How To Film Like The BBC On Your Smartphone 

The BBC Earth Unplugged playlist  is a wonderful rabbit hole of 131 very entertaining video clips. This very handy guide is #59 on the list:

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Star Wars Dogfight with Drones!

Corridor Digital created this amazing Patreon-financed video of an X-wing fighter battling 2 TIE fighters and a TIE Advanced x1 (the kind Vader flew in Ep. IV) using in-house resources that include a 3D printer, drones, GoPro cameras, and home computer-level editing software.

As cool as that video is, I found the behind the scenes video even more interesting:

I’m a bit late to discover this. It was premiered in May 2016 but it’s still cool.

CorridorPortraitBanner_v5.pngMeet Corridor Digital’s artisans: http://www.corridor-digital.com/about/ and check out the many videos on their YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/user/CorridorDigital

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Hatchling Iguana vs. LOTS of Snakes

This jaw-dropping scene aired as part of the new series of the BBC’s flagship natural history program, Planet Earth II, and seems to have captured the imagination of millions. (5,512,692 views in 11 days)

Filmed on Fernandina Island in the Galápagos, the Galápagos Racer (Philodryas biserialis) is a slim, fast-moving, mildly venomous snake that reaches lengths of up to 120cm (4ft). They were filmed during their best feeding opportunity of the year, as young iguanas are born and make a dash for the safety of the higher rocks above. Snake eyesight has evolved to quickly detect movement – and once they spot a target, their reactions can appear highly aggressive and relentless in pursuit.

But rather than capturing a coordinated attack from snakes hunting as a pack, this clip actually shows a number of snakes acting individually, on instinct. The time of year when these iguanas hatch is for these snakes the equivalent of Black Friday bargain hunting – it’s every snake for itself, because if they miss out here, they’ll go hungry. Collectively, the actions of these snakes can appear terrifying, but once a snake eats it loses its desire to hunt again.

Throughout history we’ve presented the snake as a symbol of evil and danger. No surprise then to witness the relief felt when the little iguana slipped through the snakes’ constricting coils and escaped to safety. But I suspect very few people gave a second thought to the plight of the snakes left hungry on the beach.

Over on Twitter, a lot of fans have remixed the clip with new music such as the theme from Indiana Jones (it syncs almost perfectly), the Benny Hill chase music, and the NFL TV theme.

 

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Portrait of Last Tsar Found Hidden Under a Layer of Water-Soluble Paint

A picture taken in Saint Petersburg on November 17, 2016 shows restorers of the Stieglitz Art and Industry Academy displaying the portrait of Tsar Nicholas II by Ilya Galkin (1896)                                      
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The canvas used for the full-size portrait of Vladimir Lenin by Vladislav Izmailovich (1924)

SAINT PETERSBURG.- Russian art restorers on Friday unveiled a recently discovered portrait of the last Tsar Nicholas II, almost a century after it was hidden behind a giant painting of his Bolshevik foe Lenin.

A team of art restorers led by Tatiana Potseluyeva painstakingly uncovered the tsar’s image over the last three years. The portrait of Nicholas — shot by the Bolsheviks in 1918 — was hidden under a layer of water-soluble paint, suggesting it was meant to be preserved and eventually found. “The ceremonial portrait painted by Ilya Galkin in 1896 was hidden for almost 90 years on the back of another portrait — depicting Lenin,” Potseluyeva told AFP.

Galkin, a little-known artist who painted several portraits of tsars, died in 1915 before the October Revolution of 1917. The portrait of Lenin wearing a peaked cap and standing in front of Saint Petersburg’s Peter and Paul fortress was painted by another artist, Vladislav Izmailovich, in 1924. Since then, the giant portrait measuring four by three metres (13 by 10 feet) has hung in the assembly hall of a school in the historic centre of Saint Petersburg.

The painting was damaged in the 1970s but restoration experts from the city’s Shtiglits Arts and Craft Academy only began restoring it in 2013, leading to the discovery of the hidden portrait. “We were really surprised!” recalled Potseluyeva, adding that the first detail they discovered was the ornate carpet on which the tsar was standing.

Taking a risk The Lenin portrait painter Izmailovich, who died in 1959, apparently took pains to preserve the work of his predecessor and camouflage it, working in the year when the long-ailing Bolshevik leader died and Stalin cemented his control of the regime.

“Normally you paint over the old canvas, destroying the previous image,” Potseluyeva said. “Here the painter kept it and made it disappear under a coat of water-soluble paint, before painting on the reverse” of the canvas, she said. “It seems that he hoped that one day the portrait of Nicholas II would be discovered,” she said.screen-shot-2016-11-19-at-12-37-49-pm

Izmailovich studied in Paris, Rome and Berlin before the Revolution and became known for frescoes and portraits. After 1917, he was one of the first to paint Lenin from life. He also painted scenes of revolutionary history and taught art. While his motive for hiding the tsar’s portrait may never be known, experts said that he ran a risk by doing so. “By keeping the tsar’s portrait, Vladislav Izmailovich risked a lot at that time,” said the acting head of the Shtiglits Academy, Vasily Kichedzhi.

The Bolsheviks pulled down statues and removed the tsars’ emblem from buildings after taking power. The double-sided canvas with both paintings will be put on show to the public at the end of the month at the Academy.

 

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How Jaguar cloned a legendary supercar from 1957 | Popular Science

In 1957, automakers simply did not make the engineering of its race cars available to the average (even supremely wealthy) driver. Jaguar did.jagimages-1

In the 1950s, it let loose its classic XKSS, a model based on the D-Type that won LeMans three years running. It was the world’s first supercar.

After its consecutive LeMans victories, from 1954 to 1956, Jaguar retired from the racing circuits—leaving several racing chassis unused. The automaker’s co-founder Sir William Lyons decided to transform the leftovers into an elite road car, one with minimal styling changes and a few nods to driver comfort. The XKSS became a motoring legend, ultimately ensnaring famous gearheads like Steve McQueen and Jay Leno.

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jagsteve-mcqueens-1957-jaguar-xk-ss jagrare_breed_05_largeThe company planned to produce 100, but on February 12, 1957, a fire ravaged Jaguar’s factory in Brown’s Lane, Tamworth, England, destroying nine of the 25 XKSS builds in progress—along with all off the equipment needed to construct them.

The metal used for the body (minus the bonnet and tailgate) of the original XKSS was a magnesium alloy no longer available.

Now, to commemorate the car’s 60th birthday, Jaguar Classic has rebuilt the lost nine cars from scratch.

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“All parts were made from scratch to the archived designs—some in-house and some by contractors,” Riches says.

The rest of the story is fascinating from a technological, artistic, and historical perspective:

Source: How Jaguar cloned a legendary supercar from 1957 | Popular Science

(btw- I don’t own a car and haven’t had a license since 1973. But I do appreciate them when they’re art)

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The honeymoon ends when the last bangle breaks

This colorful photo was the Wikipedia Image of the Day a few days ago and I loved the ritual described in the caption:

Photograph: Muhammad Mahdi Karim

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Bangles on display in Bangalore, India. These rigid bracelets are usually made from metal, wood, or plastic and are traditionally worn by women in India, Nepal, Pakistan, and Bangladesh.

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In India, it is a common tradition to see a new bride wearing glass bangles at her wedding and the honeymoon will end when the last bangle breaks.

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About 100,000 years ago, people with autism were championed, not shunned, and may even have shaped human evolution

Just let me say, on behalf of my fellow Aspies, you’re welcome.

A University of York study found that roughly 100,000 years ago, primitive societies stopped shunning people with autism — in fact, they were embraced as respected specialists in their groups for their unique abilities, allowing them to play a central part in human evolution.

Characteristics associated with the autistic specter, such as attention to detail and exceptional memory skills, can be identified in cave art. Image of Chauvet Cave

Geneticists believe that autism has a long evolutionary history in humans, likely appearing before the stone age.

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Today, fields such as engineering, mathematics, law, and other academia attract a high rate of people with autism, most notably Asperger’s syndrome.

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Coping with autism even in the modern world is difficult at best. But, the team argues that the traits which push modern individuals towards these fields provided a powerful advantage for the early social groups of a hunter-gatherer society.

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For example, autism is often associated with heightened visual, olfactory, and taste perception, as well as exceptional memory skills, very useful in navigating the world. Asperger’s syndrome is associated with a heightened attention to detail like recognizing different plants or animals, understanding of systems such as the behavior of prey, and increased focusing ability.

In essence, they formed society’s first specialists, filling in roles that the others couldn’t perform as well. Neurosciencenews cites the example of a 2005 study of an elderly autism patient who had been a Siberian reindeer herder who “revealed a detailed memory of the parentage, medical history and character of each one of his 2,600 animals.” His knowledge made a huge contribution to the herd’s management and survival, having a direct effect on the group’s prosperity and well-being. Despite being “more comfortable in the presence of the reindeer than humans,” the herder was a well-respected and important person in the group, had a wife, a son, and even grandchildren. A person with similar abilities would have likely received a similar treatment in a group of early humans.

The authors are asking the public to help them with an online survey of cognition and art perception, which you can fill out here.

The full paper, “Are there alternative adaptive strategies to human pro-sociality? The role of collaborative morality in the emergence of personality variation and autistic traits” has been published online in the journal Time and Mind.

A few months ago I was diagnosed with Aspergers Syndrome. It explained clearly many of the struggles I have had beginning in kindergarten and continuing right up to this year. One the one hand it is a relief to know the source of those issues. On the other, it is frustrating to think of the 60 years wasted.

I realize that for most of my life AS was not even recognized but that doesn’t help when I think of the relationships, ambitions, and jobs that were destroyed by it.

But the horizon is not bleak, at least now I can get it treated.

Source: About 100,000 years ago, people with autism were championed, not shunned, and may even have shaped human evolution

So for all of this, the beginnings of what brought our species to this brave new world in which we live, you’re welcome. We had no choice, it’s just what we do.

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Japanese Unveil Super Cool Dinosaur Suits

Basically a cyber-suit or an animatronic costume, it is operated from the inside. So far it is part of a traveling show called Dino A Live. Here’s their press conference:

In Japanese and including shots of their feathered versions:

造形や企画を手掛ける「ON―ART(オンアート)」は10日、全長8メートルの巨大な人造ティラノサウルスを報道向けに公開した。人が中に入ってハンドルなどで操縦しており、ロボットではなく大きな着ぐるみのようなものだという。現在は13体の恐竜を所有しており、2018年に倍以上に増やす予定だ。将来は恐竜のテーマパークをつくりたい考えで、映画「ジュラシック・パーク」のような体験も夢ではなさそうだ。

If your Japanese is as rusty (or non-existent) as mine, here’s the above in English:

“ON-ART (On Art)” who deals with modeling and planning has released a huge artificial Tyrannosaurus of 8 meters in length for the press. It said that a person enters inside and steers with a steering wheel or the like, it is not like a robot but a big costume. “Currently we own 13 dinosaurs, which I plan to increase more than doubles in 2018. In the future I would like to create a dinosaur theme park, and it seems that my experience like the movie “Jurassic Park” is not a dream.”

 

On-Art, the company that produced it intends to use it as the basis for a semi-robotic version of Jurassic Park. Which, until machines become self-aware, should hopefully work out better than those originals.

Here’s what appears to be a rehearsal for the press conference:

This is a version of the show from 2012, they have obviously made great strides in their cybersuits since then:

While looking for those clips I found this cool Australian outfit that make dinos and other fantastic beasts like King Kong and flying dragons. They’re operated from the outside but look and act even more realistic.

 

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House Hunting like a Russian Billionaire 

I can’t believe I never googled Russian real estate before! We all know our friends from the former Soviet Union have a special kind of taste when it comes to interior design, but with a limitless decorating budget, it just gets even better. I decided to window shop with Sotheby’s Realty, which has, shall we say,  a colorful portfolio of properties in and around Moscow for the super-rich. I toured each and every gilded, pimped-out, kitsch-tastic home on their list and narrowed it down to my favorite 10.

1)“Five-room apartment in the Empire style is for the sophisticated buyer and the connoisseur of luxury.”

And it’s a bargain at $5,775,000. See the full listing here.

2) This next one looks like it should ‘TRUMP’ somewhere on the outside, doesn’t it? All yours for $12,500,000. Listing here.

3) These townhouses are a 21st century Potemkin village, intended to look the French coastal town of Deauville.
Snap up your new bedroom home for just $2,250,000!

4) How about this hunting lair for the quiet moments between taking on the latest version of 007?

For sale at $1,425,000. Listing here 

5) If you can afford this multi-level penthouse apartment you’re probably not interested in having to go up and down stairs so it has an elevator in every room!

All that for $2,000,000. Full listing here.

6) Come in out of the Cold War with this Brezhnev era spa dacha.

Going for a bargain basement $6 million. Listing here.

7) This lovely cottage is a bibliophile’s dream house. Not too impressive on the outside:

But spectacular on the inside, especially if you love the printed word:

With a nice nook to while away the hours with your favorite tome:

And in addition to the inside pool above, there’s a built-in pizza oven!

Listed here for $5,900,000.

8) This one is called “Black Sugar” which I can only assume is the name of next designer drug to sweep the club scene.

Price reduced from $ 9,000,000 to $ 3,800,000blacksugar-930x619

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9) Seems to be trying to look like a remodeled church or monastery. If you are interested in starting your own cult you could do worse.

A steal at $3,600,000

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And finally, Number 10, an open floor plan (i.e., single room) dacha is a bargain at $30,000. It’s the perfect place to get away from it all:

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There’s an seemingly endless rabbit hole of others to explore here. But you’ll probably want to use Google Translator to make exploration easier.

 

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A giant predatory lizard swam in Antarctic seas near the end of the dinosaur age — ScienceDaily

kaikaifilu05Kaikaifilu is a new species of giant sea lizard (from the Mosasaur family) discovered in 66-million-year-old rocks of Antarctica.

kaikaifilu_hervei-novataxa_2017-otero_soto-acuna_rubilar-rogers_et_gutsteinkaikaifilu_hervei_genetspnov-1024x190At about 10 meters long, it is the largest known top marine predator from this continent.

It lived near the end of the dinosaur age, when Antarctica was a much warmer ecosystem, and fed on filter-feeding marine reptiles.

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Mosasaurs were not dinosaurs, but close relatives of modern-day lizards, that thrived in the seas during the Cretaceous period of the dinosaur age.

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Unlike modern lizards, however, mosasaurs evolved paddle-like limbs, and a long, deep tail for swimming. Some of them were top predators that attained truly gigantic size, like the fearsome Tylosaurus.

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The scientists called it Kaikaifilu hervei after the cosmology of the Mapuche, the native people from southern Chile and Argentina. Kai-Kai filú is the almighty giant reptile owner of the seas, rival of Treng-Treng filú, the land reptile, both creators of the lands through their continuous fight that causes the earthquakes, volcanoes, tsunamis and all the events that shaped the earth where we live. The species name hervei is after Dr. Francisco Hervé, a world-renowned Chilean geologist and pioneer earth-science Antarctic explorer.

Source: A giant predatory lizard swam in Antarctic seas near the end of the dinosaur age — ScienceDaily

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