Spaceship crashes in Russia…Are you worried?

The facehuggers are coming! The facehuggers are coming!

Ok.

Maybe not.

But if you believe in such thing, this could maybe frighten you into believing that they are.

*sniffs*

So are you worried? Not that I am trying to frighten you or anything.

A fragment of an extraterrestrial spaceship has been found in Russia’s Perm region. At least, this is what local ufologists said after they analyzed unusual material, from which the mysterious object was made.

Specialists determined that the strange metal was wolfram with additives. They said that such a compound could not be found anywhere else on planet Earth. Therefore, they concluded that the metal was of extraterrestrial origin.

Nikolay Subbotin, the head of RUFORS research station, believes that the metal fragment could be a piece of an engine, Pravda.Ru reports.

Russian news agencies reported about two months ago that residents of the city of Perm in Russia’s Ural could see a strange object hovering in the sky. Eyewitnesses said that the object was scanning the ground with a beam of light. Someone even saw “passengers” disembarking from the strange object.

See, no reason to be frightened at all…

*smiles*

How about now?

The Waterless Washing Machine

I love finding stuff like this. It seems to me that the world these days, is just rife with the most amazing inventions and the discovery of new and fascinating things:

British company Xeros looks forward to conquer the American market with its latest invention, a new washing system able to save a lot of water using nylon beads. The beads tumble wash clothes using 90 percent less water than traditional washers.

In addition, the company’s latest invention, which is currently in the development stage, requires less detergent. Xeros claims that there would be no need for tumble drying and if the homes in the United States would switch to the new system, the emissions of carbon dioxide would be considerably reduced. The result would be as though 5 million vehicles have been removed from the road. The company also says that the new washing machine will save 1.2 billion tons of water each year, which equals 17 million swimming pools.


The washing machines does its job using small nylon beads that eliminate stains off clothes and lock them into the molecular structure of the nylon. The beads can be used for hundreds of washes and afterwards they can be easily recycled. The technology behind the new washing machine is the result of a research carried out at the University of Leeds. It has been used in a concept washing machine by the Cambridge Consultants.

After carrying out tests for over three years, Xeros, a spinout from the University, managed to achieve an agreement with Kansas City-based GreenEarth Cleaning, which intends to market Xeros’ latest invention across North American continent in 2010. You can read more about the product on the company’s website

For me, definitely one invention that will be MOST welcome. Now, only if it comes out at a reasonable price, all will be well in my little world, cause I will SO buy one *winks* as well as your own.

Cause yeah this product is very eco-friendly. A main source of my joy and appreciation. Plus, *shrugs* it will help with that ever pesky water and electric bill with its mere purchase.

$ding$ding$ding.

Who would have thunk it…A waterless washing machine.

Pure genius.

I mean, come on…Dude, this rocks!!!

Why is this not awesome?!

Mysterious Easter Island Holds Alzheimer’s Cure?

Now THIS is why I love science.

It’s the always questioning, the always looking that often brings the most amazing discoveries when we least expect it.

Check this bad boy article out!

Blurb: “Rapamycin is a bacterial byproduct discovered in the soil of Easter Island. It extends the lives of animals, and now two independent studies show that it can reverse the symptoms of Alzheimer’s. Is this the drug we’ve been waiting for?

Hope.

It’s a strange thing. Often turning up in the place we least expect it.

So never doubt it. HOPE is always out there, just waiting to be discovered.

So never give up.

Never.

Gawd…I just LOVE science!

Mexico–Who doesn’t want to visit THIS paradise?!

Because it is so very close to me, it is hard to ignore this type of violence that is practically ignored by the main stream media (WHICH I HATE!) because they are TOO busy carrying important things like Sandra Bullock’s deteriorating marriage…

*sniffs*

You know, stuff like that.

I mean, gah, who could blame them when unimportant stuff like this…

…Is going on at our country’s border.

MONTERREY, Mexico — The decapitated body of the police chief of a northern Mexico town and the body of his brother were found inside the chief’s patrol truck Friday, authorities said. Hours earlier, gunmen killed a deputy police chief and his bodyguard in another part of Mexico’s north.

I mean admittedly, this is just one more decapitation (*flips hair* So last year!) of the brave men and women who serve on Mexico’s police force, and in contrast with the issues in Hollywood, I can understand why they would pale in comparison…

But come on, seriously?

It is really shameful how much coverage the violence in Mexico does NOT get.

Just…

The Definitive Haiku?

Huh.

I guess there are some that will really (and I mean REALLY) go all out for their art:

The Roman poet Horace once said of his works that “I have created a monument more lasting than bronze.” Well, Canadian poet Christian Bök has pretty much blown Horace away with his plan to encode a poem into bacterial DNA.

The plan is simple enough, if completely insane. Bök hopes to inject a series of nucleotides into the DNA of the bacteria Deinococcus radiodurans that form an intelligible poem, and then, in case that was too easy, he wants the protein the bacteria manufactures to also form a meaningful poem.


Since he only has four characters to work with – the nucleotides adenine, cytosine, guanine, and thymine – he first needs to create an alphabet that substitutes various triplets of nucleotides in the place of the twenty-six letters. In other words, AGT might correspond to “a”, while CTG could mean “b”, and so on. However, Bök can’t just choose the triplets at random, because for all the trillions of possible combinations, only a minuscule fraction will produce amino acids that also yields a workable vocabulary.

Bök is currently using specially designed software to find the optimal arrangement, and only once he’s figured that out will he actually write the poem. He has said that he will be somewhat limited in what sort of poetry he can write, and that most likely he will compose something with a “repetitive, incantatory quality.”

“Repetitive, incantatory quality,” huh? Could turn out a very interesting haiku, don’t you think?

I tell, I am ever amazed at the human mind and the fabulous things we can come up with.

Can’t wait to see it, once he gets it done.

Sounds interesting to say the least. *wiggles eyebrows*