: "This isn't going to be that popular, frankly, a 90-minute movie with people talking about Iraq -- it's going to have a small audience. This can't be produced in the old-fashioned way. It's totally possible now.

"That's just one dumb idea of mine, right? Imagine what we could get if we could get 100,000 people thinking about collaborative video efforts to create documentary films, or comedy, or art, or who knows what.

"So, I think we've still got a long way to go."

Continued at: -PHYSORG-

Friday, October 31, 2008

Small water fleas help ecologists understand population dynamics


A study of populations of tiny water fleas is helping ecologists to understand population dynamics, which may lead to predictions about the ecological consequences of environmental change. -CONTINUED-

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

The Fire Rainbow: An Astonishing And Rare Marvel Of Nature


No, it's not the first of April. The phenomenon known as a 'fire rainbow' does exist. A fire rainbow is a halo or an optical phenomenon similar in appearance to a horizontal rainbow, but in contrast caused by the refraction of light through the ice crystals in cirrus clouds. Here, read the science behind it and marvel at some amazing photography of this rare beauty, the circumhorizont arc, known to its friends as a CHA.

VIA: -PRESURFER-

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

'Digital dark age' may doom some data

http://blog.wired.com/27bstroke6/botnet061307.jpg
What stands a better chance of surviving 50 years from now, a framed photograph or a 10-megabyte digital photo file on your computer's hard drive? The framed photograph will inevitably fade and yellow over time, but the digital photo file may be unreadable to future computers – an unintended consequence of our rapidly digitizing world that may ultimately lead to a "digital dark age," says Jerome P. McDonough, assistant professor in the Graduate School of Library and Information Science at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

Monday, October 27, 2008

The museum of unworkable devices


This museum is a celebration of fascinating devices that don't work. It houses diverse examples of the perverse genius of inventors who refused to let their thinking be intimidated by the laws of nature, remaining optimistic in the face of repeated failures. Watch and be amazed as we bring to life eccentric and even intricate perpetual motion machines that have remained steadfastly unmoving since their inception. Marvel at the ingenuity of the human mind, as it reinvents the square wheel in all of its possible variations. Exercise your mind to puzzle out exactly why they don't work as the inventors intended.

The Infinite Brain...


A Boltzmann brain is a hypothesized self-aware entity which arises due to random fluctuations out of a state of chaos. The idea is named for physicist Ludwig Boltzmann (1844 - 1906), who had advanced an idea that the known universe arose as a random fluctuation, similar to process through which Boltzmann brains might arise.