New Overpriced Concept Toilet: The iPoo

Imagined by Milos Paripovic, the iPoo is a concept toilet that was designed with the basic functionality of a toilet in mind, but mixed in with the elegance and price tag of an Apple product.

Unlike some Apple products, this toilet fully supports Flush.

This toilet has exactly the same function as any other toilet and costs only twice as much for the same performance; but you will agree it is all about style and taste, and you will look a lot cooler in your friends’ eyes when you say you use the iPoo toilet instead of throwing your excrement through the bathroom WINDOWS.

Click to Embiggen!

[iPoo]



Silent Hill takes place at the school from Kindergarten Cop [Pic]

This school, located in Astoria, Oregon, was where Kindergarten Cop was filmed, and it seems that the people who created Silent Hill decided that the environment would be perfect for their game as well.

[Via Reddit]

Skyrim: The Dragonborn Comes [Metal Cover]

That’s it, now I want to hear Bruce Dickinson singing on top of that version! Up the irons!

Edit: Yes… YES. This is AWESOME:

[Via]



Terrifying Unicorn Head Mask [Picture]

Magical-Unicorn-Mask

The perfect mask to wear while serving a batch of unicorn poop cookies to your kids! :)

[$29.95 – Magical Unicorn Mask]

Time Lords Want to Ditch the Sun

The International Telecommunication Union will decide this week not only whether there’ll be an extra leap second in June, but whether it will be the last of its kind. The decision could mean that we no longer take any notice of the Sun when it comes to determining time.

As we’ve previously covered, the leap second is necessitated by the way we currently measure time — simply observing the Earth’s movement round the Sun and dividing by the relevant fractions — which is inherently flawed. That’s because the Earth is slowly moving away from the Sun, thus increasing its orbit time.

While the leap year deals with the fact that the time of the orbit doesn’t precisely divide into 365 days, the leap second deals with the disparity between the solar second and the time measured on atomic clocks, which take the time from vibrations in cesium and thus aren’t affected by the slowing orbit time. That’s important as such clocks are ultimately used to inform most computer systems.

Each June 30th and December 31st, depending on the disparity, officials will have decided whether to add an artificial leap second to the atomic clocks. As a result the solar and atomic clocks are never more than a second out. (Unfortunately the leap second does occasionally cause systems to freak out, for example if they’ve been programmed with a calendar that didn’t anticipate the change.)

The International Earth Rotation and Reference Systems Service, which oversees atomic clocks, has concluded we’ll need a leap second in June, the first time in three and a half years. That should be formally approved this week by the ITU, which governs Coordinated Universal Time (UTC), the “what the atomic clock says plus leap seconds” system used by computers.

That same conference could also see a final decision on a long-standing proposal: that the ITU officially ditch leap seconds, ignore solar time, and let Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) simply match the atomic clock for the foreseeable future. The main argument for the change seems to be that every time we have a leap second (or even every June or December we don’t), it’s just another opportunity for somebody to miss the switch or make one when it isn’t needed.

The plan is that if the idea is adopted, the ITC would still keep track of and publish the disparities between atomic and solar time, even though it would be for information purposes only.

The ITC has also noted that left unchecked the disparity will hit the one hour mark in about 550 years, and critics have argued that within a few millennia we’d be left with dark “noons” and light “midnights.” The unspoken ITC position seems to be that this is a problem our descendants can sort out.

Gay Stormtrooper Couple Star in Love Wars [Video]

Can a Stormtrooper be openly gay while serving the empire? This is the concept that is explored in “Love Wars,” an awesome Spanish short (subtitled in English) that was recently featured at the Notodo Film Festival. Check it out:

[Via TOR]

Have You Fed Your AT-AT Today?

I’m sure some of you will find this very demeaning for the poor dog, but the little fellow doesn’t seem to mind the costume at all!

[Via Neatorama]