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Posted on May 21, 2012 via the reckless youth with 1 note
Source: therecklesssyouth
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[Flash 10 is required to watch video]
Taking place in England the owners of the yard slowly kept adding sections to the contraption so when the squirrel learned one section and got the nuts, they’d add another section. It took over 2 weeks to get to the final product you see in the video.
(via nohetero)
Posted on May 21, 2012 via The Dandy Underworld with 24,679 notes
Source: thedandyunderworld
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Lack of motivation” is a generally misunderstood symptom of depression. It does not mean that I sit around thinking, “Oh, I’m so depressed; why bother to do shit I don’t want to do anyway.” It means not that I lack discipline, but that there is a mental disconnect between my conscious mind, which says I want or need to do X, and the part of my brain which actually initiates activity. It prevents me from doing things I would very much like to do, as well as things I need to do, rather than indicating simply a lack of interest in doing things which are not immediately rewarding.
If you want or need to go somewhere, whether somewhere you’re eagerly looking forward to going, or somewhere routine, or to the dentist for a root canal which you may be much averse to but have nevertheless decided will leave you better off in the long run, and you get in your car, turn the key in the ignition repeatedly, yet the engine sputters but does not engage, this is not an indication that you don’t really want to go anywhere. It’s an indication that something is wrong with the equipment you need to transport you there.
I am fully capable of sitting for hours, thinking periodically, “I need to pee,” then, “I really need to pee,” and eventually, “Damn, I need to pee,” before being able to jump start the part of my brain which engages with the task of getting up and walking the ten feet to the bathroom, and initiates the movement which allows me to do that.
The more complex the task, the harder it can be, because a more complex sequence of actions must be, in some sense, imagined and targeted before the actions necessary to bring them about can be initiated. Most people are unaware that this process even takes place, because in a healthy brain, it occurs swiftly and automatically. In my brain, it does not.Posted on May 21, 2012 via Yet Another Kiri Bloggish Thing with 8,633 notes
Source: kiriamaya
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I really like this ladder!
(via unfboy)
Posted on May 21, 2012 via my ideal home with 2,589 notes
Source: marieclairemaison.com
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Disney researchers put gesture recognition in door knobs, chairs, fish tanks
Imagine a door that locks when you pinch the knob. Or a smartphone that can be silenced by a hand gesture. Or a chair that adjusts room lighting when you recline into it.
A team of researchers at Disney Research and Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh have come up with a system called Touché, which uses the same capacitive technology as a smartphone’s touchscreen to imbue everyday objects with body and gesture recognition.
Full Story: Ars Technica
Thanks to Peter Connolly
Posted on May 9, 2012 via Emergent Futures Tumblelog with 50 notes
Source: emergentfutures
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(via resistapathy)
Posted on May 8, 2012 via Plan Be with 14,603 notes
Source: oddno1ishere
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Holy mother of goodness!! This just made my day.
Posted on May 4, 2012 via Fantastically Weird Shit with 29 notes
Source: fantasticallyweirdshit
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[Flash 10 is required to watch video]
Neil Haskell & Kent Boyd on SYTYCD
→ How It Ends — DeVotchKaPosted on April 10, 2012 via fuck your feelings, tho. with 6,260 notes
Source: scaly-panties
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Posted on April 9, 2012 via the reckless youth with 4 notes
Source: therecklesssyouth
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Posted on April 9, 2012 via the reckless youth with 9 notes
Source: therecklesssyouth

