If you think Matchstick Minas Tirith looked great, wait until you see this reproduction of the Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, made with over 600,000 matchsticks.
[Source]
If you think Matchstick Minas Tirith looked great, wait until you see this reproduction of the Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, made with over 600,000 matchsticks.
[Source]
Ok, I know, this isn’t really geeky, but I laughed so much while listening to this that I just had to share it with you guys. Enjoy!
Martin Plourde of violentbroccoli.com has created this funny parody of the now famous Volkswagen Superbowl commercial and replaced the Passat featured in the ad by a Toyota Corolla. Check it out!
Thanks Martin!
PewPewPewPewPewPewPewPewPew is a two-player game where the traditionnal game controller is replaced by two microphones. The first player controls the thrust of a jetpack-wearing astronaut by blowing into the first mic, and the other has to pewpewpew in the second one to fire. Check it out!
[Via TDW]
This absolutely brilliant BSG timeline was created by Flickr user Billy Ray. Enjoy!
[Source]
Remix master Pogo has just released a new song based on JRR Tolkien’s LOTR using chords and vocal samples recorded from the movies. This is the same dude who created the awesome Expialidocious as well as the The Skynet Symphonic. Check it out!
First, there was Conan the Barbarian, and then Total Recall. Now, Youtube user Legolambs has turned Arnold Schwarzenegger’s 1987 classic into a full blown musical. Enjoy!
[Via]
Wartime notes belonging to the “father of modern computing”, Alan Turing, have been saved from falling into private hands. They’ll now be on display in Britain’s Bletchley Park.
That’s particularly appropriate because Bletchley Park is where Turing and others worked to decipher the Enigma encryption system used for German military communication. This successful work is often cited as significantly shortening the duration of the second world war.
The papers initially went up for sale in an auction last year, with attempts to purchase it for public display falling short. Fortunately none of the other bidders met the hefty reserve price.
Although the collective scheme to buy the papers had raised £23,000 (approx US$37,000) from public donations, $100,000 from Google, and an unspecified amount from a private donor, it was still well short of the price the seller was looking for.
That’s now been taken care of with a donation of more than £200,000 ($213,000) from the National Heritage Memorial Fund.
The papers, which include handwritten notes, are particularly rare as for understandable security reasons most paperwork at Bletchley Park was destroyed at the end of the war.
Following the war, Turing worked on one of the first stored-program computers, which stored programs in memory rather than being physically and permanently built into the machine: in effect, what we know as a modern computer. He also led the way in the development of artificial intelligence.
Turing’s career came to an abrupt end when he lost security clearance after being convicted of being in a homosexual relationship (then a crime), for which he was sentenced to chemical castration. In 2009, then Prime Minister Gordon Brown issued an official government apology for Turing’s treatment.