Zazzle Shop

Screen printing

Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Lego Aircraft Carrier - AMAZING!!!!!!!!

http://www.techeblog.com/index.php/tech-gadget/lego-aircraft-carrier

The Most Spectacular Astronomical Observatory in the World

http://www.jantarmantar.org/samplWebGallery_2/Sph_Rndr_Gal.htm

Rejection lines

http://www.thehumorarchives.com.nyud.net:8080/joke/Rejection_lines

New Jib Jab Clip!

http://www.jibjab.com/originals/star_spangled

Don't put your hand in my pocket

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070626/ap_on_fe_st/odd_pickpocket_pummeled

Wow, Stick and Stones will break my Bones...

http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/B/BOY_KILLED?SITE=SCFLO&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT

No Skating Zone

http://www.thehundreds.com/wordpress/?p=1874

IPhone Review - Mossberg

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB118289311361649057.html.html?mod=technology_main_promo_left



Build your own Video Game Console

http://www.thinkgeek.com/geektoys/science/9617/

Jurassic Park ??

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2007/06/070625-dna-resurrection.html

The iPhone will be compatible with Microsoft Exchange

http://blogs.zdnet.com/microsoft/?p=534

Artificial hand with air muscles

http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=070626134708.hset5x6z&show_article=1&catnum=0

Dyson Air Blade- 400 mph & no hot air!!!

Dyson Airblade: 400mph, No Hot Air
James Dyson, billionaire inventor of expensive vacuum cleaners, has time on his hands to worry about bathroom bacteria, so he created the Dyson Airblade, a supercharged hand dryer that pumps room-temperature air through a tiny slot at 400mph. Dyson claims the device uses a "windshield-wiper" effect, drying both hands in 10 seconds. Since it doesn't use any hot air, he says it uses 83% less energy. Must be noisy, though. To go on sale in the UK next month, Dyson's reverse vacuum cleaner for hand drying will cost 549 (around $1027), and will also be available for lease.
This might be a great device for those of us who really don't want to touch anything in a public bathroom, and don't much like standing around for 30 seconds at a noisy hot air blower waiting for the hands to dry. – Charlie White
Dyson goes 400mph in toilet

Is this a Picasso

1960 CIA plot to kill Castro detailed

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070627/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/cuba_cia_castro_plot

Motorcycle of the Borg- BMW K 1200R


Home away Villa rentals

Compare the prices for you get on a nightly basis at a hotel for some of the villas-
http://www.homeaway.com/

Metro 9 Steakhouse in Natick

http://www.metro9steakhouse.com/menu.htm

Something new and for a little less than the in town places. Handy after an IMAX show at Jordan's

Hi Neighbor!- Have a Gansett.






What's Inside: Red Bull




Meat Sugar, Caffeine, and Bile!





Glucose


Like most popular soft drinks, Red Bull is largely sugar water. But don't count on its glucose to "give you wings," as the ad says. Multiple studies have debunked the so-called sugar high.


Taurine


Also known as 2-aminoethanesulfonic acid, taurine was originally isolated from bull bile in 1827. Now made synthetically, it is the magical elixir said to bring out the kitesurfing extremophile in any Web-surfing nerd. Taurine's actual effects, while not as drastic as the hype, are pretty wide-ranging, even from the amount found in a single can: Not only is it an inhibitory neurotransmitter (in some cases acting as a mild sedative) and an age-defying antioxidant, it even has the potential to steady irregular heartbeats.
Glucuronolactone


Internet rumors claimed this was a Vietnam-era experimental drug that causes brain tumors. Luckily, that's not true. But don't crumple up your tinfoil hat yet — hardly anyone has looked into exactly what this stuff does. So little research has been done on glucuronolactone (and most of it 50 years ago) that almost all information about it is mere rumor. Users generally believe it fights fatigue and increases well-being, but that could turn out to be bull, too.



Caffeine


Ah, here are Red Bull's wings. All the things this drink is supposed to do for you — increase concentration and reaction speed, improve emotional state, and boost metabolism — are known effects of this white powder, a distant cousin of cocaine.



Niacin (niacinamide)


Also known as vitamin B-3, niacin increases so-called good cholesterol (HDL) by preventing the formation of triglycerides, making it a terrific cholesterol drug. Unfortunately, there isn't enough niacin here to have this benefit. And it's not even pure enough to give you the mild head rush dubbed the "niacin flush."


Sodium citrate


Commonly used as a preservative in soft drinks and spreadable cheeses, sodium citrate also helps convert glucose into lactic acid during exercise, producing a measurable effect on athletic performance. In at least one test, it shaved an average of 17 seconds off a 5K run.


Inositol


A carbohydrate found in animal muscle (sometimes called "meat sugar"), inositol is turning out to be a wonder drug that significantly reduces depression, panic attacks, agoraphobia, and obsessive- compulsive disorder. It might even be what makes whole grains effective cancer fighters. Instead of being a bit player in Red Bull (you'd need to drink as many as 360 cans a day to get its benefits), inositol probably deserves a drink of its own.

This day in History, world's first nuclear power plant opens

1954: The world's first nuclear power plant becomes operational in Obninsk, outside of Moscow.
The nuclear reactor, used to generate electricity, heralded Obninsk's new role as a major Soviet scientific city, a status it retains in the Russian Federation where it carries the sobriquet of First Russian Science City.
Obninsk, population 108,000, currently houses no fewer than 12 scientific research institutions and a technical university. Research is focused on nuclear-power engineering, nuclear physics, radiation technology, the technology of non-metallic materials, medical radiology, meteorology and environmental protection.
Since the plant opened in 1954, most of the industrialized west, along with countries like India and China, have embraced nuclear power. But the backlash against this energy source continues in the wake of accidents such as those that occurred at Chernobyl and Three Mile Island. Italy, for example, has decommissioned its nuclear plants and two other European countries, Germany and Sweden, are considering doing the same thing.
Obninsk claims Oak Ridge, Tennessee, as a sister city -- another town that has more than a passing relationship with nuclear power.

Video- In Nicaragua with the Padron's

http://www.cigaraficionado.com/Cigar/Free/Video