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“Crazy In Love” by Antony and The Johnsons
01.10.2010
03:33 pm
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Superb Beyonce cover by Antony and the Johnsons. Astonishing how Antony can take a song like this and quite simply stated, make it beautiful. Video directed by Joie Iacono with footage of Pink Lady by James Elaine.

Posted by Richard Metzger
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01.10.2010
03:33 pm
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Pyramids Not Built By Slaves
01.10.2010
02:55 pm
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According to just-released findings, the pyramids of Egypt were not built by slaves, but by free workers. Which begs the question, how the !^@!* did they motivate people to carry those blocks of their own free will? Promises of eternal life? Drugs and debauchery on weekends? Gift certificates? Fuuuu….

CAIRO (Reuters) - New tombs found in Giza support the view that the Great Pyramids were built by free workers and not slaves, as widely believed, Egypt’s chief archaeologist said on Sunday.

Films and media have long depicted slaves toiling away in the desert to build the mammoth pyramids only to meet a miserable death at the end of their efforts.

“These tombs were built beside the king’s pyramid, which indicates that these people were not by any means slaves,” Zahi Hawass, the chief archaeologist heading the Egyptian excavation team, said in a statement.

“If they were slaves, they would not have been able to build their tombs beside their king’s.”

He said the collection of workers’ tombs, some of which were found in the 1990s, were among the most significant finds in the 20th and 21st centuries. They belonged to workers who built the pyramids of Khufu and Khafre.

(ABC: Pyramids Not Built By Slaves)

Posted by Jason Louv
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01.10.2010
02:55 pm
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Beer Battleship!
01.10.2010
01:42 pm
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Bomb your opponent and your brain back to the stone age at the same time! It’s… beer battleship!

Just before Christmas we had a “hedgehog in the fog” themed party (just because we had a smoke machine). Some of fellow sharenators were here too - Ensx, Darius and BongoMan. Since BongoMan is studying architecture, he had some sheets of paperboard. So we figured we can use it to make a battleship table.

How to always win at battleship
1. Make a big battleship table. Use beer bottles/cans/etc as your ships. (Bonus: if you have a smoke machine, use it to create a feeling of a real battle!)
2. The rules of the game are simple - if you hit your opponent’s ship (beer), he has to drink it.
3. ???
4. No matter if you win or lose, you always win.

(Sharenator: Beer Battleship)

Posted by Jason Louv
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01.10.2010
01:42 pm
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Very Small Guns
01.10.2010
01:38 pm
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For very small wars.

Via Copyranter, Via English Russia.

Posted by Jason Louv
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01.10.2010
01:38 pm
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“Gordon is a Moron”
01.09.2010
11:22 pm
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One-hit wonder “Jilted John” sung by Jilted John. Listen to this once and you’ll never forget it.
 

 

Posted by Richard Metzger
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01.09.2010
11:22 pm
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Do Androids Dream of Electric Lawsuits?
01.09.2010
10:19 pm
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Isa Dick Hackett, daughter of Philip K. Dick, who wrote Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? which Blade Runner is based on (although the title itself comes from William S. Burroughs), is claiming Google is using names taken from her father’s work to brand its Nexus One telephones. She is threatening to sue Google for infringement of intellectual property rights. Something tells me there is going to be a nice payday in this for her. Google IS using names from her father’s work:

She has sent a letter to Google demanding that the online giant changes the name of its new phone, which was launched as a direct rival to the iPhone.

She said: ‘Google takes first and then deals with the fallout later.

‘In my mind, there is a very obvious connection to my father’s novel. People don’t get it. It’s the principle of it.

‘It would be nice to have a dialogue. We are open to it. That’s a way to start.’

The new product is based on Google’s Android technology, launched two years ago as a way of gaining a share in the mobile phone market.

Family of sci fi author Philip K. Dick to sue Google over name of Nexus One phone (Daily Mail)

Posted by Richard Metzger
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01.09.2010
10:19 pm
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70s French Disco Dance-Off Between Darth Vader And C-3PO
01.09.2010
10:06 pm
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(via HYST)

Posted by Tara McGinley
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01.09.2010
10:06 pm
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Neil Hamburger presents A Tribute to Frank Sinatra, Jr.
01.09.2010
09:31 pm
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Sunday night at the Silent Movie Theater in Los Angles, Cinefamily has invited showbiz great Neil Hamburger to pay tribute to one of heroes. Read on:

Now that James Brown (R.I.P.) has hung up his crown, legendary stand-up comedian Neil Hamburger has surely earned the title of “The Hardest Working Man In Show Business.” For the past thirty-seven years, Hamburger has logged thousands of shows in all four corners of the world, appearing in engagements everywhere from the prestigious “Fire & Ice” room at the Doubletree Inn in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, to the Phoenix Greyhound Park racetrack in Phoenix, AZ. One of Hamburger’s idols and mentors has been one of the celebrity offspring greats and an enigma in the world of popular music, Frank Sinatra Jr. Hamburger says: “Frank Jr. has an intense stage presence unlike any I have ever encountered. Like his father, there is a lifetime of regret, disappointment, and longing in every note that comes out of his mouth—but with a career shattered by unjustified critical malevolence and public indifference, Frank Jr.‘s experiences are drawn from a completely different well. To hell with today’s slovenly singer-songwriter scam-artists! If you’re looking for an amazingly gifted vocalist who puts every ounce of his experience into every word he sings, Sinatra Jr. is your man.” In honor of Frank Jr.‘s birthday, Hamburger has assembled this evening of rare, vintage Frank Jr. TV variety specials and film appearances!

 

 

 

For details visit the Cinefamily website

Posted by Richard Metzger
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01.09.2010
09:31 pm
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Four Visions of Solar Powered EV Charging Stations
01.09.2010
06:10 pm
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Via Treehugger, check out these potential design solutions for solar powered EV stations. In the (non-Skynet, non-Halliburton) future, you’ll plug your electric-powered bike or car into these at convenient times to fuel up and keep going. Much needed here in gas-godawful southern California…

Sanyo thinks its joint strengths in solar and in batteries make solar charging stations an obvious market to pursue. Here’s one solar station - Sanyo is unveiling its HIT prototype charging station at CES this week and plans a more modest canopy to be unveiled in Portland within the first quarter of this year.

The idea of solar-powered charging stations is enticing. Sanyo, one company preparing many solar canopies and parking lot panel solutions, believes a 10 ft. by 20 ft. solar canopy parking space cover can generate enough electricity to run the electric vehicle annually. Here are three other visions for implementing solar charging for electric vehicles either in the works, or already out on the streets.

(Treehugger: 4 Solar Powered Charging Stations)

Posted by Jason Louv
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01.09.2010
06:10 pm
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Man vs. Skynet: 1-0
01.09.2010
05:58 pm
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io9 reports that scientists have created an algorithm so complex that no computer on earth is capable of solving it. This is, at present, likely our best insurance policy against the future sending back Terminators to kill John Connor, let alone sequels set in set future featuring those weird Godzilla, motorcycle and snake-Terminators. Damn future, always plotting to make new robots who hate man!

Quantum computers, which would rely on quantum mechanical concepts like superposition and entanglement to perform operations of unimaginable complexity, remain a pipe dream. But physicists have nevertheless come up with an algorithm that only quantum computers could use.

The newest algorithm, developed by Aram W. Harrow of the University of Bristol in England and Avinatan Hassidim and Seth Lloyd of MIT, tackles linear equations, which is something many students run across in high school or college. An example of such an expression is 3x + 4y = 12, with the variables and the constants on each side of the equation. Although it’s relatively easy to solve an expression with only two unknown values, it is another matter entirely to solve systems with billions of unknown values.

Such scenarios are hardly unusual; weather scenarios frequently involve just that many variables and equations. These so-called “N by N” systems, which have N linear equations and N unknown values, can be solved relatively easy with current algorithms, but time is a factor. Say it takes a computer one second to solve one linear equation. If the system has a billion variables, then it will take a billion seconds to figure out every value. That’s almost 32 years.

(io9: Super Algorithm)

Posted by Jason Louv
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01.09.2010
05:58 pm
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