Nov 23, 2011
sciencecenter:

Scientists create first bionic contact lens, foolishly equip rabbits with new technology

Bionic contact lenses—which would display navigation data, personal emails, or any other sort of info superimposed on the world before your eyes—have long been mainstays of science fiction. Over the past several years, researchers have been working to make the tech real-world ready, striving to find solutions to the energy, size, safety, and image-quality problems that come up when you’re trying to fit a tiny integrated circuit into something transparent that sits on an eyeball.
Now, University of Washington researchers and their Finnish colleagues have made the first functioning bionic lens: a prototype with a single LED pixel, which could be safely worn by rabbits in the lab. (The image at right shows a rabbit wearing an earlier version of the lens, which contained a circuit but no light-emitting components.) Radio frequency energy emitted from a nearby transmitter and picked up by a circular antenna a fifth of an inch in diameter, printed on the lens, powered the electronics. The transmitter supplied adequate energy from three feet away when the lens was sitting in a dish, but had to be less than an inch away when the lens was placed on a rabbit’s eye, since tissues and fluids in the body interfered with reception. Since light from such a lens would be too close for the human eye to focus, the researchers made a separate contact composed of an array of smaller, flatter lenses, which would sit on top of the bionic contact and focus the light.

What are these scientists thinking? Haven’t they seen what rabbits are capable of?

Pretty much reblogged for the title.

sciencecenter:

Scientists create first bionic contact lens, foolishly equip rabbits with new technology

Bionic contact lenses—which would display navigation data, personal emails, or any other sort of info superimposed on the world before your eyes—have long been mainstays of science fiction. Over the past several years, researchers have been working to make the tech real-world ready, striving to find solutions to the energy, size, safety, and image-quality problems that come up when you’re trying to fit a tiny integrated circuit into something transparent that sits on an eyeball.

Now, University of Washington researchers and their Finnish colleagues have made the first functioning bionic lens: a prototype with a single LED pixel, which could be safely worn by rabbits in the lab. (The image at right shows a rabbit wearing an earlier version of the lens, which contained a circuit but no light-emitting components.) Radio frequency energy emitted from a nearby transmitter and picked up by a circular antenna a fifth of an inch in diameter, printed on the lens, powered the electronics. The transmitter supplied adequate energy from three feet away when the lens was sitting in a dish, but had to be less than an inch away when the lens was placed on a rabbit’s eye, since tissues and fluids in the body interfered with reception. Since light from such a lens would be too close for the human eye to focus, the researchers made a separate contact composed of an array of smaller, flatter lenses, which would sit on top of the bionic contact and focus the light.

What are these scientists thinking? Haven’t they seen what rabbits are capable of?

Pretty much reblogged for the title.

Nov 22, 2011
Nov 22, 2011
Childish Gambino - Heartbeat [Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

kenyatta:

Childish Gambino - Heartbeat

In my playlist forever.

(Source: mcskittlz)

Nov 21, 2011

(Source: millertime83, via 1000lolz)

Nov 21, 2011

heaven spent: by Chuck Palahniuk

melanyouth:

(via tinyunicorn):

In six seconds, you’ll hate me.

But in six months, you’ll be a better writer.

From this point forward—at least for the next half year—you may not use “thought” verbs. These include: Thinks, Knows, Understands, Realizes, Believes, Wants, Remembers, Imagines, Desires, and…

(Source: writingadvice)

Nov 15, 2011
Nov 12, 2011
The beginning of a new adventure.

The beginning of a new adventure.

Nov 5, 2011

(Source: wahjah)

Oct 31, 2011

(Source: wahjah)

Oct 23, 2011

apsies:

funnyordie:

Clinton Foundation: Celebrity Brainstorm

Ben Stiller, Kristen Wiig, Jack Black, Matt Damon, Sean Penn, Ted Danson, Mary Steenburgen and Kevin Spacey, who comprise the Clinton Foundation’s Celebrity Division, brainstorm ideas for the Clinton Foundation’s 10th anniversary. Everything goes great until they get a call from President William J. Clinton himself.

For everyone asking where that Bill Clinton/Kevin Spacey photoset is from, here you go!

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Mohamed Nazmi from Brunei. Ask.
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