Search This Blog

Tuesday, September 4, 2018

Tree House Made From About 50 Vintage Windows

Getting Rich Dumpster Diving

An excerpt from Wired -

THE PRO DUMPSTER DIVER WHO'S MAKING THOUSANDS OFF AMERICA'S BIGGEST RETAILERS

BY DAY, MATT Malone is a security specialist for Slait Consulting. By night, he earns even bigger money as a dumpster diver.

He’s not diving in just any dumpster. By targeting electronics stores, like Office Depot or Best Buy, he makes away with like-new vacuums, computers, surveillance systems—you name it. If he pursued this secondary career full-time, Malone estimates he’d make more than $250,000 a year.


Although he doesn’t object to the term “dumpster diving,” Malone prefers the term “for-profit archaeologist.” One man’s trash is this man’s treasure—because we’re conditioned to see it that way. “We can only do what we do here because we live in a society where most people have been conditioned to look past what’s right in front of them,” says Malone.

https://www.wired.com/2015/12/pro-dumpster-diver/?CNDID=27124505&mbid=nl_090318_daily_list1_p3

Can't Get Enough

Colin Kaepernick featured in Nike 'Just Do It' ad

Inciting Unrest

Central Georgia twins celebrate 102 years of life

Monday, September 3, 2018

University VS College - What's The Difference? Education Comparison

DJ Khaled | No Brainer (feat. Justin Bieber, Chance the Rapper & Quavo) ...

I Can Do This!

https://htv-streaming-otfp.hearst.io/b16cab5b-e18b-4dab-8ae2-0cf823983727/video_rover_16x9_240p_sd_1535937890_52799,video_rover_16x9_360p_sd_1535937890_6180,video_rover_16x9_480p_sd_1535937890_93123,video_rover_16x9_720p_hd_1535937890_92468/master.m3u8

Incredible!

Stanford Children's Health - Lucile Packard Children's Hospital Stanford
about 3 weeks ago
A chance encounter at Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital Stanford has led to a heart-warming reunion between nurse and patient. Brandon, one of our pediatric residents, was born 28 years ago in our NICU--then just 29 weeks old. Vilma was his primary care nurse. Fast forward nearly 30 years, and Vilma recognized Brandon’s name while he was rounding at our hospital. What a memory! Here’s a special look at them both then and now. #WaybackWednesday
Image may contain: 2 people, baby
Image may contain: 3 people, people smiling, people standing and indoor

Why Is This Strange Flock Of Turkeys Marching Around A Dead Cat?! | Weir...

The Teen Golf Sensation Swinging for Nepal

Saturday, September 1, 2018

Learn to Lead

'Candace Parker's Sacrifice' Official Clip | The Shop | HBO

I Just Called To Say I Love You - Stevie Wonder (cover by Bailey Pelkman...

Buckingham Palace pays 'Respect' to Aretha Franklin

When New Yorkers Hear A Violin

"AS LONG AS YOU LOVE ME" - (Backstreet Boys KOver) - Kevin Olusola

Rev. Al Speaking the Truth

How To Make Perfect Chocolate Chip Cookies

8 Unique Ways To Eat Watermelon

Wednesday, August 29, 2018

He's a Smart Cookie

From the Washington Post -

This 4-year-old spotted an error on the WMATA map
By Kery Murakami





 Theo Reynolds, 4, points out a mistake he found on a Metro map in a Green Line car (Ehren Reynolds.)
https://www.washingtonpost.com/express/wp/2018/08/28/this-4-year-old-spotted-an-error-on-the-wmata-map/?utm_term=.38bec9f665c3




Experts Not Always the Best

An excerpt from the NY Times -

Those Who Can Do, Can’t Teach
Advice for college students: The best experts sometimes make the worst educators.
By Adam Grant

Two decades ago, I arrived at Harvard as an undergraduate excited to soak up the brilliance of professors who had won Nobels and Pulitzers. But by the end of the first month of my freshman year, it was clear that these world-class experts were my worst teachers. My distinguished art history professor raved about Michelangelo’s pietra serena molding but didn’t articulate why it was significant. My renowned astrophysics professor taught us how the universe seemed to be expanding, but never bothered to explain what it was expanding into (still waiting for someone to demystify that one).

It wasn’t that they didn’t care about teaching. It was that they knew too much about their subject, and had mastered it too long ago, to relate to my ignorance about it. Social scientists call it the curse of knowledge. As the psychologist Sian Beilock, now the president of Barnard College, writes, “As you get better and better at what you do, your ability to communicate your understanding or to help others learn that skill often gets worse and worse.”

I’ve come to believe that if you want to learn something new, there are three factors that you should keep in mind when choosing a teacher — whether it’s a professor or mentor or soccer coach.

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/08/25/opinion/sunday/college-professors-experts-advice.html

Just Do It: Serena Williams

IF YOU EVER GOT IMPEACHED - A Randy Rainbow Song Parody

Candy Sorter Machine Introduces Engineering To Kids

Jill Scott - Rock Steady (Live 2014)

Sunday, August 26, 2018

The Grandmas Leading Africa’s Solar Revolution

Madagascar’s Eerie Forest of Stone

How Actors Fake Fight In Movies

Josh Groban - Symphony (Official Lyric Video)

A portrait of America

Burnt

Simone Biles – Floor Exercise – 2018 U.S. Gymnastics Championships – Sen...

It's Not the Outfit

Silicon Valley Discovers Africa - Between The Scenes | The Daily Show

Eggs Experiments | Try This!

Tragic Coincidence

An excerpt from USA Today -

John McCain dies 9 years to the day after Ted Kennedy — of the same kind of cancer
By John D'Anna, Arizona Republic

PHOENIX – U.S. Sen. John McCain died nine years to the day after his good friend Sen. Ted Kennedy — both of the same kind of cancer.

McCain, R-Ariz., died Saturday a little more than a year after he was diagnosed with glioblastoma, a rare form of brain cancer that affects roughly 10,000 Americans a year.

Kennedy, D-Mass., a close friend of McCain's in the Senate, was diagnosed in May 2008 and died Aug. 25, 2009.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation-now/2018/08/25/john-mccain-dies-9-years-day-after-ted-kennedy-same-cancer/1102340002/

Spaghetti Mystery Solved

An excerpt from CNN -

Spaghetti mystery that stumped famous physicist is finally solved
By Don Lincoln

Until this month, however, it was unknown if it is even possible to break a stick of spaghetti into only two pieces. Spoiler: It is. And researchers Ronald Heisser of Cornell University and Vishal Patil of MIT and their co-authors figured it out. All it takes is a twist.

If you take a stick of spaghetti and twist it before you bend it, you can break the stick into two. When the initial fracture occurs, energy is released as occurs in a normal break, but rather than propagating through the stick and breaking it, the energy goes into relieving the tension induced by the twist.

https://www.cnn.com/2018/08/25/opinions/spaghetti-mystery-feynman-lincoln/index.html


Navigating the Mixed-Race Experience

An excerpt from the Guardian -

The mixed-race experience: 'There are times I feel like the odd one out'
By Alex Moshakis

Last year the photographer Tenee Attoh began taking portraits of multiracial friends and acquaintances against a mottled black background at the Bussey Building in Peckham, southeast London. Attoh is half-Dutch on her mother’s side, half-Ghanaian on her father’s, and identifies as mixed-race. Born in the UK, she spent most of the first 23 years of her life in Accra and Amsterdam, shuttling between cities and cultures, an experience she found enlightening but problematic. “On the one hand it allows you to develop a different understanding of the world,” she says of her duality. “But there’s still a lot of ignorance in society. People perceive you as either black or white, and you’re not – you’re mixed.”

https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2018/aug/26/the-mixed-race-experience-there-are-times-i-feel-like-the-odd-one-out-


When Dairy Hurts


Wednesday, August 22, 2018

Hajj: 7 things you don't know about the Muslim Pilgrimage - BBC News

We Learned That [These Five Amazing Things Happened]

Brilliant Response

Why Is Drake's Latest Album 'Scorpion' So Long?

You are fluent in this language (and don't even know it) | Christoph Nie...

In Rwanda, His Drones Are Saving Lives

Panda Doesn't Realise She's Had Twins! | BBC Earth

This Man Can Pronounce Every Word in the Dictionary

Freedom!

An excerpt from the Washington Post -

Animal crackers have been caged for 116 years. Pressure on Nabisco helped free them.
By Taylor Telford

Nabisco’s redesigned box appears on the shelf of a grocery store in Des Moines. (Charlie Neibergall/AP)


After more than a century of imprisonment, Barnum’s cracker creatures are roaming free — until they meet their mushy demise in the mouths of children, anyway.


After pressure from People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, Nabisco has rolled out a redesign of its Barnum’s animal crackers box — which takes its name from the famed circus — that historically featured animals behind bars. Now, the box shows the animals in formation, asserting their freedom on the savanna.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/food/wp/2018/08/21/animal-crackers-have-been-caged-for-116-years-pressure-on-nabisco-helped-free-them/?noredirect=on&utm_term=.3863073f6771&wpisrc=nl_rainbow&wpmm=1

Worth a Thousand Words


A song about growing up British and Indian - BBC

Wednesday, August 15, 2018

The fastest way to charge your phone without damaging the battery

Cuomo: We hold kids to higher standard than Trump

A Real President

A post shared by Pete Souza (@petesouza) on

Great Analogy

Innovative Grocery Store

https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/free-supermarket-cuts-food-waste_us_5b7337fde4b046f5d7c791aa