Friday 26 September 2008

Tuesday 9 September 2008

Quote

Democracy consists of choosing your dictators, after they've told you what you think it is you want to hear.
Alan Corenk
via

Letters from the past.

More than 1,000 pages of handwritten letters from 1947 to 1948 by an American woman who witnessed and described in detail the Allied Occupation of Japan have been discovered in Nebraska and recently obtained by The Japan Times.

"The letters are interesting because they tell a lot about how an ordinary American woman at that time felt about Occupied Japan, being exposed to a totally different culture,"

It came from outter space....

....well we put it there first.


Its a tardigrades also knwo by the much cuter name of Water Bear. The artical floating about the web say its the toughest living thing on this planet, and now orbiting us.#

The papers abstract reads as:
Vacuum (imposing extreme dehydration) and solar/galactic cosmic radiation prevent survival of most organisms in space [1]. Only anhydrobiotic organisms, which have evolved adaptations to survive more or less complete desiccation, have a potential to survive space vacuum, and few organisms can stand the unfiltered solar radiation in space. Tardigrades, commonly known as water-bears, are among the most desiccation and radiation-tolerant animals and have been shown to survive extreme levels of ionizing radiation [2, 3, 4]. Here, we show that tardigrades are also able to survive space vacuum without loss in survival, and that some specimens even recovered after combined exposure to space vacuum and solar radiation. These results add the first animal to the exclusive and short list of organisms that have survived such exposure.

For more friendly comments etc: Wired
It's one small step for Tardigrada, and one giant leap for the animal kingdom: The toughest creature on Earth has survived a trip into space.

Except for a few hardy strains of bacteria, any other creature would have been destroyed -- but tardigrades handled the voyage as though it were a dry spell on their local moss patch.

"They have claws and eyes. They are real animals. And this is the first time such an animal was tested in space," said Petra Rettberg, an Institute of Aerospace Medicine microbiologist.

Better known as water bears, tardigrades are eight-legged invertebrates visible to the naked eye and found throughout the world, making them a biology class favorite........

Friday 5 September 2008

An Animal

This Picture is from one of my fave blogs :)


Stuck In Customs

Abit about Trey Ratcliff from the man himself

American Political Cartoons


From the left: Lalo Alcaraz


Tony Auth


Now from the right:



Lisa Bensen



Scott Stantis




Thursday 4 September 2008




pic via

Franklin Booth, born 1874 and raised in Indiana, was an artist who worked mainly with ink and a pen. His works are composed of thousands of lines, whose careful positioning next to one another determine the density and shade of that particular region. His unusual technique was the result of a misunderstanding: As a boy, Booth scrupulously copied magazine illustrations which he thought were pen and ink drawings. In fact, they were wood engravings.[1]

Txt via

recool (really cool)

Hmmmm

At first i was like so what, but then it just made me want sushi, i just love the way the eggs look.
via

Wednesday 3 September 2008

Quote

What if everything is an illusion and nothing exists? In that case, I definitely overpaid for my carpet.
Woody Allen
US movie actor, comedian, & director (1935 - )
via

A funny

http://xkcd.com/471/

Monday 1 September 2008