One Post Wonders

all sorts of malarkey to stuff your brain with
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piper99
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Who's The Monkey - Peter Piper

Post by piper99 »


Heres a silly vid I threw together using piles of GIFS I found scattered around the net..
The track is called Who's The Monkey, which I created about a decade ago..
Any of you trainspotters out there tell me where I nicked the vocal samples... LOL

Theres a few other ones Ive done available on my YouTube page for anyone who likes that kinda thing.. Some go back to 14 years ago... there is a couple of recent remixes on there too....

www.youtube.com/piper99
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faceless
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Bank Aid - Do They Know It's Christmas?

Post by faceless »

:lol: :thumbs:
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Sera_6969
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The Beatles - Everyday Chemistry

Post by Sera_6969 »

The Beatles - Everyday Chemistry
https://thebeatlesneverbrokeup.com

Total poppycock, of course, and like all the best poppycock it's difficult to disprove (but perhaps driven by the massive cease and desist that would come down on the original remixer for messing with the Beatles/solo work) but it's a fun read and still a very nice listen.
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Sera_6969
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Some nice DIY illusions

Post by Sera_6969 »


3D paper design


Animated illusions



and (just a little too late for homemade Xmas decorations!):
Animated spinner

[/size]

More at: https://www.youtube.com/user/brusspup
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faceless
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The Boneyard

Post by faceless »

Image
The 'Boneyard': £22bn 'military cemetery' pictured in stunning Google Earth photos
The world’s most expensive military cemetery, a £22.6 billion centre dubbed “The Boneyard”, has been pictured in a spectacular series of new high-resolution Google Earth satellite images.
By Andrew Hough
23 Feb 2010
The 2,600 acre facility, officially known Davis-Monthan Air Force Base, is home to thousands of outdated aeroplanes and helicopters mothballed by the United States Air Force and other allied forces. The 60 year-old facility, the size of 1,300 football pitches and sprawled across the desert in Tucson, Arizona, houses the 309th Aerospace Maintenance and Regeneration Group (AMARG) and is America's only storehouse for out-of-service aircraft.

Now for the first time, a series of stunning high resolution satellite images of the four-square-mile facility, nicknamed “the Boneyard”, have been produced by Google Earth. Commonly used as a final resting place for thousands of decommissioned machines, the centre, originally designed in 1946, is also is used as a spare parts resource for the United States military.

Among cabins, wings and undercarriages are more than 4,200 of the western world's military aircraft, said to be worth £22.6 billion ($US35 billion) that were at one point in history the most advanced weapons of the air. Some of the dismantled aircraft include B-52 flying fortresses, F14 Tomcats, seen in the Tom Cruise 80s blockbuster film “Top Gun”, and the A-10 Thunderbolt “tank busters”.

Resident aircraft are either stored long term, dismantled for spare parts, kept in tact for shorter stays or sold off. Over the past 25 years more than a fifth of the aircraft have been returned to flying status, officials said. Similar to a large-scale recycling plant, hundreds of staff sift and sort almost 20,000 pieces of junk. Its landscape has also come to the attention of Hollywood, with several blockbuster movies including Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen, shot there.

Most of the aircraft are vacuum packed in the hope they can be restored and returned to service or sold to other nations. "309 AMARG does not own the aircraft stored here, they still belong to the delivering military services and government agencies,” said a base spokesman. "Some of the aircraft belong to various aviation museums like the National Museum of the U S Air Force, the National Museum of Naval Aviation, the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum. This area was selected for two reasons. The first is Tucson's dry climate minimises damage caused by corrosion. The second reason was the ground under the site consists of about six inches of dirt topsoil.”

He added: “Beneath that is a claylike sub layer called ‘caliche’. This extremely hard subsoil makes it possible to tow and park the planes in the desert without constructing new parking ramps.”

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They should change the name to The Death Yard. Yeah, right on!
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faceless
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YouTube Closes Down For The Night

Post by faceless »

This is a parody of how BBC2 closes down at night.

:D
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faceless
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Tabbouleh!

Post by faceless »

:lol:
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Skylace
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In Communist Russia, television sucked

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faceless
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Scarface - The School Play

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:goofy:
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luke
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Don't be shy, come out of your shell

Post by luke »

Don't be shy, come out of your shell: Magical photos capture the first moments of life
First the shell begins to crack. Then there's a flurry of activity as the tiny creature curled up inside the egg breaks a hole in the shell.

Next, a scaly, pink foot emerges, flailing wildly, before - bit by bit - the miniature damp bundle bursts forth from the broken shell, making its appearance in the world for the very first time.

These extraordinary sets of pictures show the young of four different species hatching from their eggs.

Titled 'Escape Into Life', the series records the first moments of a newborn chick, the young of the African penguin (whose eggs are laid in caves padded with feathers and bits of wood), the ostrich (which breaks the shell not by pecking, but expanding the muscles of its throat) and, finally, the red footed tortoise (seen here popping out of its shell with mouth wide open as if in astonished rapture at what it can see).

The work of husband and wife team Heidi and Hans-Juergen Koch from Germany (who have specialised in animal photography for the past 20 years) they are the result of many days and weeks of patient observation - and provide a fascinating pictoral record of four creatures arriving into the world.
Ostrich...

Image Image

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African penguin...

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Tortoise...

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Chicken...

Image Image

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from https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/ ... -life.html

:)
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Brown Sauce
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Meet Meline

Post by Brown Sauce »

How good is this ??
:)
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faceless
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Music from the sun

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Music of the sun recorded by scientists
The sun has been the inspiration for hundreds of songs, but now scientists have discovered that the star at the centre of our solar system produces its own music.
By Richard Gray, Science Correspondent
19 Jun 2010
Astronomers at the University of Sheffield have managed to record for the first time the eerie musical harmonies produced by the magnetic field in the outer atmosphere of the sun. They found that huge magnetic loops that have been observed coiling away from the outer layer of the sun's atmosphere, known as coronal loops, vibrate like strings on a musical instrument. In other cases they behave more like soundwaves as they travel through a wind instrument.

Using satellite images of these loops, which can be over 60,000 miles long, the scientists were able to recreate the sound by turning the visible vibrations into noises and speeding up the frequency so it is audible to the human ear. Professor Robertus von Fáy-Siebenbürgen, head of the solar physics research group at Sheffield University, said: "It was strangely beautiful and exciting to hear these noises for the first time from such a large and powerful source. It is a sort of music as it has harmonics. It is providing us with a new way of learning about the sun and giving us a new insight into the physics that goes on at in the sun's outer layers where temperatures reach millions of degrees."

The coronal loops are thought to be involved in the production of solar flares that fling highly charged particles out into space, creating a phenomenon known as space weather. When the sun's activity, and thus solar flare production, increases, the resulting "space storm" can have catastrophic results here on earth, destroying electronic equipment, overheating power grids and damaging satellites. Nasa warned last week that the sun's activity is starting to increase following an extended period of low activity and is on course to throw out unprecedented levels of magnetic energy into the solar system by 2013.

Professor Fáy-Siebenbürgen said that studying the "music of the sun" would provide new ways of understanding and predicting solar flares before they happen. The coronal loops vibrate from side to side because they are "plucked" rather like guitar strings by the blast waves from explosions on the surface of the sun. The scientists also found the loops vibrate backwards and forwards in a way that mimics the acoustic waves in a wind instrument.

Professor Fáy-Siebenbürgen's research has been revealed as the University of Sheffield launches a new project, called Project Sunshine, aimed at finding new ways to harness and understand the power of the sun. He said: "These loops are oscillating like the strings on a guitar or the air in a wind instrument. Over time the waves die away and that is telling us new things about the physics in the sun's atmosphere."

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I remember hearing 'crop circle music' a few years back
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faceless
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World Wide Telescope

Post by faceless »

download the program and you can look at Mars in a similar way to google-earth
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faceless
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Irish politicians interviewed with a butt-plug!

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The politicians started to arrive. We really wanted to question them about their ideas on our debt crisis, NAMA and other things. We'd discussed our approach a number of times and had decided to bring along a butt plug in the event that the politicians decided to be anal. They decided to be anal, just like we really knew they would. They didn't disappoint us.

When asked questions about how the deficit was going to be plugged or if the people of Ireland felt that they were taking it up the arse for the banks, the politicians almost eat the butt plug, in their hurry to promote themselves and the shite they were expelling.

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haha daft buggers! :lol:
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faceless
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Harry Hill to produce new internet only show

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