… It’s very enraging, and the Rodenator produces a result that has a sense of justification and revenge — I mean your blowing ‘em up, I mean … I guess that’s a crude way of saying it, but I mean your putting gas down there, and the gasses go off and it produces a good loud noise, and throws dirt around, and a lot of guys say: ‘You know, I don’t even care if I kill em it just makes me feel good to do it.‘
The bizarre and interesting site spacecollective.org has a fascinating article about Chernobyl, which, after having been abandoned by humans for 20 years, is being retaken by its natural environment.
The people are gone, and in their place are now thriving populations of deer, elk, wild boar, wolves, and even lynx. Trees are pushing up through Lenin Avenue and moss is clinging to the broken sidewalks and abandoned buildings throughout the 19-miles that make up the Exclusion Zone. […]
Radiation levels are still too high for long term exposure, but the Ukraine has opened up the nearby city of Pripyat to daytrippers looking to catch a glimpse of what an urban center would look like after 20 years without a human footprint.
Another striking page on SpaceCollective is the gallery, which has a wealth of science related/inspired imagery. Worth checking out, but though beautiful, it’s a little overwhelming and poorly organized.
Bicycle Built For 2,000 is comprised of 2,088 voice recordings collected via Amazon’s Mechanical Turk web service. Workers were prompted to listen to a short sound clip, then record themselves imitating what they heard.
Garfield Minus Garfield is a site dedicated to removing Garfield from the Garfield comic strips in order to reveal the existential angst of a certain young Mr. Jon Arbuckle. It is a journey deep into the mind of an isolated young everyman as he fights a losing battle against loneliness and depression in a quiet American suburb.