A fully-functional Rubik’s Cube made of ice

Starting in 1980, spurred by popularity of the Rubik’s Cube, UK-based Tony Fisher started passionately collecting “twisty puzzles.” Over the years, he’s become quite the collector and inventor. All his ” transformations ” are really impressive. In fact, in 2016, he became a Guinness World Record holder for ” World’s Largest Rubik’s Cube .” Well, now he has fashioned a fully-functional Rubik’s Cube out of ice. He explains : This is my Rubik’s Cube made from 95% ice and it is fully functional. All 8 corners and 12 edges are solid ice. The 6 centres are 50% ice and the core is plastic. The screws and springs are regular metal ones. The puzzle shown is a first attempt and works surprising well. I am thinking about making others with full ice centres and also fully coloured ones. This video doesn’t show how he made it and you’ll see that the video footage is reversed in the beginning, making the melting ice seemingly “build” the toy. He does, however, write that he’ll be posting the construction video soon. ( Daily Mail ) Previously: WATCH: World record smallest 7x7x7 Rubik’s Cube

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A fully-functional Rubik’s Cube made of ice

Christmas movies from before 1918

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EUySE5moIFI Nothing evokes yuletide wonder quite like huddling around a modern Christmas family classic such as Die Hard or Eyes Wide Shut . But did you know that there are christmas movies more than a century old? Keep the holiday flame going through Boxing Day with the Nitrate Diva’s pick of ten pre-1918 xmas films. Embedded above is James Williamson’s joyous and celebratory 1902 The Little Match Seller , just a few minutes long.

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Christmas movies from before 1918

The hardest and easiest languages to learn for native English speakers

The Foreign Service Institute has ranked the difficulty of learning a language for English speakers. From Blazepress : Languages based upon Latin, such as French, Spanish and Italian are some of the easiest to pick up and are placed in ‘Category I’ languages with an estimated learning time of around 6 months. Languages such as Japanese, Korean and Arabic are placed in ‘Category V,’ and can take considerably longer and an estimated 2 years to master properly. Check out the rest on the map below.

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The hardest and easiest languages to learn for native English speakers

Making rubber bands is incredibly labor intensive

Wow. I had no idea that making rubber bands was so labor intensive. Can you imagine the resources it took just to get this long process in place? This footage is from the show How It’s Made . An older (but worse quality) video exists and shares that this factory makes 40 million rubber bands a day.

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Making rubber bands is incredibly labor intensive

Researchers infuse plants with chemicals to glow for hours

MIT researchers have figured out how to infuse common plants like watercress and arugula with luciferase, the chemical that makes fireflies glow. The process make the plants emit a dim glow for up to four hours. Via MIT : Previous efforts to create light-emitting plants have relied on genetically engineering plants to express the gene for luciferase, but this is a laborious process that yields extremely dim light. Those studies were performed on tobacco plants and Arabidopsis thaliana, which are commonly used for plant genetic studies. However, the method developed by Strano’s lab could be used on any type of plant. So far, they have demonstrated it with arugula, kale, and spinach, in addition to watercress. For future versions of this technology, the researchers hope to develop a way to paint or spray the nanoparticles onto plant leaves, which could make it possible to transform trees and other large plants into light sources. “Our target is to perform one treatment when the plant is a seedling or a mature plant, and have it last for the lifetime of the plant,” Strano says. “Our work very seriously opens up the doorway to streetlamps that are nothing but treated trees, and to indirect lighting around homes.” • Engineers create plants that glow (MIT)

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Researchers infuse plants with chemicals to glow for hours

Complete tour of the LEGO House in Denmark

The Beyond the Brick channel headed to Billund, Denmark for a superfan’s tour of the LEGO House . What’s great about this tour is that the host knows the names of many of the builders, and has met a lot of them personally, giving the tour a real insider’s feel. (more…)

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Complete tour of the LEGO House in Denmark

Watch this experiment on mice squeezing through tiny holes

Woodworker Matthias Wandel has mice in his workshop, and he wanted to see how small a hole mice could crawl through . But after setting up his ingenious little test, a challenger appears: the wily shrew! (more…)

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Watch this experiment on mice squeezing through tiny holes

An anonymous person with $86 million in bitcoin is giving it to charity

The Pineapple Fund was started by some nice person whose early acquisition of bitcoins made him a multimillionaire. He’s donating $86 million to different charities, including the EFF (who gets $1 million) FAQ Who are you, and why? Sometime around the early days of bitcoin, I saw the promise of decentralized money and decided to mine/buy/trade some magical internet tokens. The expectation shattering returns of bitcoin over many years has lead to an amount far more than I can spend. What do you do when you have more money than you can ever possibly spend?Donating most of it to charity is what I’m doing. For reference, The Pineapple Fund is bigger than the entire market cap of bitcoin when I got in, and one of the richest 250 bitcoin addresses today. How many bitcoins do you have? The Pineapple Fund represents a majority of my cryptocurrency holdings. Why are you remaining anonymous? Publicity has never been the point of this fund. I’m an individual. Can I get some bitcoins? The answer is no. Pineapple Fund is charity, but not that kind of charity. Please do not apply or email. We have never funded an individual request and we never will. Why the name, Pineapple Fund? I like pineapple. The only bad thing about pineapple is you can’t eat too much 🙁

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An anonymous person with $86 million in bitcoin is giving it to charity

The Orville is better than Star Trek: Discovery

Critics hate The Orville , Seth McFarlane’s uncanny love letter to Star Trek and The Next Generation , but they love the gloomy, ultra-2017 Star Trek: Discovery . Viewers love The Orville , though, while remaining divided on and indifferent to the new official series. The critics are mistaken; the viewers are right. I was surprised at how intimately Seth McFarlane — Seth McFarlane! — is tuned into Gene Roddenberry’s sense of humanity’s future potential and why it’s OK to have a shipful of lovers. It’s TNG with dick jokes! And, let’s face it, the time is right for some happy technocommie utopian SF.

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The Orville is better than Star Trek: Discovery