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The Anti-Theft Lunchbag

15 Sep

Everyone who’s worked in an office environment has experienced the contemptible act of a co-worker ‘stealing’ their lunch from the communal fridge at least once. Well, here comes the Anti-Theft lunch Bag to the rescue. Anti-Theft Lunch Bags come with green splotches on both sides of the bag. Pack your sandwich in this, and no one will want to touch it… unless it falls into the hands of the office neat freak;  you know, the guy who throws out all of the stale-looking forgotten lunches and expired yogurts.

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The Most Advanced CG Facial Animation Ever

22 Aug

Emily is the creation of Image Metrics in partnership with USC’s Institute for Creative Technologies. Using ICT’s special scanning system that can capture facial details down to the individual pore, the face of actress Emily O’Brien was transformed into a digital representation of herself, which could then be entirely machine-manipulated. A special spherical lighting rig captured O’Brien in 35 reference facial poses using a pair of high resolution digital cameras. The facial maps were then converted into 3D data using Image Metrics’ proprietary markerless motion capture technology.  Image Metrics then generated a new animation sequence and precisely superimposed it onto the live actress’ head. As you can see from the video below, you’d be really hard-pressed to tell the difference between digital Emily and real-world Emily.

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Super Slow Motion Lightning: First Ever Video of Lightning’s Downward Stroke

9 Aug

The following lightning strike captured by storm chaser Tim Samaras is one of the first ever video captures slow enough (100,000 frames/second) to show lightning as it actually travels toward the ground and back toward the sky. Using an Ultra-High Speed camera that he heavily customized, Samaras was able to confirm that the lightning we see with the naked eye is actually the return stroke back toward the sky, not the superfast downward stroke. This video provides visible proof of this theory.

The World’s Tiniest Snake

5 Aug

Evolutionary biologists from Penn State have recently identified the world’s smallest snake.  The 3.9 inch specimen, that’s small enough to fit on a quarter, was found under a rock on the island of Barbados.  The spaghetti noodle sized Barbados threadsnake (or Leptotyphlops carlae), is believed to be as small as nature would allow, for if it were any smaller, its young would have nothing to eat.  The snake primarily consumes the tiny larvae of termites and ants.

Females of this species produce just one slender egg. In contrast to larger species that may lay up to 100 eggs in a single clutch, with each egg measuring just a fraction of the mother’s body, this snake produces a single hatchling that’s half its mother’s size.

The species is believed to be in grave danger as it’s habitat on Barbados is being replaced by human development.