To end the day in beauty, here’s a video of a dancing AT-AT. Enjoy!
May the fourth be with you all!
[Via TDW]
[Source: Joy of Tech | Via Holykaw]
The operators of a British farm are to allow internet users to take over its management.
Wimpole Home Farm is run by the National Trust, an organization better known for managing many of the UK’s stately homes. It’s decided to allow 10,000 members of the public to become virtual farmers, playing a role in the way the farm operates.
In return for an annual membership fee of £30 (approximately $US50), members will be able to help make one major decision each month. There’ll be a three-week debate period on a particular topic through a message board, followed by a binding vote. Matters decided in this way will include the choice of crops, animal breeds and machinery used on the farm.
The topic and options to choose from each month will be chosen by Richard Morris, who will be the real life farm manager and will carry out the decision. Members will generally have free reign in making the decisions, though they’ll have to comply both with the law and some specific environmental requirements that affect the estate.
In return for their fee, members will also be entitled to an annual visit for up to five people (including free parking) to Wimpole Hall, the stately home and gardens that houses the farm. There’ll also be access to webcams and video updates about the farm.
The concept is partly inspired by MyFootballClub, a project that involved Internet users clubbing together to buy Ebbsfleet United, an association football team in England’s minor leagues. Members have the right to approve or reject proposed transfers of players to and from other clubs, as well as having some say in the selection of the line-up of players for each game. Other decisions they’ve voted on include the choice of team colors and uniform design for each season. However, the novelty of membership appears to have worn off, and only a little over 10% as many people are members now as when the scheme started in 2007.
Today may be Star Wars day, but it doesn’t mean we can’t give any love to other awesome sci-fi franchises as well. Behold this delicious-looking Dalek cake:
It may not be the best looking Dalek cake we’ve seen, but it certainly looks like the most delicious one.
[Via BuzzFeed]
OMG! Best. Song. Parody. Of. ALL. TIME.
There’s only one thing I don’t agree with however: Coke certainly isn’t the best beverage to have while playing D&D.
[Via]
[GAS] reader Oliver Hindle just sent me a pretty awesome music video he produced for one of his own songs which, I must say, sounds pretty amazing. Check it out!
[Youtube]
Inspired by an abalone shell, Angela Belcher programs viruses to make elegant nanoscale structures that humans can use. Selecting for high-performing genes through directed evolution, she’s produced viruses that can construct powerful new batteries, clean hydrogen fuels and record-breaking solar cells. In the following video, she shows us how it’s done.
[Picture source: Wikimedia Commons]
Here’s yet another mousetrap fission video for you guys to enjoy :)
What it shows:
In a nuclear reactor or atom bomb, a fissile material such as 235U can capture a neutron. The resulting unstable nucleus fragments into two smaller nuclei, releasing energy and several neutrons (a typical equation is given below). Each of these neutrons can in turn cause the fission of a 235U nucleus. If there is above a critical concentration of fissile material, this chain reaction will continue unaided, and if unregulated, can result in a very loud bang.n + 235U ? 236U* ? 141Ba + 92Kr + 3n
How it works:
We have a 120 × 70 × 100cm high plexiglass case, onto whose base we set a 5 × 20 array of mouse traps. 1 Onto each trap is rested a ping-pong ball. The traps represent the fissile atoms, and the balls the neutrons. When an extra ping-pong ball is dropped through a hole in the top of the case, it lands on an triggers a trap. Now there are two ping-pong balls each capable of setting off a trap. Thus a chain reaction ensues; the whole explosion lasts about three seconds.