Tuesday, January 31, 2006

Foodthulhu

A great idea from Jon: H.P. Lovecraft meets bizarre vintage food adverts:



It was very peculiar, but as the little boy uttered his petition there seemed to form overhead the shadowy, nebulous figures of exotic things; of hybrid creatures, crowned with horn-flanked disks.



Those who described these strange shapes felt quite sure that they were not human, despite some superficial resemblences in size and general outline.



The odor of the fish was maddening; but I was too much concerned with graver things to mind so slight an evil, and set out boldly for an unknown goal.

(thanks to boingboing and accordionguy for mashup fodder)

Monday, January 30, 2006

Try the veal

(15:03:11) Frank: Did you hear about the penguin in a santa suit who went to the psychiatrist?
(15:03:21) Frank: diagnosis: bipolar!
(15:03:34) Frank: tip your waitresses...
(15:03:48) Frank: I'll be here all week...
(15:03:52) David: <insert cricket chirps here>

Ultimately, EVERYBODY just wants to makes music.

Remember 80s movie staple Rick Moranis?



You loved him in Ghostbusters. And Little Shop of Horrors. And the Honey, I Shrunk the Everything series of flicks. Well fast-forward a bit from the 80s (a VERY long bit, come to think of it) and you'll find that he's released a country music album, of all things, named "Agoraphobic Cowboy".



(his site | his explanation | amazon reviews)

Thursday, January 26, 2006

Dumbest moments in business

(via Business 2.0):

Winner, Dumbest Moment, Outsourcing
Told you we shouldn't have rented that list from the Department of Homeland Security.

Blaming a mailing-list vendor for providing bad information, JPMorgan Chase apologizes for sending a form letter about its credit card services to an Arab American man in California addressed to "Palestinian Bomber."


Another good one:

Winner, Dumbest Moment, Public Relations
Men, on the other hand, have a charming self-destructive quality.

Speaking at an ad industry event in Toronto, WPP Group's worldwide creative director, Neil French, says there aren't more female creative directors "because they're crap" and they eventually "wimp out" and "go off and suckle something." French speaks from a stage decorated as a hunting lodge while being served drinks by a woman in a skimpy maid's outfit, of whom he asks, "Could you lean over a bit more?" Two weeks later WPP accepts French's resignation.

Monday, January 23, 2006

The ghosts of BASIC past



Click the button for resurrected geekery.

Update:
From Jerry:
"What goose did:


Once upon a time, there was a great sinus who lived in a large goose in the clouds.


I'd really like to hear the rest of that story."

Sunday, January 22, 2006

Pluto brings out silliness




The New Horizons mission finally launched, after many false starts and delays. And it brought out not only the great feeling of human achievement, but more importantly some goofiness in our instant messaging chatter:

(12:52:26) Chris: aw snap! they are delaying for clouds
(12:52:39) Chris: it's a freaking rocket guys
(12:52:47) Chris: clouds are not a problem
(12:53:39) David: dammit
(12:53:49) David: oh no, we might hit an endangered bird species up there or something
(12:53:56) Chris: why does god hate pluto
(12:54:11) Chris: oh yeah...the whole "underworld" thing
(12:56:58) David: LOL

...

(Chris getting excited as we hear that the launch is actually happening for real this time:)

(13:53:25) Chris: ooh, they might be good to go at 2 PM
(13:53:30) Chris: GO! GO!
(13:53:56) Chris: GO on weather
(13:55:38) Chris: light that freakin candle
(13:56:14) Chris: man, i should have seen if i could have gone over to mission ops
(13:57:44) Chris: look out for teh birdz!!!!!11
(14:00:40) Chris: OH YEAH!
(14:03:37) Chris: sweeet

...

(the day after, i saw an article about
the spacecraft's cargo containing the ashes of Pluto's discoverer Clyde Tombaugh):

(11:17:22) David: i had no idea
(11:18:27) Jon: neither did I
(11:18:42) David: the plutonium is going to bring that dude back to life
(11:18:56) Jon: ...as the Incredible Hulk
(11:19:05) David: HULK SMASH CHARON!!!!

Haven't you wanted to do this?



(via PostSecret)

Wednesday, January 18, 2006

Before you leap...

From Michelle:



"At least San Francisco is trying to keep people from jumping!"

Here's another view I found on Flickr:


Monday, January 16, 2006

Nanotechnology...

...is now a dietary supplement??



"Mesosilver is 0.9999 pure silver in colloidal form, a true silver colloid. All natural mineral supplement in the form of nanoparticle colloidal silver."

Are they actually making money off this?? The link appeared in the Adsense advertisements above. Of course, I'm giving them some potentially free business by talking about them. What a scam!

1000 reasons to love Japan




Reason #625: Arnold Schwarzenegger explodes out of a woman's head in a commercial.

Symptoms of fatigue

Kathryn, who woke up for a while last night due to Iris screaming, tells me at the gym today that she's "looking forward to going home to relaxate."

Reminds me when I was sleep deprived in college, riding the bus to campus and thinking that everyone was speaking a weird new language that only makes sense again when you get enough sleep.

But one of the best is Jim's boot camp story, wherein he reached out to receive candy offered by the fatigue-induced vision of a woman in a blue dress. He was supposed to be practicing hiding in a ditch with his machine gun. Apparently his drill instructor was not happy to be seeing him jumping out of the ditch for treats.

Sunday, January 15, 2006

Sunday funnies, the remix



Click for info and full comic.

Thursday, January 12, 2006

Spam subject du jour

The subject of some cheesy Web marketing scam I received in my inbox recently:

"My Darling, Is That Manure Stick You Have On?"

Wednesday, January 11, 2006

Geckos with friggin' LASER BEAMS!

I and several other BKA folk are working on some SBIR proposals to try to fund some research and development in our little shop, and I found some interesting proposals that were already awarded.

DARPA, which has a reputation for funding some freaky stuff, awarded one to a company with some interesting wording in their abstract: "The ability to efficiently utilize the large surface area of entities such as buildings, tanks, and ships as active, intelligent skins will allow these assets to become part of a larger, highly-responsive, complex nervous system in mission critical scenarios."

This title won the funding award despite breaking trademark: "Printed Electronics Processing for Structural Integrity (PEPSI)".

And CES would have been a much more interesting consumer electronics conference with items such as the "Highly Scalable Low Loss Fast Tuned True Time Delay Module Based on Dispersion Enhanced Photonic Crystal Fibers".

Science fiction? "Distributed Collaborative Planning and Control for Undersea Surveillance using Swarms of Autonomous Underwater Vehicles." Big Brother goes swimming!

And who would have thought the humble gecko could inspire the next generation of robots? "An essentially new research thrust on studying the climbing capability of the gecko has been of major interest. The ability to not only climb walls but also hang upside down from the ceiling has postulated many research questions. In addition to this, the gecko has the added advantage of having dry, self-cleaning, dynamically modulated adhesive feet. These advantages give unlimited life in sticking ability, unlike modern adhesive materials (i.e. tapes, glues, etc.). Recent studies indicate that this is actually achieved by small intermolecular forces known as van der Waals forces. This force, which occurs when unbalanced electrical charges around molecules attract each other, is individually miniscule, but the effect of several million collectively produces a powerful adhesion. An effective adhesive material would probably have to utilize a multi-level micro structure design that would engage the surface so the naturally occurring van der Waals forces could be maximized. The development of this new material would incorporate understanding at the nanoscopic scale of the fibers and/or microstructure of both the gecko feet and the proposed adhesion material. The major technical risks will be in the development, fabrication, and adhesive efficiency of this type of material."

Wednesday, January 04, 2006

Today, on "Internet", part 2

(15:41:11) Dave: i think i typed a bush-ism accidentally
(15:41:24) Dave: writing up some sbir crap on the wiki, i tried to type "easily"
(15:41:29) Dave: and ended up typing "easible"
(15:41:38) Jon: HAH HAH HAH
(15:41:58) Jon: see? modern society makes ya dumbpid!
(15:42:01) Dave: it'd be a good name for a company :)
(15:42:07) Dave: Welcome to Easible
(15:42:32) Jon: that'd be a good name for a ranch out in nevada...
(15:42:29) Dave: oh, i saw an ad for some meds for bi-polar patients
(15:42:34) Dave: it had the worst drug name ever
(15:42:38) Dave: it was called "Abilify"
(15:42:47) Jon: oh yeah, that stuff
(15:42:59) Dave: it makes you able! so it abilifies you!
(15:43:00) Jon: pharmaceuticals have all kinds of stupid names like that now
(15:43:28) Jon: "Ask you doctor about Pubella!"
(15:43:32) Jon: "No, I don't think I will..."
(15:44:39) Dave: LOL

Today, on "Internet"

(13:04:32) Jon: internet thread of the day:
(13:04:59) Jon: I noticed a news headline about Philly celebrating Benjamin Franklin's 300th birthday this month
(13:05:07) Jon: So I looked him up on wikipedia
(13:05:20) Jon: read through all this stuff about him that I either had forgotten or didn't know
(13:05:35) Jon: at the end there's a fiction category
(13:05:40) Jon: one of the lines:
(13:05:51) Jon: "Franklin surprisingly appears as a character in Tony Hawk's Underground 2, a skateboarding video game. Players encounter Franklin in his hometown of Boston and are able to play as him thereafter."
(13:05:54) Jon: o_O
(13:06:09) Dave: ROFL
(13:06:12) Dave: that's awesome :)
(13:06:25) Jon: didn't expect to read that line ever :)
(13:06:41) Dave: that rules
(13:06:55) Jon: it does sound pretty cool :)
(13:07:11) Dave: now i wanna play that game
(13:07:24) Dave: and, they should make a spinoff that lets you play as all sorts of historical characters
(13:07:31) Dave: sigmund freud shreddin' up the asphalt
(13:07:34) Dave: with his wicked moves
(13:07:43) Jon: don't forget socrates!
(13:07:49) Dave: hehe
(13:07:57) Dave: he's a sk8 poseur
(13:08:26) Jon: they should do a contemporary version too, where you can play Bill O'Reily, Jesse Jackson, Jerry Falwell, etc.
(13:08:36) Dave: hahaha
(13:08:39) Dave: jery falwell
(13:08:42) Dave: i'd buy that game
(13:08:46) Jon: hells yeah!

This says it all



The International Coal Group executives celebrating their initial public offering on the New York Stock Exchange in November 2005; a precursor to today's news of the 12 West Virginia miners that perished.

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