iPad Pillow

The iPad Pillow Takes the Apple Obsession a Few Steps Further

Amazing Yamaha motorbike made out of paper

You May Never Touch Your Tablet Again With Elliptic Labs
There are many ways to keep our sleek tablets in tip top shape including using protective cases or cleaning products to wipe the screen, but all that can be so fussy. Elliptic Labs figured out a way to really keep it smudge-free—using motion-sensing technology.

2-year-old half-blind Yi lived in an orphanage and was considered the ugliest dog in Britain. But, fortunately, the world is not without good people. 35-year-old April Parker saw the pictures of Hugo on the Internet and decided to pick up the dog yourself. Now Yi lives in the family.

The Italian artist Franco Recchia really showed his creative and urban side by creating this art piece. It is amazing how detailed he managed to make the city landscapes and their skyscrapers. It is even more impressive that he used computer parts to make it. If you know computers well you will understand what part is what, but for me it looks the same. Recchia wanted to show how modern creation is popular and how humans can have lot of talent to create different kind of art. The sculptures are also showing that something gray and boring like the inside of a computer can be beautiful with sharp lines and design. Something similar was done by another artist that made a whole city model by using stacked staples.

Street Sign Furnishings Turn Symbols into Seats

Most people have seen similar tasks undertaken, but Tim Delner’s street sign furniture manages to make worn warning signage into aesthetically pleasing contemporary furnishings.

 Catamarans, solar-powered Turanor PlanetSolar.  The length of the catamaran - 31 meters, width 29 m, height 7,6 m

If you were looking for a gift for your architectural friend, perhaps you can persuade Daniel Weil to create another ‘Clock for an Architect.’ This one-of-a-kind timepiece is extraordinary and will surely gain you that friend-for-life status.

What's with Fashionable Cats


Migratory birds

Many birds, especially those that migrate, can use the "Earth's magnetic field to stay their course during long flights. Scientists still aren't sure how they do it, but one recent study suggests birds might have a form of synesthesia that lets them "see" the planet's magnetic lines as patterns of color or light that is overlaid on their visual surroundings. Humans must rely on familiar landmarks or the sun's position to locate North, and many can't even manage that.

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