Stanford University students Derrick Davis and Tom McFadden rap about how the human body converts food into energy. Enjoy!
[Via Make]
Stanford University students Derrick Davis and Tom McFadden rap about how the human body converts food into energy. Enjoy!
[Via Make]
When she calls Leo Laporte’s show claiming her Wi-Fi Internet access has suddenly “disappeared”, a lady gets served a lesson in security and good manners by the tech guy himself.
Yes folks, Blizzard has finally announced that the multiplayer beta for StarCraft II: Wings of Liberty has now begun. Unfortunately, this is a closed beta, but if you were lucky enough to get an invite, the downloader is available through Battle.net.
Please note that even though StarCraft II hasn’t been released yet (it is planned for release “in the first half of 2010”), the game is already available for preorder on Amazon.com.
In a far away solar system, on a small planet much like our own, lived the Euwins, kind little creatures who enjoyed a peaceful existence. Then one day, out of nowhere, a massive tidal wave appeared and nearly washed away their entire city! In order to rebuild their city, the Euwins need your help!
There seem to be two main requirements for a social-based internet site to catch on with the online public: it should do one task very simply, and it should attract enough users to reach a critical mass.
Chatroulette.com is not a particularly great site, neither is it a useful one. It will probably never change the world, but in its own way, it may be the site that offers the best microcosm of how the web brings people together.
Before going any further, let me state clearly that Chatroulette.com is not suitable for children. It’s not for us to say how parents should monitor their child’s online activity and whether it’s better to use human supervision or automated filters, but let us simply repeat for your information that Chatroulette.com is not suitable for children.
So what does the site do? It’s simple. You hook up your webcam (or get ready to type if you don’t have one), click one button, and you are connected to another user at random. If either party wants to end the conversation, they hit F9. You can then be reconnected to another person if desired. And, erm, that’s it.
For those with cameras, it appears to work like a particularly harsh form of speed dating: never mind three minutes, most people will be lucky to last three seconds before they race their chat partner to be the first to move on. Something in the region of 10 percent of users are men exposing their genitals, so if that’s going to offend you, steer well clear. The rest are a bizarre mix of drunken mixed-gender student groups in college dorms, and solo men frantically hitting F9 in the hope of finding a woman.
But what makes the site slightly addictive is the occasional surprise: a man wearing the mask from V for Vendetta, people dancing, and users who have unconvincingly rigged their cams to show footage of Homer Simpson sat at a computer. (These are just examples I’ve seen myself; the web is full of outlandish screenshots from the site, though it’s hard to know which, if any, are genuine.)
What is genuinely brilliant about Chatroulette is that, because it is simply a middle-man, it can have 40,000 visitors at once with presumably very little server load, and appears to be based around a comparatively simple piece of code. While the stream of erect penises may well be off-putting to advertisers, it’s still amazing the creators haven’t yet added any ads to the site.
Now if GeeksAreSexy readers with cams want to use the site to talk to strangers, be my guest. If readers think the whole site sounds ridiculous and have better things to do, that’s a sign of good judgment. But for those without cams who might be tempted to kill some time by simply clicking through cams at random, I have an appeal to you.
Let’s use Chatroulette for good. If you type quickly enough (the trick is to use cut and paste the moment you are connected to a user with a cam), the random stranger appearing on your screen may read your message before clicking away. That gives you one shot, so use it wisely. “Hi!” and similarly lame variants are out. Saying something shocking? Forget it, these folks will be numb to the core.
Instead, share some knowledge with them. Hit them with a piece of trivia in the style of the one shown in the picture above (“The piece of plastic at the end of a shoelace is called an aglet.”) I promise you, you will be amazed at the reaction. You’ll get the occasional wannabe gangster who offers a two-digit critique, but in most cases you’ll see a moment of confusion followed by a surprisingly high proportion of smiles, and an equally unlikely ratio of polite “Thank you for telling me.”.
Let’s do it. Let’s spread our geek-fueled knowledge, one cam user at a time.
Procrastination: Because sometimes, the only way you can get something done is to do something else first.
Procrastination was made in 2007 as a graduation film project by a team of student from the London-based Royal College of Art. Enjoy!
Congratuations, by watching this video, you just exercised your right to procrastinate!
To break the world record of the largest stick bomb chain reaction, Tim Fort (warning: this link will make your eyes bleed) built a montage of 2,250 sticks. He then set the apparatus off and caught the whole thing on tape. Check it out:
[Via BoingBoing]
Since I don’t speak German, I can only guess about what’s going on here, but I’m pretty sure that each and every one of you, at one point or another in your childhood, imagined yourself in a similar situation.
[Via Neatorama]
For those of you who are fans of geeky cakes, check out this absolutely amazing Jabba the Hutt cake made especially for Flickr user icruise_flickr’s birthday.
This is my birthday cake this year — Jabba the Hutt. A friend of the family kindly made this for us and I think she did a fantastic job (she also made my iPhone cake 3 years ago). My four-year-old son likes Jabba’s son Rotta and requested that the cake have Jabba and Rotta hugging, so that’s what we did. :) Jabba is made of chocolate cake, chocolate fudge, and fondant.
Many thanks to icruise_flickr for giving us permission to post his pics on [GaS]!
[Via Flickr]
Produced by the folks at RealtimeUK, the following animation was first made in 3dsmax and then rendered in Vray. Lastly, post-production visuals were added via After Effects. Let’s just say that the end result is quite stunning, to say the least. Check it out: