August 20
Two commercial pilots find themselves on the no-fly list. One pilot
sues after having his flight privileges revoked, while the second pilot (and a five-year old sharing his name) note they can
bypass the watchlist by checking in using their initials instead of their full names. TSA has also found themselves in the news this week for disrupting 40 flights and damaging 9 planes during an
overzealous security check.
posted by grippycat at 12:03 AM -
12 comments
August 19
Cockatoos are much better dancers than macaws. Well that was my clear conclusion after watching the first two vid clips linked to
why animals dance in this Guardian feature. And since this is from a serious researcher I don't think they are faked. For those with
much more time, this site has an interesting podcast on the topic of music and the brain.
posted by binturong at 7:18 PM -
13 comments
And you may find yourself behind the wheel of a large automobile | And you may find yourself in a beautiful house, with a beautiful wife | And you may ask yourself... Well...
How did I get here?
posted by unSane at 7:02 PM -
53 comments
Get your learn on. 180+ ways of investigating the human brain = hours of fun for the whole family. Thanks to an innocuous question by a 5 year old, my entire evening is now being spent investigating and discussing the structure and workings of the human brain. This flash site lets you explore the workings of the brain according to 12 subject areas (each with subtopics which are not included in the "180" count), within each of which are 5 levels of organization from social to molecular, within each of which are three levels of explanation (beginner, intermediate, and advanced.) discovered via Wikipedia.
posted by ThusSpakeZarathustra at 3:27 PM -
8 comments
Baseball behind barbed wire. Japanese-Americans brought baseball with them when they emigrated to America. The game had been introduced to Japan,
so the story goes, by American Professor Horace Wilson in the 1870s. When Japanese nationals and Japanese-Americans were relocated to internment camps during World War II, playing baseball was one of the few freedoms allowed them by camp directors.
[more inside]
posted by nanojath at 12:54 PM -
4 comments
In a strange and incestuous twist of the space-web-time continuum, a fascinating
comment about the mechanism by which The Daily Show with Jon Stewart (
previOusly.) records every bit of daily news appeared inside a
post on
PVRBlog, the red-headed stepchild blog of our selfless benefactor,
user 1.
posted by cklennon at 6:23 AM -
26 comments
The Echo Label (splash page, site offline) a subsidary of Chrysalis, is "an independent creatively driven record company which nurtures artists before they sign deals with major labels." Blaming a "challenging macroeconomic environment" for hampering sales of CDs, a decline in synchronisation revenues from music used in TV programmes, films and advertisement, Chrysalis recently warned its investors that the Echo Label
has performed below management expectations, with "marginally higher" write-offs for new unproven artists, noting that it had not "upstreamed" any artists to major labels in the third quarter.
posted by three blind mice at 5:22 AM -
22 comments
August 18
The
Hong Kong Lego Users Group created an exhibition called
Lego Sport City, a recreation of the Olympic Village in Lego. It's 3m x 8m, and has over 300,000 bricks; you can read more about it
here and
here. Brickshelf has a very comprehensive collection of photos
here, including a lot of shots showing the construction and the smaller details.
[Via /.]
posted by Upton O'Good at 7:36 PM -
8 comments
Yearbook Yourself. Have you ever thumbed through an old yearbook and wondered what you'd look like if you were part of that class? Wonder no more! Try on a 50s beehive hairdo, become a 60s flower child or prepare to join the cast of "That 70s Show".
posted by scalefree at 2:10 PM -
23 comments
An Iraqi national with a fascinating background,
Ghaith Abdul-Ahad has been
documenting the situation in Iraq. His video report is in three parts on YouTube (
1,
2,
3). Of particular note is the cemetery on the outskirts of Sadr City (at 2:13 of segment 2), which is disturbing beyond words.
posted by dbiedny at 1:53 PM -
11 comments
Psych Securities LLC. "With future forecasts declaring ultimate doom from all components of the man-altered world, it seems there is a clog in the conduit of information transmitted between those in control and the public at large. Black Ops, psychological torture, acoustic weapons, Project Starfire, and a multitude of other state sponsored programs exist, well-hidden in plain sight, shrouded in a stigma of conspiracy and diluting any significant public inquiry. Psych Securities LLC is an ongoing exploration of this aforementioned covert reality, most clearly seen while in an alternative psychological state. By
compiling declassified documents, historical narratives, and psychedelic conjecture, a visual world is pieced together; undermining strategies of deception and
concealed truths."
[Via]
posted by homunculus at 12:12 PM -
39 comments
Then I imagined what my friends would say if I got killed: I kept hearing them retell the story of how I went out to O'Hare to get a cat and instead met my doom wandering down the middle of a highway in a blizzard. I could just hear them saying, It's how he would have wanted to go ...
[more inside]
posted by enn at 11:18 AM -
89 comments
10 Futuristic User Interfaces. [...] we present 10 recent developments in the field of user experience design. Most techniques may seem very futuristic, but some of them are already reality. And in fact, they are extremely impressive. Keep in mind: they can become ubiquitous in the next years.
posted by soundofsuburbia at 2:33 AM -
57 comments
August 17
Whether you're fleeing
tropical storm Fay - which is currently heading for Florida - or you've just been airlifted out of the Grand Canyon due to the the recent
flooding due to a dam breach, or even "none of the above/other", the American Red Cross has a way for you to let folks know you're
Safe and Sound. You can search for people in the list by family name, pre-disaster phone number, and pre-disaster address.
Also, the American Red Cross has a twitter feed. But I don't think twitter being down counts as a disaster...
posted by rmd1023 at 9:03 PM -
11 comments
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