Awesome Halloween Math Lecture V. 2.0

We’ve featured Professor Matthew Weathers’ Math Lectures many times in the past (here and here); this year, once again, he has organized a little something special for his class in honor of Halloween. Check it out:



Amazing Halloween Light Show [Video]

So, you put a lot of efforts decorating your house for Halloween and think you have the best setup ever? Well I’m sorry to dissapoint you my friend, but I’m pretty sure your home looks nowhere near as awesome as this one. Behold:

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Halloween Candy [Graph]

So geeks, who’s guilty among you guys? I know I am! Though the ratio of candy I’ll hand out / candy I ate (because I already ate them… shame on me!) is probably more around 75/25. I’ve been digging at those stupid bags of halloween treats for the past month. Now all that’s left for those poor kids are those disappointing boxes of Sun-Maid raisins. ;)

[Via]

Best Halloween Kid Costume Ever: My Lil’ Jawa [Video]

Now that is one of the best lil’ jawa costume I’ve ever seen!

On a related note, if you’re still wondering what you’ll disguise yourself as tomorrow, here are a few ideas:

3D Music Clip: Kill Your Co-Workers (With Kindness)

A somewhat disturbing 3D music video for Flying Lotus’s newest song, Kill Your Co-Workers. Enjoy!

[Via Vimeo]

3G mobile comes to Everest

With all the sniping and griping on social networks, it’s rare that somebody posts to say they are feeling on top of the world. But that’s exactly what climbers at Mount Everest will soon be able to do.

Ncell, a subsidiary of a Swedish phone company, has set up eight 3G phone masts (four powered by solar energy) around and on the mountain, the highest being at 17,000 feet near Gorak Shep, the last stop on the route up to Everest’s base camp. The company has made a video call from the base camp and believes the 3G signal will be accessible from Everest’s 29,029 feet summit, though that’s not yet been tested for real.

Though the coverage may sound like a gimmick, it will be useful for climbers who currently communicate through an unreliable satellite connection. Up to 50 people will be able to use the service at the same time, with a speed of up to 3.6MB a second. That speed could be doubled if there is sufficient demand.

The announcement may earn some criticism about priorities as currently less than a third of people in Nepal have access to any form of telecommunication. However, Ncell’s parent company TeliaSonera says it plans to extend its mobile coverage to cover more than 90 percent of the country’s population.

Appropriately enough, TeliaSonera also claims the lowest 3G station in the world, in a European mine 4,595 feet below sea level.

Zombie Wars: The Living Dead Strike Back [Pic]

Hollywood is dead has many more available. You can check them all out right here.

[Via Buzzfeed | Nextmovie]