Monday, October 18, 2010

Ken Block's Gymkhana THREE, Part 2; Ultimate Playground; l'Autodrome, Fr...


Ken Block changed his car to Ford b/c of the gas emission causing the air pollution. but I still love how he drives it

The Four-Winged Dinosaur


the four winged dinosaur that are the ancestors of birds. (I think)
it's pretty long.. but interesting.

Sunday, August 1, 2010

Amazon founder and CEO Jeff Bezos delivers graduation speech at Princeto...


"...one day you'll understand that it's harder to be kind than clever...since cleverness is a gift and kindness is a choice" awesome speech!

[0-60] Ken Block's snowboard/rally bit from DC's Mtn.Lab 1.5



Ken Block + Monster + DC = Subaru

Ken Block jumps his rally car 171 feet

Subaru WRX 530whp Drift



I love this car.. the way it sounds like a mad bull, how it handles, how fast it can accelerate,,, just love it

wow this is great! bioware?



I never thought about transplanting an animal's tissue to a human. but this guy did a great job on transplanting! this is a great stuff... thumbs up!

Monday, July 26, 2010

u kno what this is?



all those junks around the EARTH!!!!! it sucks that we can't do anything about them

From the New York Times, Feb. 11th, 2009:

Debris Spews Into Space After Satellites Collide

For decades, space experts have warned of orbits around the planet growing so crowded that two satellites might one day slam into one another, producing swarms of treacherous debris.

It happened Tuesday. And the whirling fragments could pose a threat to the International Space Station, orbiting 215 miles up with three astronauts on board, though officials said the risk was now small...

It happened some 490 miles above northern Siberia, at around noon Eastern time. Two communications satellites — one Russian, one American — cracked up in silent destruction. In the aftermath, military radars on the ground tracked large amounts of debris going into higher and lower orbits.

“Nothing to this extent” has ever happened before, Mr. Johnson said.

This is a serious and growing problem. You can imagine the worst-case scenario over the long term - that the swarm of junk surrounding Earth becomes so dense that it forms a sort of minefield such that no craft can go into orbit without a significant risk of collision; we will have encaged ourselves with our own debris. That's a remote possibility at this point, but if it came to pass, it wouldn't be the first time we managed to junk a pristine and seemingly limitless environment with our crap.