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Archive for June 20th, 2008

Best election commercial ever

by mike on Jun.20, 2008, under humor, politics

Okay, maybe it’s not a commercial espousing one candidate over another, but this Snickers commercial ran back in 2000. Priceless…

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Nano Vent Skin

by mike on Jun.20, 2008, under cool, environmental

This is such a freaking cool idea. Sure, it’s a concept and is largely untested, but it combines brilliant architecture and design with sound science. If I had gobs of money I would throw millions at Mexican-born designer Agustin Otegui and get this on the market. We’re dependent on fossil fuels and the internal combustion engine at the moment, but we won’t always be. Nature is constantly evolving and improving, and so should humanity.

From CNN…

The Nano Vent Skin forms an organic skin around a building providing its energy needs.Organic by Design
As a product designer, Agustin Otegui’s has to “think big” about the objects he creates. From novel portable chairs made out of shovels to chrome radiators that look like modern works of art, he recasts the mundane in a modernist and functional new light.
The Nano Vent Skin forms an organic skin around a building providing its energy needs.

Yet when he got thinking about how he could help with solutions to mitigate climate change he started thinking small. Very small, in fact.

His futuristic concept is called the Nano Vent-Skin (NVS) and the design — to wrap buildings in an organic lattice skin made up of micro wind turbines — is radical… read the rest of the article…

His blog & his portfolio site

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NASA’s APOD site

by mike on Jun.20, 2008, under astronomy

Each day NASA posts a new astronomy/space-related picture. Today’s is particularly beautiful, in my humble opinion, marking the summer solstice. From http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap080620.html :

Solstice Moonrise, Cape Sounion
Today’s solstice marks the northernmost point of the Sun’s annual motion through planet Earth’s sky and the astronomical beginning of the northern hemisphere’s summer. But only two days ago, the Full Moon nearest the solstice rose close to the ecliptic plane opposite the Sun, near its southernmost point for the year. Astronomer Anthony Ayiomamitis recorded this dramatic picture of the solstice Full Moon rising above Cape Sounion, Greece. The twenty-four hundred year old Temple of Poseidon lies in the foreground, also visible to sailors on the Aegean Sea. In this well-planned single exposure, a telescopic lens makes the Moon loom large, but even without optical aid casual skygazers often find the Full Moon looking astonishingly large when seen near the horizon. That powerful visual effect is known as the Moon Illusion.

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