The Real-Life “Spidey-Sense” [Comic]
[Source: Fowl Language | Like Fowl Language on Facebook]
[Source: Fowl Language | Like Fowl Language on Facebook]
Yep, plants can communicate between each others, so when a plant gets attacked, it can send a signal to nearby plants (or insects in certain cases) to help them activate specific protection mechanisms. [Minute Earth]
Warning: Language. From Egoraptor: Is Ocarina of Time REALLY the masterpiece we all say it is? What did it do to change how Zelda games are made? How much hate mail WILL I get for this?! [Egoraptor]
Every second of your life you are under attack. Bacteria, viruses, spores and more living stuff wants to enter your body and use its resources for itself. The immune system is a powerful army of cells that fights like a T-Rex on speed and sacrifices itself for your survival. Without it you would die in […]
Be sure to watch this one till the end when the reporter tries to create her own character. Video game customization reaches new heights in ‘The Elder Scrolls Online’ thanks to a feature that allows players to customize their character’s bones, flesh, and nervous system. (Brought to you by Bethesda) [The Onion]
Warning: Immature humor + language. PARTYING IS FUTILE! In this clip from the June 29th episode of Robot Chicken, we find out who runs the bridge of the Enterprise after Picard (guest star Patrick Stewart) goes to bed. Chris Pine voices the night crew’s captain. [IGN | Via GT]
A Comic by Julia Lepetit and Andrew Bridgman from Dorkly. [Source: Dorkly]
A technology and gadgets magazine is to drop its policy of using scantily-clad women as cover models. Stuff magazine says it’s a business decision based on changing tastes. The magazine launched in the UK in 1996 and now has several international editions. The UK version has consistently used models on the front cover, usually posing […]
From SciFri: Cuttlefish change the patterns on their body for courtship rituals, when they eat a snack, and most famously when they want to blend in. How they change their skin patterns may tell us something about how they see the world, says Duke biologist Sarah Zylinski. Her work suggests that when cuttlefish see incomplete […]
[Reddit | Via NA]