freerangestock.com: Totally Free Commercial Photography
Freerange Stock was formed with the goal to provide quality stock
photos for commercial and non-commercial use. For free. We feel that
free stock photos can be good photos. Freerange is an advertising
revenue supported photographic community – photographers get paid when
users click on the ads that appear next to their submissions.
Images on the site are either shot by Freerange Stock, drawn from
Freerange archives, or contributed by a talented community of
photographers. We feel that the images want to be seen and good photos
should be available to everyone – so we give the collections away with
the hope that the will be useful and be enjoyed.
Flashy Furniture Changes Color to Match Your Mood
An interactive table-and-chairs set that can change color has been
developed by Japanese researchers. They also make a chair that turns colors according to your weight.
Elvis Week 2007
2007, the 30th Anniversary, will be the largest celebration of all
things Elvis in history. Online, at Graceland and around the world,
projects that celebrate Elvis’s legacy are being planned. Millions of
Elvis fans will attend events and purchase product, and Elvis will be
featured in non-stop news coverage and special programming on tv,
radio, in print and online.
Human Tetris Game Show
Hilarious video of a Japanese game show: Human Tetris.
Atari 2600 Label Maker
Upload a pic and use it to create your own custom Atari cartridge label.
277 Reasons to Have Sex
The two psychologists have looked over the nominations and decided there are now 277 reasons to have sex.
Seek and ye shall find. Our quest for the 238th reason to have sex has
been more successful than I dared hope. Hundreds of readers nominated
additions to the list of 237 reasons published by Cindy Meston and
David Buss of the University of Texas at Austin.
The Great Beer Experiment
Bronze Age Irishmen were as fond of their beer as their 21st century counterparts, it has been claimed.
Two archaeologists have put forward a theory that one of the most
common ancient monuments seen around Ireland may have been used for
brewing ale.
The following is a summary version of a forthcoming article in
Archaeology Ireland. The full text will be posted after publication of
the article. The majority of Irish field monuments are defined by their
names – a standing stone is a standing stone and a ringfort is a
ringfort – but not so the fulacht fiadh, characterised by its
horseshoe-shaped mound and associated trough.
One hungover morning at breakfast, discussing the natural
predisposition of all men to seek means to alter our minds, coupled
with our innate inquisitiveness (and more mundane preparations for the
excavation of a fulacht fiadh), Billy Quinn of Moore Group came to a
sudden and startling conclusion: fulachts were Ireland’s earliest
breweries!
Immediately we set out on a journey of discovery. This quest took us to
Barcelona to the Congres Cerveza Prehistorica, and later one evening in
Las Ramblas in the company of, among others, an international beer
author, an award winning short story writer, a world renowned beer
academic and a Canadian Classical scholar – all of whom shared our
passion for the early history of beer. In pursuit of the early Northern
European brewing evidence we travelled to the Orkneys and the welcoming
arms of Merryn and Graham Dineley, an archaeologist and home brewer who
taught us more about Neolithic brewing and the basic manufacturing
process. Hot rock brewing technology brought us to Belgium and thence
to Bavaria and Rouchenfeld’s brewery in Marktoberdorf. We also had to
follow the clues to Canada, all of this culminating in a failed attempt
to enter Iran via Basra.
So having discovered that brewing and beer drinking was prevalent and
widespread throughout The Levant and The Far East with growing evidence
of the same from Late Neolithic and Bronze Age Europe and Britain, and
given our prodigious reputation for alcohol consumption (even in Roman
Times), where and how did the Bronze Age Irish people brew?
Be sure not to miss the photo gallery
Dumbass Girl overdoses on Caffine
Jasmine Willis, 17, developed a fever and began hyperventilating after
downing seven double espressos while working at her family’s sandwich
shop.
The student, of Stanley, County Durham, was taken to the University
Hospital of North Durham, where doctors confirmed she had overdosed on
caffeine.
She has since made a full recovery and is now warning others about the dangers of excessive coffee drinking. What an amateur.
Flashy Furniture Changes Color to Match Your Mood
An interactive table-and-chairs set that can change color has been developed by Japanese researchers. They also make a chair that turns colors according to your weight.
Say “Xyzzy!”…Nothing happens
Real Life “Colossal Cave Adventure�! Discussion of original source code, different versions of the game, hand draw maps, and lots of photos inside the cave the game is based on. Grab your shiny brass lamp and tasty food and meet me at the Bedquilt entrance.
Oh my God, I just felt it ferment!
The Bender Brewer Project. Inspired by an episode of Futurama in which boozy robot Bender is used to brew beer, Star Wars ASCII animator Simon Janson decided to build his own Bender to use to brew his own beer. Among the many careful details that went into this project was to actually build the robot’s brain out of a 6502 processor, as specified in the show, and to build a remote detonator to operate his brain.
Rage, rage, against the dying of the light.
Interviews with 100-year-olds:
(Short): Quick NPR interview with a guy who works on Wall Street.
(Medium): A series of small segments with the oldest graduate of Gilbert High School.
(Long): Part of WFMU’s 365 day project. Restored tape from 1978, on which it appears a young student is interviewing an old lady from Kansas.
Slaves to Superstition
Episode one of controversial evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins’ new series Enemies of Reason premieres on Channel 4 tonight. Here’s a list of topics.
The Unpleasant World of Penn and Teller
You want to waste as much time as possible before going back to work Monday morning, right? So, stay up late and watch 6 episodes of The Unpleasant World of Penn and Teller, their mid-90s show on British TV. Don’t have time for all that right now? Then jump right to a card trick with John Cleese, or their unique version of the Card Stab trick. At the very least, you owe it to yourself to prepare for tomorrow’s coffee break.
Wallpaper eye candy
Social Wallpaper. A community effort to classify, rank, and distribute high resolution images for use as computer wallpaper.
Spare the rod and how to love a child to death
the truth about denial: just a dry river bed
The “Great Climate Change Debate” finally on the cover of Newsweek – what’s new, you ask? This is the story of the denial that global warming exists and how exactly the science behind the undeniable facts of increasing hurricanes, tsunamis, droughts, heatwaves and monsoons was muddied for profit.
Bonus links from the same issue: Timeline of global warming and its denial and a slideshow of images from around the world on the effects but its one of those fancy interactive thingamajigs that doesn’t allow it to be linked by an URL so be sure to take a look at it. Extra bonus! Quiz your knowledge on global warming
Caturday on Sunday
Spider cat. Cats in a box. Cat playing with himself. Cat on LSD. Man murdered parents with axe for laughing at cat’s death. Rudy gives Winston a vigorous tongue lashing (tender). Winston the cat, blog.
Muppet Wiki
Muppet Wiki. It’s like Wikipedia, except about the Muppets.
Mah num ah num
Mah num ah num – The Muppets debut their first music video in 1976.
What good are flying fingers if they’re wrapped around a duck?
Put Down the Duckie! A silly, jazzy song from the Muppets, featuring an all-star cast. Careful: it may change your life?
Of Muppets and Men
Of Muppets and Men. [1 2 3 4 5 6] Excellent behind-the-scenes documentary showing the mental, verbal and physical athleticism of putting together The Muppet Show. Also, a TMBG video mashup with excerpts from the doc.







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