Ships vs. Big Waves "QUANTUM SHOT" #336linkOverwhelmed! - Heavy Seas, Part 3Also Rea [..]
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Dark Roasted Blend
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Lighthouses vs. Huge Waves LinkScroll down for today's pictures & links.Lighthouses vs. Huge WavesAs an interesting variation of our "Ships vs. Huge Waves" articles, here comes s [..]
GPL 3.0 ships Cory Doctorow:
Earlier this month, I wrote about Larry Lessig's announcement that he was switching his focus to fighting corruption. Larry has just left on his annual month-long Internet fast/family retreat (of all his inspirational examples, this might be the most inspirational), but he's left a wiki up for his friends and fellow travellers to start wikifying the problem of overt [..]
Boing Boing
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Man spends 7 nights in tree to escape crocs Mark Frauenfelder:
New Scientist reports that squirrels have evolved an interesting defense against rattlesnakes -- tails that heat up.
The ground squirrel heats up its tail then waves it in the snake's face - a form of harassment that confuses the rattler, which has an infrared sensing organ for detecting small mammals.
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Boing Boing
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Photos of ceramic figurines in the middle of being destroyed Mark Frauenfelder:
New Scientist reports that squirrels have evolved an interesting defense against rattlesnakes -- tails that heat up.
The ground squirrel heats up its tail then waves it in the snake's face - a form of harassment that confuses the rattler, which has an infrared sensing organ for detecting small mammals.
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Boing Boing
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Two views on climate change at Edge.org: Dyson vs. Anderson Mark Frauenfelder:
New Scientist reports that squirrels have evolved an interesting defense against rattlesnakes -- tails that heat up.
The ground squirrel heats up its tail then waves it in the snake's face - a form of harassment that confuses the rattler, which has an infrared sensing organ for detecting small mammals.
Link
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Boing Boing
Relevancia: 5.714
Squirrels heat up their tails to scare rattlesnakes Mark Frauenfelder:
New Scientist reports that squirrels have evolved an interesting defense against rattlesnakes -- tails that heat up.
The ground squirrel heats up its tail then waves it in the snake's face - a form of harassment that confuses the rattler, which has an infrared sensing organ for detecting small mammals.
Link
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