26 December 2013

Post-Christmas link exchange


These are links that wouldn't fit under TYWKIWDBI's tree.  As always, take whatever interests you - and this time feel free to leave interesting links in the comments.

A new record has been set for the most Rubik's Cubes solved in 24 hours.   Eric Limeback solved 5,800 of them (an average of one every 15 seconds); he provides an AMA at the link (with links to videos).

The Most Ancient and Most Puissant Order of the Beggar's Benison and Merryland, Anstruther was a famous 18th-century British sex club.

An op-ed piece at Salon lambasts the NFL for their sale of pink items to support breast cancer awareness, in part because for every $100 of such merchandise sold, only $3.54 actually goes toward cancer research.

You probably didn't even know that there is a list of famous trees.

A man in Florida set himself on fire while setting up a cross-burning as a Halloween decoration.

A financial transaction tax "is simple, fair, widely supported by the public and long overdue."

A link only for those who do not like Republican politicians.

Car rental companies can charge you extra for their "loss of use" while they fix a dent.

More than you really need to know about fake movie blood.  "For the original Carrie, a combination of Karo syrup and food coloring looked great, but it was “sticky,” star Sissy Spacek later recalled: “When they lit the fires behind me to burn down the gym,” she said, “I started to feel like a candy apple.”

When dogs eat human excrement they find in parks, they can be poisoned by recreational drugs in the feces.

Advice regarding embarrassing tattoo mistakes (with a gallery of photos).

A Minnesota Vikings football fan vowed to let his beard grow "until the team wins a Super Bowl."  He died this fall, with the 38-year-old beard.

The American Council on Science and Health defends fracking, BPA, and pesticides.  They are funded by...(you can guess)...

A huge list of television tropes.

An interesting set of photos of a doctor's abandoned mansion in Germany.

An argument that the United States should have just two time zones.

Many "high security" doors sold for homes can be opened with common tools such as a can opener.

Impressive catch of a football (gif).

After a man didn't stop his car at a stop sign "Doctors prepared Eckert for surgery, sedated him, and then performed a colonoscopy where a scope with a camera was inserted into Eckert's anus, rectum, colon, and large intestines.  No narcotics were found."

Oklahome City had a record high temperature and a low temperature on the same day. And another city in Oklahoma experienced a temperature rise of 110 degrees in one week.

The UC Davis cop who pepper-sprayed protesters has been awarded $38,000 in workers' compensation for his suffering.

From an open letter: "Last week, word got out that your children had broken into a home in Stephentown, NY and threw a party. More than 300 of them partied and drunkenly smashed windows, urinated on the floors, stood on tables, punched holes in the ceiling and stole a statue that was part of a memorial for the owner's stillborn grandson. Oh, it gets better. Before, during and after the party, they tweeted about it and posted pictures of themselves engaged in this behavior."   The owner of the house asked the teens and their families to clean up and repair the house.  One kid showed up.  Then some parents threatened to sue the homeowner...

Thoughtful answers to the question "what is it like to see your spouse grow older?"

America's first known serial killers were the members of the Bender family.  "The family built a one-room house near the Osage Trail... Travelers on the trail were welcome to refresh themselves with a meal and resupply their wagons with liquor, tobacco, horse feed, black powder, and food from the Bender home. And they often spent the night...

Why do Americans refrigerate eggs? "But then, maybe the question should really be posed the other way around: Given the sanitary benefits of refrigeration, why don't other countries ship, package, and store their eggs at cold temperatures, like we do in the U.S.? Well, because, unlike America, they may not actually need to. Why? Because here in America, we wash our eggs – and while it may sound counterintuitive, the cleaning process may actually make eggs more susceptible to contamination."

Someone's list of the Top Ten Best Short Stories Ever.

Should you remove your shoes when you visit a friend's house?

If you DO remove your shoes, you may be at risk for getting a splinter in your foot.  But probably not as big as this splinter (warning - graphic image).  ["risk for" or "risk of"?]

Top image: head of a male Culex pipiens mosquito, by Dr. Gareth Paul Jones.
Second image: egg sac of a pirate spider, by Geir Drange.
Bottom image: pulmonary artery epithelial cells, by Dr. Heiti Paves.

8 comments:

  1. I looked at the tree list immediately to see if Austin, Texas' Treaty Oak was there. It was, but they had no information about it listed like the others. The only surviving member of the historical Council Oaks, it was once declared the most perfect specimen of a North American Tree by the American Forestry Association, but was poisoned in the late 80s. Amazingly, it's still alive today and producing acorns, but it's lopsided now. I remember seeing it when it was so huge and beautifully proportioned.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_Oak,_Austin

    http://www.austinpostcard.com/view.php?card=23596

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    Replies
    1. Sad to hear about the poisoning attempt. And curiously somewhat of a backhanded insult to Dupont re the quality of their product ("Lab tests showed the quantity of herbicide used would have been sufficient to kill 100 trees").

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  2. There is some back story on the involuntary analysis drug search. The guy had 4 prior drug arrests. Still seems excessive but I'm sure there is more to the story.

    The 110 temperature change was over 1 week, not 1 day.

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  3. I like the Republican clowns, although they're too sophisticated to be truly clown-like (the face paint designs, not the politicians). Would like to see versions for other countries.

    Of course one should remove shoes when visiting a household where that is the custom, as it is in a large minority of households here in Australia (the remark about deadly creatures is just cheekiness). But I could tell you a story about when it's NOT acceptable to require people to remove their shoes, namely when you are the appointed manager of a shared accommodation facility and the people already living there have not been consulted. That's why I moved out of the place where I was living a little more than a decade ago.

    I am happy to leave interesting links in the comments, but there are always so many to choose from, how do I decide? For example there's this or this or this or this, for starters.

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  4. A note on the eggs. The reason truly fresh eggs do not require refrigeration for many days (some folks say up to 3 months). The reason for eggs in the States being in the fridge is because the factory eggs are washed and this removes the "bloom" from the eggs. This bloom keeps the eggshell's pores from being opened up and allowing bacteria into the egg. If you get truly fresh eggs that are straight from the farm, don't stick 'em in the fridge. Just wipe them clean with a dry rag to get the dirt off them and leave them on the counter. This leaves the bloom on the shell and allows the eggs to stay room temp and ready to go all the time. I never get store-bought eggs if I can avoid it. They don't have the bright yellow yolk, the yolk isn't a big, and they just plain taste nasty. You want good eggs, get 'em straight from the chicken, or at least from the farm. DON'T get them from the store.

    http://www.backyardchickens.com/t/499059/how-long-can-you-leave-eggs-out-unrefrigerated

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  5. I love these link dumps! Thank you for an hour of interesting reading......

    ReplyDelete

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