Crazy old promo for the "Master the Internet" video made by a guy with creepy rapist glasses in 1997.
Street magician gets cocky and ends up screwing up BIG TIME.
There’s been quite a few ingenious alarm clock concepts of late. They all have one thing in common - force you to physically get up to turn them off. The Carpet Alarm Clock is a variation to that whole meme. In order to turn it off, you have to get up and step on it. If you really want to make it a challenge, place it far away from your bed. Of course it wouldn’t be a clock if it didn’t have and LCD screen to indicate time too.

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These cool paddy field art is created in Japan. The tradition in the town of Inakadate, dates back to 1993. This artwork was created by planting different varieties of rice, including the purple and yellow-leafed Kodaimai rice and the green-leafed tsugaru-roman variety.







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Reddit
Apple
Digg
Ebay
Flickr
Google
Mozilla
Six Apart
Microsoft
Yahoo
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Guy almost gets killed buy his own grenade.
This drunk men fall under a train or he tempted to make a suicide. But damn, he's ''evilgodessly'' lucky !
World Luckiest Drunk Dumb - Watch more free videos
This is what happens when you put a Bull terrier in the same room with a porcupine.

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Phoenix Lander Caught On Camera While In Desent With Parachute Visible
10:15 AM | pictures | 0 comments »
NASA's Mars Phoenix Lander can be seen parachuting down to Mars, in this image captured by the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) camera on NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. This is the first time that a spacecraft has imaged the final descent of another spacecraft onto a planetary body. From a distance of about 310 kilometers (193 miles) above the surface of the Red Planet, Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter pointed its HiRISE obliquely toward Phoenix shortly after it opened its parachute while descending through the Martian atmosphere. The image reveals an apparent 10-meter-wide (30-foot-wide) parachute fully inflated. The bright pixels below the parachute show a dangling Phoenix. The image faintly detects the chords attaching the backshell and parachute. The surroundings look dark, but correspond to the fully illuminated Martian surface, which is much darker than the parachute and backshell.
Link: nasa.gov































