Two Friends Take To The Skies In Flying Boat

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Saturday, July 31, 2010 | , | 0 comments »

Two Norwegian friends have taken to the skies on a wing and a prayer in a home-made flying boat.

The men created the bizarre machine from hanglider wings, a propeller motor and a rubber dinghy.

Proving the sky's the limit, the boat can soar as high as ten thousand feet and reach 85 kilometres per hour.

A "pilot" sits in the dinghy and holds on to a bar attached to the hanglider wings in order to control his direction.

It might not be as slick as a James Bond gadget, but its ability to dominate air and water is reminiscent of some of the spy's more unusual modes of transport.

So far, the friends say it has been pretty plain sailing - with no accidents as yet.

news.sky.com

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Brewer claims world's strongest beer

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Saturday, July 31, 2010 | | 0 comments »
A Dutch brewer with a penchant for competition has laid claim to creating the world's strongest brew: a beer that is some 60 percent alcohol by volume.

"You don't drink it like beer, but like a cocktail -- in a nice whisky or cognac glass," brewer Jan Nijboer told Dutch news agency ANP.

Nijboer's Almere-based brewery, 't Koelschip (The Refrigerated Ship), sells the new beer, which is 120 proof and dubbed "Start the Future," in a one-third liter bottle for 35 euros ($45) each.

Nijboer told ANP he developed the new brew to keep up with Scottish outfits that were also pushing the boundaries of beer's alcohol content.

His previous record-holder, a beer called Oblix that was 90 proof (45 percent alcohol by volume), was eclipsed by a Scottish beer that reached 55 percent.

That beer, dubbed "The End of History," was announced last week by a small brewery called BrewDog. Only 12 bottles were made, each housed inside a stuffed dead animal and sold starting at 500 pounds ($780) each.

"It has become a little competition," Nijboer said. "You should see it as a joke."

yahoo.com

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German couple have sex fall

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Friday, July 23, 2010 | | 0 comments »
A German couple fell from a first-floor window while they were having sex.

The amorous pair were romping on a windowsill in an apartment when their vigorous lovemaking caused them to plummet onto the street in the city of Lubeck.

Although the unnamed couple denied they were having sex, they were both naked when they fell.

The woman said: "We weren't having sex, we were just mucking about. I don't remember anything about the fall at all."

According to police, the couple tumbled out because the woman fell backwards pulling her man out of the window with her. Luckily, they were both left uninjured.

Neighbours claim the pair often met in the flat for sex.

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Hundreds of Santa Clauses meet at world congress

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Friday, July 23, 2010 | | 0 comments »
Santa Clauses from around the world have gathered in Copenhagen for the annual World Santa Claus Congress.

Each year the event sees the Santa Clauses meet to network with each other and share their experiences of the last Christmas.

But it's not all fun and games, the conference covers issues concerning their trade such as standardisations and regulations.

This isthe 53rd year of the congress which will be attended by Santas from Japan, the United States, United Kingdom, Germany, Netherlands, Spain, Norway, Sweden and Denmark.

In odd news the organisers of the three-day event say they have to ship in additional mince pies -- yes he enjoys them all year around.

newslite.tv

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Mount Everest's Death Zone Gets Clean-Up

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Monday, July 19, 2010 | | 0 comments »
A group of 20 people have braved the dangerous "death zone" conditions of Mount Everest to clear the peak of rubbish left behind by climbers.

Tourism officials in Nepal have released a video of the trash collection, which has been gathering on the mountain for decades.

More than 4,000 adventurers have scaled the peak since 1953, which means it has become the world's highest dump.

Many climbers leave behind their used gear and rubbish before they descend due to exhaustion and lack of oxygen.

While there have been past efforts to clean up the mountain, no team has ever ventured into the thin air and freezing temperatures of the so-called death zone.

Namgyal Sherpa, leader of the Extreme Everest Expedition 2010, took his group above the 8,000-metre mark to collect empty oxygen bottles, gas canisters, torn tents, ropes and utensils.

"Collecting the rubbish is quite a risky task. Such tasks cannot be carried out by anybody," Mr Namgyal said.

After a dangerous 40-day campaign, the waste brought back to base camp was expected to weigh around 2,000kg.

But the team was not only concerned with the impact of garbage on Mt Everest but also with the threat of global warming.

"We used to climb over snow. These days we climb over rocks," Mr Namgyal added.

"If it continues this way succeeding generations will only be able to read in books that there was once snow in the Himalayas."

news.sky.com

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Soldiers in Afghanistan issued heat-ray gun

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Monday, July 19, 2010 | | 0 comments »
The Active Denial System (ADS) uses a focused invisible beam, which causes an “intolerable heating sensation" but does not permanently harm the skin.

The first batch of the vehicle-mounted non-lethal weapons has been sent to US troops in the war-torn country but it has not yet been used on the battlefield.

When the beam is pointed at a person, it penetrates the skin to the equivalent of three sheets of paper – enough to cause pain by burning nerve endings.

The discomfort is enough to force people to move away but not to cause long-term damage. The US military says the chance of injury from the system is 0.1 per cent.

It has already been tested more than 11,000 times on around 700 volunteers, including journalists.

The beam produced by the ADS can travel more than 500m (1,640ft) and is seen as an important new way to limit unnecessary deaths and minimise war zone casualties.

Developers also say it could be adapted to other operations, such as tackling drug smugglers at sea and general peacekeeping operations.

telegraph.co.uk

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Man grows freak watermelon

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Monday, July 19, 2010 | | 0 comments »
A Chinese bus driver has harvested a rare conjoined watermelon in a field near his home in central China.

Xiong Wei, a 25-year-old from Wuhan, has been planting the fruit in his home field for five years.

"It's the first time for me to see such a weird-shaped water melon," said Xiong.

Experts say it's very rare to have such a conjoined water melon.

orange.co.uk

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Teenager catches 'UK's biggest goldfish'

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Monday, July 19, 2010 | | 1 comments »
worlds largest goldfishA teenager from Surrey has reportedly caught the biggest goldfish ever seen in the UK.

Nick Richards, 16, posed for photographs with the 2.27kg fish which he discovered while out catching carp at a lake in Poole, Dorset, the Daily Mail reports.

Richards said: "I'd heard rumours there might be some big carp there and thought I'd see for myself. I was there for two days running and caught some big common carp. Then suddenly I saw this big orange fish cruising along the top of the lake.

"It wasn't too much trouble to reel it in. At first I thought it must be a really fat Koi carp, but when I saw it properly I realised it was a common goldfish - just like one you might keep as a pet. The only difference was that it was massive. It weighed 5lb when I put it on the scales."

He added: "I can only think that it had got too big for someone's tank or pond and the owner had dumped it in the lake. It looked like it was healthy and in good condition. The lake is sheltered with plenty of food, so it's doing pretty well."

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Spain Zoo To Break Transfer Record For Paul

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Monday, July 19, 2010 | , | 0 comments »
A Madrid zoo has promised to give "whatever demanded" to get the new national hero from Germany to Spain.

While Paul the octopus is enjoying his well-deserved retirement days in his home in Oberhausen, Germany, the bid for his last transfer is getting heated in Spain.

A zoo in Madrid has said it would trump any offer made to Oberhausen Sea Life centre for the celebrity octopus.

"We are negotiating with Oberhausen zoo to get Paul here for a short term stay or indefinitely.

"We are prepared to swap Paul for any animal that they may want. We are ready to pay for it," a spokesman told Sky News Online.

"There is no agreement yet."

However several other offers are being made for the world's most wanted octopus.

A Galician town mayor is about to travel to Germany to help smooth any transfer, the Spanish newspaper El Pais reported.

The Madrid zoo has received dozens of emails from Spaniards asking for Paul to brought to Spain after Vicente Del Bosque's team won the World Cup.

Paul became a national hero after forecasting Spain's 1-0 win over the Netherlands.

Earlier Paul had made headlines across the world by predicting all seven of Germany's tournament results.

The Madrid zoo spokesman said much could be learnt from the octopus.

"The octopuses have more educational than conservational value.

"They are very intelligent and can be used as a tool to communicate environmental values to our youngest visitors."

She assured that Paul would be offered the best living conditions and that it would receive lots of love in Madrid.

news.sky.com

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Home-made helicopter ready to fly, possibly

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Wednesday, July 14, 2010 | , | 0 comments »
Wanting to have your own personal helicopter is a fairly common aspiration - but one man in China has gone to the length of building his own home-made helicopter.

Gao Hanjie created his do-it-yourself helicopter in Shenyang, northeast China - spending two months completing the 350kg, three-meter-long aircraft.

It makes him yet another of China's ingenious homebrew technologists, including Wu Yulu's home-made robots, and Yang Youde's home-made cannon.

Gao says that soon he will soon be hoping to find an appropriate open space for his helicopter's first test flight.

Hang on, we think we may have spotted a slight design flaw.

metro.co.uk

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Alligator bites man's hand off, man gets hand back

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Wednesday, July 14, 2010 | | 0 comments »
Florida wildlife officials say a 10-foot-long alligator bit off a man's hand while he was swimming in a canal with friends.

18-year-old Timothy Delano is recovering at a hospital after his alligator encounter, Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission spokeswoman Gabriella Ferraro said.

Luckily for Delano, officials managed to catch the alligator and retrieve his hand from its stomach - and doctors may even be able to reattach the hand.

Ferraro says Delano was swimming with three friends around 9:30 p.m. Sunday when the alligator attacked.

The men swam to shore and drove to a gas station, where they called for an ambulance. Delano was flown by helicopter to a hospital.

metro.co.uk

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The World's Weirdest Weather

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Tuesday, July 13, 2010 | | 0 comments »
As if tornadoes, hurricanes and blizzards weren't enough to keep us on our toes, Mother Nature occasionally surprises us with some truly odd weather phenomena: From whirlwinds of fire to bloody rains, it's a strange world of weather out there.

10. Raining Fish and Frogs

raining fish and frogs
From California to England to India, people have periodically reported a fishy form of precipitation: small animals, such as fish, frogs, and snakes have occasionally fallen unexpectedly from the sky, sometimes miles away from water. Waterspouts whirling over lakes or oceans can suck water and whatever is in it up into the clouds above them. The strong winds of these storm clouds can carry their flopping cargo long distances before dumping them on unsuspecting people below.

9. Great Balls of Fire

great balls of fire
For centuries, people have reported an electrical oddity invading their homes, usually during thunderstorms. Balls of light, ranging from the size of a golfball to a football, occasionally float through the air during storms, undoubtedly surprising anyone they happen to encounter. Known as ball lightning, they have no smell and emit no heat and little sound. They generally disappear with a "pop" when they encounter something electrical, like a television, though they occasionally explode more violently, sometimes starting fires. These glowing spheres not only mystify those who happen to encounter them, but scientists as well, as yet, there is no prevailing explanation for how ball lightning forms.

8. The Sky is Bleeding!

bleeding sky
Showers of blood falling from the sky may sound like something out of a Hollywood horror film, but such scarlet-tinted rains have been reported since ancient Roman times. Though they often horrified the people they fell upon, these rains were not actually blood, they were caused by dust or sand blown into the atmosphere and carried long distances by strong winds, eventually mixing with rain clouds and coloring the rain. In Europe, these red rains are usually dyed by dust carried across the continent from Saharan sand storms. (Other colored rains have also been spotted and seem to be caused by similar sources: pollens can create a startling yellow rain, dust from coal mines and ominous black rain, and some dusts a milky white rain.)

7. Seeing Triple

triple sun
Even on a clear, sunny day, the sky can hold some surprises, at least for the eyes. If the Sun is close to the horizon and feathery cirrus clouds sit high in the sky, 'ghost' images of the Sun will sometimes materialize on either side of it, giving the appearance of three Suns shining in the sky. These ghostly Suns are actually brightly colored spots of light created when the Sun's rays are refracted by tiny ice crystals in the high clouds. Though they are a fairly common optical phenomenon, they are not always seen: after all, how often do you look directly at the Sun? [Without proper eye protection, looking at the Sun can blind you.]

6. Once in a Blue Moon

blue moon
Though the term 'blue Moon' usually refers to occasions every two and a half years when a full Moon occurs twice in one calendar month, there are rare occasions when the Moon really does look blue. Forest fires and volcanoes can shoot ash and soot high into the atmosphere where it mixes with water droplets. These sooty droplets can travel thousands of miles around the globe and are just the right size to scatter the moon's light, making the moon appear blue.

5. Sea Monster or Spinning Water?

sea monster or spinning water
The Loch Ness monster may be nothing more than an overactive column of spinning water. Small whirlwinds, sometimes called 'water devils,' can form over warm water, sucking the water up with them to create a funnel. These water devils can spin around erratically, sometimes making hissing or bubbling noises. These startling sounds combined with the long, neck-like appearance could certainly give anyone nearby the impression that a terrifying sea monster is about to jump out at them.

4. Whirlwinds of Fire

whirlwinds of fire
Though they don't have the ferocious, house-lifting winds of a tornado, dust devils can certainly look scary. These whirlwinds, essentially smaller versions of tornadoes, form when there is intense heat at the ground, which causes the air above it to rise, and winds that can cause the rising air to spin. The whirlwind picks up dust from the ground, hence its name. An even scarier relative is the fire devil, which forms over the intense heat of forest fires, pulling up ropes of fire that spin furiously above the blaze.

3. Sprites, Jets and Elves, Oh My!

For years, pilots have reported seeing strange colored flashes of light shooting out of the tops of storm clouds, usually to the disbelief of many, But in recent years, scientists have found proof that these strange types of lighting exist. Red sprites are blasts of red light that soar up to 50 miles above the Earth, usually in clusters of two or more. Their cousins, blue jets, are cones of bluish light that occur lower in the atmosphere than red sprites. Occurring at about the same time as red sprites are elves, a pancake-shaped red glow created by the heat of conventional lightning below. These flashes last only thousandths of a second, and scientists are still investigating exactly what causes them.

2. St. Elmo's Fires

st elmos fires
During thunderstorms, people have reported seeing balls of 'fire' dancing on ships' masts, the horns of cattle, and their own heads. These small, luminous balls, called St. Elmo's fires, are static electric discharges that occur during thunderstorms and course up tall objects. While they aren't dangerous themselves, they can occur before a lightning strike, so it's probably best to get out of the way.

1. Ice Fall/Bomb

ice fall bomb
Most people who have been in a strong thunderstorm have experienced hail, the chunks of ice, usually no larger than a softball, that sometimes fall from the storm clouds. But occasionally hailstones far, far larger (one was recorded at 80 pounds) fall from the sky, startling anyone nearby and often shattering into smaller chunks when they hit the ground. More mysterious are the giant chunks that have sometimes plummeted to the ground without a cloud in the sky. While some such events have been chalked up to ice fall off the wings of planes, others still have no explanation as to what caused them.

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Top 10 Surprising Results of Global Warming

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Tuesday, July 13, 2010 | | 1 comments »
You've probably heard about the global warming song and dance: rising temperatures, melting ice caps and rising sea levels in the near future. But Earth's changing climate is already wreaking havoc in some very weird ways. So gird yourself for such strange effects as savage wildfires, 25-mile long icebergs, disappearing lakes, freak allergies, and the threat of long-gone diseases re-emerging.

10. Aggravated Allergies

Have those sneeze attacks and itchy eyes that plague you every spring been worsening in recent years? If so, global warming may be partly to blame. Over the past few decades, more and more Americans have started suffering from seasonal allergies and asthma. Though lifestyle changes and pollution ultimately leave people more vulnerable to the airborne allergens they breathe in, research has shown that the higher carbon dioxide levels and warmer temperatures associated with global warming are also playing a role by prodding plants to bloom earlier and produce more pollen. With more allergens produced earlier, allergy season can last longer. Get those tissues ready.

9. Heading for the Hills

Starting in the early 1900s, we've all had to look to slightly higher ground to spot our favorite chipmunks, mice and squirrels. Researchers found that many of these animals have moved to greater elevations, possibly due to changes in their habitat caused by global warming. Similar changes to habitats are also threatening Arctic species like polar bears, as the sea ice they dwell on gradually melts away.

8. Arctic in Bloom

While melting in the Arctic might cause problems for plants and animals at lower latitudes, it's creating a downright sunny situation for Arctic biota. Arctic plants usually remain trapped in ice for most of the year. Nowadays, when the ice melts earlier in the spring, the plants seem to be eager to start growing. Research has found higher levels of the form of the photosynthesis product chlorophyll in modern soils than in ancient soils, showing a biological boom in the Arctic in recent decades.

7. Pulling the Plug

A whopping 125 lakes in the Arctic have disappeared in the past few decades, backing up the idea that global warming is working fiendishly fast nearest Earth's poles. Research into the whereabouts of the missing water points to the probability that permafrost underneath the lakes thawed out. When this normally permanently frozen ground thaws, the water in the lakes can seep through the soil, draining the lake, one researcher likened it to pulling the plug out of the bathtub. When the lakes disappear, the ecosystems they support also lose their home.

6. The Big Thaw

Not only is the planet's rising temperature melting massive glaciers, but it also seems to be thawing out the layer of permanently frozen soil below the ground's surface. This thawing causes the ground to shrink and occurs unevenly, so it could lead to sink holes and damage to structures such as railroad tracks, highways and houses. The destabilizing effects of melting permafrost at high altitudes, for example on mountains, could even cause rockslides and mudslides. Recent discoveries reveal the possibility of long-dormant diseases like smallpox could re-emerge as the ancient dead, their corpses thawing along with the tundra, get discovered by modern man.

5. Survival of the Fittest

As global warming brings an earlier start to spring, the early bird might not just get the worm. It might also get its genes passed on to the next generation. Because plants bloom earlier in the year, animals that wait until their usual time to migrate might miss out on all the food. Those who can reset their internal clocks and set out earlier stand a better chance at having offspring that survive and thus pass on their genetic information, thereby ultimately changing the genetic profile of their entire population.

4. Speedier Satellites

A primary cause of a warmer planet'scarbon dioxide emissions is having effects that reach into space with a bizarre twist. Air in the atmosphere's outermost layer is very thin, but air molecules still create drag that slows down satellites, requiring engineers to periodically boost them back into their proper orbits. But the amount of carbon dioxide up there is increasing. And while carbon dioxide molecules in the lower atmosphere release energy as heat when they collide, thereby warming the air, the sparser molecules in the upper atmosphere collide less frequently and tend to radiate their energy away, cooling the air around them. With more carbon dioxide up there, more cooling occurs, causing the air to settle. So the atmosphere is less dense and creates less drag.

3. Rebounding Mountains

Though the average hiker wouldn't notice, the Alps and other mountain ranges have experienced a gradual growth spurt over the past century or so thanks to the melting of the glaciers atop them. For thousands of years, the weight of these glaciers has pushed against the Earth's surface, causing it to depress. As the glaciers melt, this weight is lifting, and the surface slowly is springing back. Because global warming speeds up the melting of these glaciers, the mountains are rebounding faster.

2. Ruined Ruins

All over the globe, temples, ancient settlements and other artifacts stand as monuments to civilizations past that until now have withstood the tests of time. But the immediate effects of global warming may finally do them in. Rising seas and more extreme weather have the potential to damage irreplaceable sites. Floods attributed to global warming have already damaged a 600-year-old site, Sukhothai, which was once the capital of a Thai kingdom.

1. Forest Fire Frenzy

While it's melting glaciers and creating more intense hurricanes, global warming also seems to be heating up forest fires in the United States. In western states over the past few decades, more wildfires have blazed across the countryside, burning more area for longer periods of time. Scientists have correlated the rampant blazes with warmer temperatures and earlier snowmelt. When spring arrives early and triggers an earlier snow-melt, forest areas become drier and stay so for longer, increasing the chance that they might ignite.

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india - world's biggest countryIndia will overtake China to become the world's most populous nation within the next 16 years, according to new government figures.

Officials say the rise in population to more than 1.6 billion by 2050 will threaten the country's rapid economic development.

The subject of population growth in the country has been almost taboo since Indira Gandhi's heavy-handed population policies, which included forced sterilisations and vasectomies, caused widespread anger in the mid 1970s.

According to the author, Dr Amarjeet Singh of the National Population Stabilisation Fund, India will need to reconsider its position to stop population growth fuelling poverty.

India's current population of 1.1 billion will swell by 371 million in 2026, the report said, taking it beyond China's current 1.35 billion.

The scale of India's population explosion is highlighted by the fact that its most populous state, Uttar Pradesh, has more than 180 million people.

The report's publication provoked a clash between India's population experts and leading commentators over whether the rise will help or hinder the country's remarkable growth story. India's economy is currently growing at more than nine per cent – second only to China.

Author Dr Amarjeet Singh warned that becoming the world's most populous country will trap several hundred million Indians in poverty.

"If we continue to grow at the current pace we will double our population in fifty years making sustainable development unattainable," he said.

His report blamed economic insecurity among the country's 500 million poor, which led to high rates of teenage pregnancies. It revealed that a quarter of India's teenage girls were either pregnant or mothers by age eighteen.

Those girls who left school early were more likely to become teenage mothers, while those who remained at school showed lower fertility levels, the report claimed.

Dr Singh's report for the Ministry of Heath and Family Welfare was denounced by rival experts and commentators who said a growing nation could pay a "demographic dividend" of even higher economic growth.

"This is absolute bunkum," said AR Nanda, executive director of the Population Foundation of India and former commissioner of India's census.

"Over the next 25 years India will reap a demographic dividend of high economic growth providing we invest in human resources and health. We could see an economic surge," he added.

Pavan K Varma, one of India's most influential social commentators, said India already produces 160,000 newly qualified engineers and more than one million technicians every year, which will increase as its population and investment in education rise.

He said increasing education opportunities and the rise in access to television was already slowing the population growth rate.

"More than 500 million people in rural India are watching cable television and as more and more try to replicate the lifestyles they see portrayed so fleshily, they see how each child reduces the possibility of being part of this upwardly mobile curve," he said.

telegraph.co.uk

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Google Street View captures man with two heads

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Monday, July 12, 2010 | | 1 comments »
Google Street View captures man with two headsThe wonders discoverable on Google Street View never cease - after the mysterious Horse Boy, a man with two heads and three legs has been found in Britain.

The appendage-gifted man, apparently a window cleaner, has been spotted in Hawes, Yorkshire by the Google Sightseeing blog. He can be seen in all his bicephalic glory in the embedded Street View below.

There are various theories regarding the provenance of the multi-limbed man. But the only sensible one is that he is in fact an ordinary man with the usual number of legs and heads, but that the Google Street View car took two images of that part of the street and he happened to be caught on the edges of both.

Horse Boy, a mysterious horse-headed creature native to Aberdeen, has been spotted twice around the Scottish city, once with a schoolgirl companion. He was briefly removed from Street View before being reinstated, with no explanation.

He has since become an international phenomenon. Stefan Kleen from Germany said he met horse-boy at a festival: "He only spoke English so we didn't really talk a lot to him."

Google Street View, which is expected soon to cover more than 99 per cent of the UK's roads, stretching to 238,000 miles, has been the subject of some controversy. The Australian communications minister described the service as "creepy", saying it was the "single biggest breach of privacy in history."

telegraph.co.uk

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The Firs Estate in east London has earned the distinction of becoming Britain’s most popular street for rookie motorists.

On a typical day, a bumper crop of learners stutter and jerk their way along the wide avenues, leaving near-misses and queues in their wake.

Some 409 learners carefully eased into the Woodford estate in just 12 hours, according to one survey.

The appeal? It is thought driving ins­tructors favour its long, quiet and straight roads and its proximity to the local testing centre.

Unfortunately, despite the clear lack of anything to hit, novice drivers have notched up an average of one accident a month there over the past ten years.

Long-suffering residents have seen their cars, trees, garden walls and nearby lampposts take a hit as learners fine-tune their technique.

Head teacher Shirmila Sharma lives on the most popular road on the estate – appropriately named The Drive – and says her gates have been dented several times and that two of her neighbours have lost their fences.

Some fed up residents want to keep them out using ‘access only’ signs.

‘We are determined to get this res­olved. If it means fighting the council in the courts, so be it,’ said campaign leader Eddie Blackwell, 75.

But there was ‘no easy solution’ bec­ause learners have the same rights as any other motorist, said a London Borough of Redbridge spokesman.

metro.co.uk

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Road melts in heatwave

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Friday, July 09, 2010 | | 0 comments »
Dozens of vehicles stuck to a road in heatwave-hit China after the tarmac melted in the hot sun.

The road, in Zhengzhou, capital of Henan province, had just been resurfaced the previous day, reports the Zhengzhou Evening Post.

It melted in 40C temperatures which saw the street surface temperature reach as high as 70C.

Vehicles including cars, buses, taxi cabs and ambulances began sticking to a 200m stretch of the road.

Plastic sheeting had to be laid as a temporary surface to get the traffic moving again.

Motorist Lao Yang said his car seemed to get heavier and heavier as he drove along the street.

"After getting out of the car to check what the problem was, I found both front wheels were covered in melted tarmac," he said.

"I had to lift the car with a jack, and take off the tyres to remove the asphalt."

An ambulance and a taxi cab nearly crashed into each other after losing control in the sticky conditions.

"It's lucky that our ambulance was empty, otherwise the wasted time here may have cost a life," said the ambulance driver.

orange.co.uk

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Psychic octopus backs Spain to win World Cup

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Friday, July 09, 2010 | | 0 comments »


Paul, the psychic octopus, has picked Spain to beat Holland in the World Cup final. The who has rightly predicted six games in a row at the 2010 World Cup.

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Chinese man to swim 750 milesA 56-year-old Chinese man has embarked on a 750-mile swim down the polluted Yangtze River from his home in Wuhan to visit the World Expo in Shanghai.

Bao Zhengbing, who works for China Telecom, said he had dreamed since childhood of swimming from his home in central China to Shanghai, the Xinmin Evening News reported on its website.

"Now at last, I'll swim all the way to Shanghai, to fulfil my own dream and to see the World Expo," Mr Bao was quoted as saying in the Shanghai Daily before starting his journey.

"When I was 12, I travelled to Shanghai by ship. The beautiful landscapes along the way impressed me so much that I wished one day I could swim along the route and stop wherever I chose," he said.

However, Mr Bao may find that China's longest river has changed since he was a boy. The river has been labelled "cancerous" by environmentalists, and that industrial pollution is killing it, according to state media.

Mr Bao acknowledged that the adventure was dangerous and signed a statement saying he took full personal responsibility for anything that happened to him before beginning his swim, Xinmin Daily reported.

Friends travelling in a boat and by car will follow him during his 35-day journey, during which he plans to swim 25 miles a day, reports said.

The 2008 Beijing Olympics inspired similar physical feats as Chinese showed their national pride, including a 97-year-old grandmother who rode 1,500 miles on a tricycle to see China's badminton team.

telegraph.co.uk

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World Cup 'Psychic' Octopus Is Right Again

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Thursday, July 08, 2010 | | 0 comments »
Psychic Octopus Paul"Psychic" octopus Paul has done it again - by successfully predicting the result of a World Cup game, but this time to the dismay of German football fans.

The "oracle" creature, who lives in Germany, maintained his 100% record of correctly choosing all of his homeland's results in the tournament after opting for Spain in the semi-finals.

His prediction came true and the Spanish went through to the World Cup final, after defeating the opposition 1-0 thanks to a Carles Puyol goal.

A football fan was reportedly seen in the crowd holding up a banner saying Paul's prediction would be wrong.

His keepers claim the creature is psychic and Paul has now topped Twitter trends. He is also the talking point of many social networking sites.

The animal has become the most unusual celebrity at this year's tournament after correctly indicating whether Germany would win or lose each of their six games in South Africa.

His entire homeland was hoping Paul was wrong after going for the men in red and yellow on Tuesday.

Two plastic boxes with the flag of each country on the front had been placed into his tank at the Oberhausen Sea Life Centre.

With food in both boxes to attract Paul, it is then a matter of waiting until he opens one of them to determine his predicted winner.

On this occasion, the octopus, who originally comes from Weymouth in Dorset, initially went straight for Spain's container.

German hopes were raised as he moved and began to hover over his homeland's flag, but the indecision was brief as he went with his first instinct.

Other results that Paul successfully predicted in the South African tournament included Germany's win against England and their defeat to Serbia.

The eight-legged mystic is said to have had an 80% success rate during Euro 2008.

In what German fans had hoped was a good omen, the only tip Paul has ever got wrong is the Germany v Spain final two years ago.

His keeper, Oliver Walenciak, said before Wednesday's match: "We know that all octopuses have nine brains so we know he has exceptional powers.

"In the European Cup he got one game wrong. It was the final between Germany and Spain and he picked Germany which was wrong and this time he has picked Spain so we are thinking he must be wrong again."

Now the world is waiting to see if Paul can successfully predict the result of the World Cup final between the Spanish and the Dutch, and the third-place play-off where Uruguay take on Germany.

news.sky.com

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Solar-powered plane starts a 24-hour test flight

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Wednesday, July 07, 2010 | | 0 comments »
Solar-powered planeA solar powered plane - which makers hope will soon be able to fly around the world - has begun a 24-hour test flight.

The Solar Impulse HB-SIA is being tested by pilot Andre Borschberg to see if it can fly at night using energy stored from solar cells in its wings.

It took off from the Payerne airbase in Switzerland at 6.51am and will ascend to an altitude of 8,500 metres, while charging its batteries in preparation for the night flight.

Andre will then slowly descend through the night, aiming for a dawn landing… but he won't have travelled too far, the plane currently has a top speed of just 28mph.

"The intention of this mission is to demonstrate the potential of renewable energy and clean technologies and to promote them amongst the public," explains Bertrand Piccard, initiator and President of Solar Impulse.

"After 4 space missions, I experience the same excitement being part of this revolutionary project!" added Claude Nicollier, Head of the Solar Impulse test flight programme.

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Ghost town - Bodie, California

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Wednesday, July 07, 2010 | | 0 comments »
Ghost town - Bodie CaliforniaBodie ghost town on the eastern slope of the Sierra Nevada mountain range in Mono County, California, United States, about 75 miles (120 km) southeast of Lake Tahoe, at an elevation of 8369 feet (2550 m).

Gold was discovered in 1859 by prospector Wakeman S. Bodey, who the town was named after. Bodey died in November making a supply trip and becoming stranded in a blizzard.

In 1876, the Standard Company discovered a profitable deposit of gold transformed Bodie from an isolated mining camp of few prospectors to a boomtown.

Ghost town - Bodie CaliforniaBodie was famous for its lawlessness. At its peak in 1880, it had 60 saloons. Murders, brawls, and stagecoach holdups were constant occurrences. Legend has it that a little girl, upon finding out that her family was moving there,prayed one night, "Goodbye God, I am going to Bodie."

Gold bullion from the town's nine stamp mills was shipped to Carson City, Nevada accompanied by armed guards. Once the bullion reached Carson City, it was sent by rail to the San Francisco mint.

In 1893 the Standard Company built its own hydroelectric plant, located approximately 13 miles away on Green Creek, above Bridgeport, California. The plant developed a maximum of 130 horsepower and 6,600 volts alternating current to power the company's 20-stamp mill. This pioneering installation was one of the first times an electric motor was operated over long-distance power lines.

Ghost town - Bodie CaliforniaBodie's Chinatown, had several hundred Chinese residents at one point. The Chinese workers earned their incomes mainly from selling vegetables, operating laundries, and cutting, hauling, and selling firewood. Winter temperatures in Bodie would often fall well below zero, and winds reaching nearly 100 miles per hour would sweep across the high open valley. Large amounts of firewood were needed to keep residents warm through the long winters. Many ill-prepared towns folk perished during the extremely harsh winter of 1878-1879.

Today Bodie is an authentic, intact ghost town. Bodie is currently a State Historic Park. Visitors walk the deserted streets of a town that once had a population between 7,000 and 8,000 people. Interiors remain as they were left and in some cases stocked with goods. The remains of Bodie are being preserved in a state of arrested decay...

credited to legendsofamerica.com, ghosttowngallery.com, explorehistoricalif.com, futurballa.com, davestravelcorner.com, jstottphotography.com, photo.net

Ghost town - Bodie California

Ghost town - Bodie California

Ghost town - Bodie California

Ghost town - Bodie California

Ghost town - Bodie California

Ghost town - Bodie California

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Five-legged toad surprises dog walker

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Wednesday, July 07, 2010 | | 0 comments »
Five-legged toadA woman who rescued a toad while walking her dog was surprised to discover that it had five legs.

Faye Sweeney found the five-limbed amphibian at the Attenborough Nature Reserve in Nottinghamshire.

A regular walker in the reserve, the 27-year-old found the toad in the middle of the path last week, but as she picked it up she found it had an unusual extra leg.

Erin McDaid, communications manager at Nottinghamshire Wildlife Trust, said Ms Sweeney released the toad but then reported it to charity Froglife.

He said: 'She is a regular dog walker in the reserve and was walking dogs when she found it on the path. The only reason she picked it up was because it was a hot sunny day so she wanted to put it in the shade.

'Then she noticed it had five legs - it has an extra front leg.'

Ms Sweeney, from Chilwell, Nottingham, said: 'I was just out on the path walking down with three dogs so didn't want it to get trampled or dry out in the sun. When I picked it up I saw it had an extra front leg so I took a couple of photos and popped it in the undergrowth.

'It seemed to be getting on fine though, it was nice and healthy.

'I've never seen any photos of frogs or toads with extra front legs, the pictures I've seen seem to be back legs, so I think it's quite unusual.'

metro.co.uk

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EU call for 'X Files' archive of UFO sightings

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Tuesday, July 06, 2010 | , | 0 comments »
X Files archiveA European Union lawmaker has called on member governments to open their secret files on UFOs, saying people need to know about close encounters of the third kind.

Mario Borghezio, an Italian member of the European Parliament, said that the EU needed its own "X Files" archive where anyone could see information on UFOs – including data gathered by the military.

Mr Borghezio said all European governments should go public and stop what he called a "systematic cover-up."

Opening the files is not unprecedented. Last year, Britain published 4,000 pages online on 800 alleged encounters with aliens during the 1980s and 1990s. And over the past three years the Ministry of Defence has been gradually releasing previously secret UFO papers after facing Freedom of Information demands.

Mr Borghezio also said it was essential to have a scientific centre to research unidentified flying objects. Its investigations could have "major scientific and technological spin-offs," he said.

"I think that, under the principle of transparency, the EU member states have a duty to make public and available to all scientific data on UFOs which today are partially or wholly withheld," he said.

He is seeking the support of other lawmakers from the 736-member assembly for a statement calling on governments to act.

So far, though, he's collected only 18 signatures.

telegraph.co.uk

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Megastructures - Millau Viaduct - France

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Tuesday, July 06, 2010 | | 0 comments »
Megastructures Millau Viaduct FranceWhen it opened on 17 December 2004, the spectacular Millau Viaduct set new standards in both planning design and construction - without mentioning the record it set as the largest cable-stayed bridge in Europe.

At 2.4km long, and 270m above the river at its highest point, the Millau viaduct spans a 2km valley in the Massif Central mountain range and forms the final link in the A75 highway from Paris to Barcelona. Despite its huge length, journey time over the structure is expected to be just one minute.

The road has two lanes in each direction and cost €400 million. This will be recouped by the builder, Eiffage, under a 75-year concession.
Megastructures Millau Viaduct FranceBridge design

Two major challenges were identified in building the structure: crossing the River Tarn, and spanning the huge gap from one plateau to the other. The solution proposed is unique, using seven pylons instead of the typical two or three. It is several metres taller than that other famous French landmark, the Eiffel Tower.

Famous British architect Norman Foster was in charge of the viaduct's appearance. It has been designed to look as delicate and transparent as possible. Each of its sections spans 342m and its columns range in height from 75m to 235m over the river Tarn. It uses the minimum amount of material, which made it less costly to construct: the deck, the masts rising above the road deck and the multi-span cables are all in steel.

Megastructures Millau Viaduct FranceSeven Piers

The seven piers of the Millau Viaduct are sunk in shafts of reinforced concrete in a pyramidal shape, being divided in an overturned V, and the shrouds are anchored and distributed in semi harps. The program utilised hundreds of high-pressure hydraulic cylinders and pumps to push-launch the deck spans in place and a PC-synchronised lifting system to lift the auxiliary piers. Enerpac was awarded the major contract to supply the hydraulic system for lifting and pushing the bridge spans and piers for the bridge.

Intriguingly, the Millau Viaduct is not straight. A straight road could induce a sensation of floating for drivers, which a slight curve remedies. The curve is 20km in range. Moreover, the road has a light incline of 3% to improve the visibility and reassure the driver.

Megastructures Millau Viaduct FranceBridge Construction

Construction began in October 2001, and by November the following year, the highest pier had already reached 100m in height. Launching the deck started in February 2003, and was completed by May 2004.

Unusually, the deck is constructed from a new high-grade steel as opposed to concrete. This helped the deck to be pre-constructed in 2,000 pieces at Eiffage's Alsace factory and GPS-aligned, 60cm at a time.

The Millau Viaduct is supported by multi-span cables placed in the middle. To accommodate the expansion and contraction of the concrete deck, there is 1m of empty space at its extremities and each column is split into two thinner, more flexible columns below the roadway, forming an A-frame above the deck level.

Construction work used approx. 127,000m³ of concrete, 19,000t of steel-reinforced concrete and 5,000t of pre-constraint steel (cables and shrouds). The project needed 205,000t of concrete, of which 50,000m³ will be reinforced concrete. In total, the viaduct weighs 290,000t.

A 3m-wide emergency lane provides increased security. It will, in particular, prevent drivers from seeing the valley from the viaduct.

As the bridge will be exposed to winds of up to 151km/hr, side screens are used to reduce the effects of the wind by 50%. The speed of the wind at the level of the road therefore reflects the speed of the wind found at ground level around Larzac and Sauveterre.

Toll Station
An 18-lane toll station 6km north of the Millau Viaduct is housed under a structure made of a special concrete patented by the group Eiffage. The toll plaza includes a CCTV connection to the viaduct and the highway. It also accommodates technical and administrative services.

credited to roadtraffic-technology.com

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