This New ATV Has 18 Tiny Wheels

The company and its product are both named 18 Wheels. Unlike its counterparts with tracks or large pneumatic tires, this design from Finland uses 18 small solid wheels, each of which is independently powered with its own motor on flexible suspension arms. Together, they're able to traverse high obstacles, including ones 8 inches high, without losing speed.

The designers mean for it to be environmentally friendly, which is why the unit is made of recycled materials and electrically powered.

18 Wheels unveiled its prototype last year and, according to this video, had planned to demonstrate an improved model this summer.

-via The Awesomer


Delivery Driver Goes for a Swim

ViralHog shares this compilation of footage from security cameras around one home in Gardena, California. The resident had ordered a package from Amazon and a delivery driver dutifully brought it. The order had come with specific delivery instructions: the driver was welcome to go for a swim if s/he wished to.

It apparently didn't take long for the driver, sweating in the hot summer sun, to make a decision about the offer. He emptied his pockets onto a handy table and executed a clean dive into the pool. Then he went straight back to work, presumably while soaking wet, but also cool.


This Music Video is Also a Sitcom



The new song from Claud Mintz is "A Good Thing" in more ways than one. The song is a real toe-tapper, but the video is a mini-film featuring Paul Rudd as a clueless mail carrier who has a ferret with an eye problem. Believe it or not, that's not what the video is about at all. It's about Claud, and the gift from their girlfriend. There's a cat who looks exactly like my Marshmallow, and then things get weird. When the song was over, I had to look up the lyrics to see what the song is about. It's a normal angsty love song, but I couldn't follow at the time because I was busy concentrating on what was happening in the video, which is both cute and funny. "A Good Thing" is from the album Supermodels. -via Nag on the Lake


Tall Tale Postcards Boasting of Bountiful Travel Destinations

Early in the 20th century, as Americans traveled more and more by train to exotic destinations in their own country, they mailed or brought back novelty "tall tale" postcards to show where they'd been. These are still funny, and charmingly retro. Most were the work of Edward Henry Mitchell. While this type of fantasy image can easily be done in Photoshop today, Mitchell made them the old-fashioned way, in his photo shop in San Francisco.



Mitchell would lay out a picture of a background, often a photograph of the the Southern Pacific Railroad, then cut out  produce from a different photograph and just lay it over top. Then he'd take another photo of the whole thing together. These templates would be offered to various businesses, governments, and Chambers of Commerce, and their name or location added before printing mass quantities.

Ridiculously large produce shipments were just a small part of Mitchell's postcard business. His business published at least 4,000 designs between 1898 and 1915. See a gallery of his tall tale postcards from the collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of American History at Flashbak. -via Everlasting Blort


Tom Scott's GoPro: The Rest of the Story



Yogi, are you ready for your closeup? To understand this story, you'll need to see last week's video in which bears test bear-resistant trash cans at the Grizzly & Wolf Discovery Center. A bear looting a trash can made off with Tom's GoPro camera, and I made a remark about it being a write-off. But there's more to the story. Someone commented that the camera should be okay since GoPros are fairly waterproof. But are they bear-proof? After all, that's what the testing center is for. And this GoPro was covered in honey and peanut butter, which bears just love. Miraculously, the camera was later recovered from the bear pond, and it more or less worked. So this week we get to see the footage from the camera that the bear chewed on and then dropped in the pond. Strangely, the bear remembered the camera and went back to retrieve it himself!


Weird Job Opening: Library Barista

Most library job descriptions include the term "and other duties as assigned" and we librarians often share jokes based on real-life experiences about what that generic statement can include.

The public library system of Arapahoe County, Colorado offers a position that includes that caveat (more or less), but is based upon a core duty seldom found in library services positions: barista.

Yes, some public libraries have in-house cafes or even bars, but these are usually separated from the conventional library services end of the business. This job posting is not for a barista who works in a library, but a person who offers paraprofessional library services and makes coffee.

A master's degree in library science is not required, so it is not, strictly speaking, a librarian position. But the detailed list of job requirements includes core library services.

-via Jessamyn West


Musician Turns Drums into a Keyboard

Eric Carr is a master percussionist. At his YouTube channel EMC Productions, he teaches the world how to play drums and not how to play drums, as well as inventively uses drums for unconventional purposes. In the latter category, Carr recently compiled a few dozen drums into a mostly QWERTY-arranged keyboard.

In this video, Carr never speaks a word. He instead dictates his narration into his drum kit as he describes the project, tells a percussion joke, and performs songs, the most challenging of which is "Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious" from Mary Poppins.

In the comments, Carr notes that the hardest words for him to spell were "supercalifragilisticexpialidocious" and, a YouTuber's favorite, "subscribe".

-via The Awesomer


27 Things You've Always Heard That Just Aren't True

It's become common for parents to console children about bad grades by comparing them to Einstein, saying he got bad grades, and look how he ended up. Then the child drops out of school and tells his parents, well, Einstein dropped out, too, and look how he ended up. The myth about bad grades came from a misunderstanding of how numeric grades in Switzerland (and later Italy) worked. Einstein was brilliant in science and math, and okay in other subjects. He just hated school because it was regimented and boring. He did drop out of school at 15, because he wanted to join his parents who were living in Italy. Einstein went on to get a PhD in Zurich.



This myth came about purely because of Hollywood. It's much more exciting to see a body flying as it is shot than to just see the victim slump to the ground. Things are a bit different in wartime, with missiles, bombs, and cannons, and the only way to make a mundane murder by gun look as exciting on screen is to emulate the explosions of war. In fact, a lot of what we think of as "common knowledge" commonly comes from Hollywood or debunked science or someone just making a good story better. Find out the stories behind a bunch of these myths at Cracked. 


Suffering and Dying for Beauty in the Victorian Age



Is risking your life to be attractive ever worth it? Maybe, if you've been taught that beauty is the only thing you have to offer, or if everyone around you is doing the same risky thing, or if you have no idea how dangerous an everyday beauty regimen can be. Society has gone through many cycles of less-than-healthy beauty fads, from makeup made of lead to eating disorders. Weird History focuses in on some unhealthy trends of the Victorian era, namely consumption chic, corsets, arsenic baths, and wildly dangerous makeup ingredients. While we can look back and say "What were they thinking?" we also have to wonder what we are doing today that will cause people of the future, say a hundred years from now, to say the same about us.


Exploring the New Lava Tubes After a Volcanic Eruption

A lava tube forms when a stream of lava is rolling downhill, and the outside of the flow cools and solidifies before the inner flow. The hot lava inside eventually runs out, and meanwhile more lava and rock has buried the tube, leaving a cave.

It's been almost two years since the Cumbre Vieja volcano erupted in the Canary Islands covered La Palma island with 200 million cubic meters of lava, with an average depth of 50 feet. Hundreds of residents are still waiting to go home, and construction of new communities has begun, even thought the lava is still hot in places. That leaves scientists scrambling to study the eruption and its effects before the lava is moved or destroyed. It's a risky endeavor, as the lava tubes are just barely cool enough to enter with protective gear, and you can't tell if the rock underneath is stable enough to complete the journey. The ceilings can fall, too.

But the research goes on. So far, explorers have found stalactites and stalagmites formed by dripping lava, and mineral deposits that leave streaks of colors behind, all within just two years of the eruption. If these lava tubes survive long enough, they could become home to microorganisms and develop their own ecosystem. Read about the lava tubes of La Palma and the scientists who dare enter them at Smithsonian. -via Damn Interesting


Does Your State Lean toward Barbie or Oppenheimer?

Twitter user @WSBChairman made this map using data from Google Trends. Huge crowds are going to see the new movie about Barbie as well as the biopic of Robert Oppenheimer. There's crossover marketing involved as people blend the two movies. Many people are going to see both films.

But, ultimately, you have to choose which movie to see first even if you are going to watch both. These data might suggest which movie holds dominance in different states. Right now, New Mexico is going hard for the site of Oppenheimer's most famous project. Mississippi, which has never experienced an atomic detonation, is bright pink for Barbie.

-via Terrible Maps


The Long, Twisted Career of Titanic Thompson

How could you not be drawn to a story headlined "the golfer who married five women and murdered five men"? That was Alvin C. Thomas, better known under his nickname Titanic Thompson. I was halfway through the story and remembered that this was supposed to be about a golfer, and it hadn't mentioned golf yet. Thompson took up golf suddenly as an adult, and discovered he was very good at it. He could have been a professional golfer, but Thompson scoffed at the idea because he already made a better living gambling. In fact, he made an awful lot of money gambling because he cheated.

Thompson didn't kill five men at once; those were three different instances, and he had an indirect hand in a sixth death. Yet he never served time for any of them. The five women he married were all teenagers, between 15 and 18 years old. The 18-year-old was his fifth wife, and he was in his 60s when he married her. So you can see that a timeline of Thompson's life would be pretty complicated. And he got away with it all, dying in a nursing home at age 80. Read his story at Historic Mysteries.  -via Strange Company


How Maple Syrup is Made, and Why It's So Expensive



As a kid reading Laura Ingalls Wilder stories, I was fascinated to read about making maple syrup and snow candy. It seemed so neat that you could go collect tree juice from the forest and make candy from it! But that was more than 100 years ago, and she saw it from a child's point of view. Making proper grade A maple syrup takes a lot of work and expertise, but more importantly, it takes time. Forty years to grow a sugar maple tree, although you can skip that if you're lucky. Weeks of slowly gathering sap, which must be done at just the right time, and you'd better get a year's worth when you do it. Many hours of filtering and greatly reducing each gallon of sap. It's no wonder then, that grade A maple syrup can cost $200 a gallon, and that tiny bottle at the grocery will cost you $15. In this video, Jeffrey Schad and Ashley Ruprecht of Laurel & Ash Farm in New York take us through the process of producing maple syrup, from the trees to the table.  


The Ashram Where the Beatles Went to Meditate

(Image credit: Eran Sandler)

In 1968, the Beatles traveled to Rishikesh, India, to spend time with Maharishi Mahesh Yogi at his Transcendental Meditation Center. It wasn't exactly a "getaway" in the way you or I would think, as they took an entourage of 60 people and were followed by the press. None of the Fab Four stayed as long as they had planned, but John and George were there for a couple of months. The Beatles returned to England with a slew of their most creative songs having been written during their stay.


(Image credit: Daniel Echeverri)

So what happened after that? Rishikesh, which has many ashrams, became quite popular among Westerners who discovered Transcendental Meditation and other Eastern disciplines and religions. The Maharishi died in 1981, and the Transcendental Meditation Center was abandoned and left to be taken over by nature. Yet visitors still came, and in 2015, it was officially opened to the public again. Learn about this unique Ashram, its place in history, and what it's like now at Messy Nessy Chic. 


The Early Would-Be Forensic Toxicologist

It wasn't until 1840 that James Marsh developed a test to determine if someone had been killed by arsenic, changing forensic science forever. But the idea has been around for a couple of hundred years already.
 
The career of John Cotta shows us that the idea of forensic toxicology greatly preceded the ability. Cotta was a doctor in the early 1600s, a strange time in which old superstitions overlapped with the scientific study of medicine. He wrote a book about the modern and scientific methods of discovering witches in 1616. Really. Cotta also thought of himself as an expert in forensics. In 1620, he was summoned by Sir Euseby Andrew, who was ill and convinced that he was being poisoned. He suspected his wife's companion, Mistress Moyle, of giving him poisoned "broths and jellies." Andrew made no secret of his worries, but no one believed him but Cotta. A minister who attended Andrew near his death even admonished him not to make false accusations just before he meets his maker. Then Andrew died.  

Cotta and another physician performed an autopsy, and Moyle was eventually charged with murder. But there was no Marsh test at the time. Read about the case of possible poisoning and the trial that followed at Legal History Miscellany. -via Strange Company

(Image credit: Wellcome Images)


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