Bluetooth Mannequin Head Speaker: When Your Playlist Needs a Side of Creepy Brain Goo!

Mannequin Head Speaker

Ever wondered what would happen if a Bluetooth speaker and a mannequin head had a creepy lovechild? Well, wonder no more! This bizarre contraption has sound coming out of the mannequin’s eye holes, and its “hair” is just a bunch of exposed wires. Oh, and for the grand finale? A raw egg gets poured onto the subwoofer on top, bouncing around like some kind of brain goo smoothie. It’s like the uncanny valley and your playlist had a weird, unsettling dance party!

From Aboringday:

In this video, I made a Bluetooth speaker shaped like a human head that can independently adjust treble and bass. The video provides a detailed overview of the entire process of making the head speaker. If you want to try making one yourself, you can follow the steps, but be mindful of the speaker’s power and size. When the music plays from the head, it’s both novel and funny, I hope you enjoy it! (Easter Egg at the End)

Today’s Hottest Deals: Save BIG on GIGANTIC LEGO Marvel Hulkbuster Set, SAMSUNG Odyssey 34 inch Curved Gaming Monitor, Fire HD 10 Tablet, and MORE!

Lego Hulkbuster Deal

For today’s edition of “Deal of the Day,” here are some of the best deals we stumbled on while browsing the web this morning! Please note that Geeks are Sexy might get a small commission from qualifying purchases done through our posts. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.

-LOWEST PRICE EVER: LEGO Marvel Hulkbuster 76210 Building Set (4049 PCS)$549.99 $299.99

LEGO Star Wars: A New Hope Tantive IV, Buildable 25th Anniversary Starship Model$79.99 $60.18

SAMSUNG Odyssey 34 inch Curved Gaming Monitor (165Hz)$549.99 $329.99

Garmin vívoactive 5, Health and Fitness GPS Smartwatch$299.99 $249.99

Amazon Fire HD 8 tablet, 8” HD Display, 64GB, 30% faster processor$129.99 $54.99

Amazon Fire HD 10 tablet (newest model)$139.99 $74.99

bev by BLACK+DECKER Cocktail Maker Machine and Drink Maker for Bartesian capsules$299.99 $199.99

Ninja Specialty Coffee Maker, Hot & Iced Coffee, 6 Brew Styles, 8 Sizes, Small Cup to Travel Mug, 10-Cup Carafe$169.99 $99.99

Microsoft Office Pro 2021 for Windows: Lifetime License$219.99 $39.97

1minAI: Lifetime Subscription – Why choose between ChatGPT, Midjourney, GoogleAI, and MetaAI when you could get them all in one tool? – $234.00 $39.99

DEWALT 20V Max Cordless Drill/Driver Kit, Includes 2 Batteries and Charger$179.00 $99.00



A Gorgeous Bardcore Cover of Billie Eilish’s Birds of a Feather

Hear ye, hear ye! Gather round, good folk, for a wondrous tune hath graced our ears! The fair Hildegard von Blingin’ hath once more lent her dulcet tones to the realm of Badcore, crafting a most beauteous cover of Billie Eilish’s Birds of a Feather. Let thine ears be blessed by this enchanting sound, as if plucked from the very annals of time itself. Go forth, and listen well!

[Hildegard von Blingin’]

Scientists have figured out how to ‘see’ through mice – could humans be next?

You should be so lucky. Fran_kie

Timothy Hearn, Anglia Ruskin University

Imagine being able to see right through your skin to watch your muscles or organs in action. It sounds like science fiction, but a group of scientists at Stanford University were recently able to make the skin of live mice appear transparent – at least under certain light conditions.

This breakthrough has unquestionably opened up new possibilities in biological research and medical imaging. So how did they do it, and could it ever lead to humans becoming invisible?

When we look at objects, light reflects off them, allowing our eyes to see shapes and colours. However, living tissue such as skin behaves differently because it is comprised of things such as water, proteins and lipids (fats), which all bend light at different angles. This means that light is scattered by skin, which limits how deeply we can see into the body without invasive surgery.

To try and get around this problem, scientists have developed more sophisticated imaging techniques over the years, such as two-photon microscopy and near-infrared fluorescence. But they often require harmful chemicals or only work on dead tissue. Instead, the goal has been to find a way to achieve transparency in living organisms safely and reversibly.

In the Stanford study, the researchers turned to a surprising tool: food dye. Tartrazine (also known as E102), a common yellow food dye found in crisps and soft drinks, has a unique property. When dissolved in water and applied to skin tissues, it alters how light interacts with biological matter.

Imaging of internal mouse organs

The key to this lies in the physics of light absorption and refraction, specifically something called the “Kramers-Kronig relations”, which describe how materials interact with light across different wavelengths. Tartrazine has been used in microscopy for years as a way of staining certain parts of the anatomy to make them more visible, but it has never been used on the whole tissue of living animals.

By adding tartrazine to water and applying it to the tissues of anaesthetised live mice, the researchers were able to change the refractive index of water in the tissue, meaning the extent to which it bends light. This brought its refractive index closer to that of lipids, which enabled the light to pass through the skin of the mice more easily, making them appear transparent.

Astoundingly, the researchers were able to see in unprecedented detail deep structures inside the mice such as blood vessels and even muscle fibres. In one example, they could see the movements of the intestines in real-time through the transparent abdomen. This level of visibility was achieved without any apparent harmful effects to the mice, including being able to return their skin to its normal, opaque state once the dye was washed off.

This discovery could be revolutionary. Imagine being able to monitor organ function without invasive procedures, or see precisely where a vein is to draw blood. It could also pave the way for breakthroughs in understanding how diseases affect the body at a microscopic level.

Next stop, invisibility?

As fascinating as this all is, making humans fully invisible remains unlikely for several reasons.

Firstly, the transparency achieved in the Stanford study is clearly not total invisibility. And although the tartrazine allows light to pass through tissues, it works best with specific wavelengths of light, mainly in the red and infrared regions of the spectrum. This means that under normal lighting conditions, the mice aren’t truly invisible to the naked eye. Instead, they are transparent under specific imaging equipment designed to capture this phenomenon.

Secondly, this transparency only affects the tissues where the dye has been applied, and even then, it is limited by how deeply the dye can penetrate. Human bodies are significantly more complex and skin much thicker than those of mice. Making a whole human transparent would require a different level of application and technology.

Internal view of a human shoulder
Disappear this! BigBlueStudio

For one thing, light behaves differently when passing through larger volumes of tissue. Also, even if we could scale up the technology, achieving full-body transparency would involve significant challenges, such as ensuring the dye reached all parts of the body evenly without causing harm. Tartrazine is safe to consume within daily limits, but can cause side effects, allergic reactions and, at large doses, there is conflicting data regarding it having toxic effects on cells or potentially causing genetic mutations.

In addition, the transparency effect works by modifying how light interacts with biological tissues, but it doesn’t address the issue of light absorption by other components of the body, such as bones, which are denser and would likely require different methods to become transparent.

So, is human invisibility possible? Not in the way we see in movies. But we may in future see further developments that push the boundaries of what’s possible with transparency in living organisms.The Conversation

Timothy Hearn, Senior Lecturer in Bioinformatics, Anglia Ruskin University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Monster Wine: Fermenting Bad Ideas Into Something… Delicious?

Monster Wine

Ever wonder what would happen if you took the power of Monster Energy Drink and turned it into an alcoholic beverage? Well, one creative brewer at Golden Hive Mead did just that, and the result is something truly unique—Monster Wine! After multiple experiments and some serious trial and error, he discovered that some of Monster’s ingredients make it tough for yeast to thrive. But with a special brewing process, he managed to get the yeast to cooperate, unleashing the power of fermentation on Monster Energy.

Monster wine in a glass

The result? A wild creation that’s not quite beer, not quite wine, but something entirely its own. Monster Wine brings a whole new meaning to “energy drink,” packing the intense flavors of Monster with the smoothness of an alcoholic beverage.

And at least, it actually looks better than Monster pickles!

Monster Wine: Unleash the Yeast! Would you give it a try?