nsaspook
Science Advisor
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I'm always amazed by these powerful speakers. It is just unimaginable. In this next video, not only we can see the girl's hair moving to the beat, but the camera that is filming is actually distorting! Not a video effect added afterward. Just insane.Hornbein said:View attachment 351030
https://audio-database.com/MITSUBIS...g8B7donC5CdEt41gLQ_aem_vZ_JaHSxwgW1wBL_m7PIjA
At the Koriyama Test at the Koriyama Factory was carried out in the measurement room at first, but it was stopped because fluorescent lamps on the ceiling fell due to vibration. It seems that the characteristic test was carried out at the ground in the factory premises.
The outdoor test seemed to have a negative impact on the neighborhood. At a distance of about 100m from the speaker, it was felt as sound, but at a distance of more than that, it was transmitted as vibration and earth rumbling instead of audible sound. Within a radius of 2 km from the factory, there were damages such as vibrations like earthquakes and earth rumbling, and sound of walls and windows.
The first one opened to the public was Kobe Portpia Mitsubishi Miraikan in March 1981.
In addition, it seems to have been used in a quiz program on Tokyo Broadcasting System at that time to ask, "If you ring it in the prefabricated house, will the window glass break?" It seems that the glass broke easily.
jack action said:I'm always amazed by these powerful speakers. It is just unimaginable. In this next video, not only we can see the girl's hair moving to the beat, but the camera that is filming is actually distorting! Not a video effect added afterward. Just insane.
jack action said:I'm always amazed by these powerful speakers. It is just unimaginable. In this next video, not only we can see the girl's hair moving to the beat, but the camera that is filming is actually distorting! Not a video effect added afterward. Just insane.
cormsby said:wat
References
Stuart and Tonya Junker loved their quiet neighborhood near South Dakota’s Black Hills — until the earth began collapsing around them, leaving them wondering if their home could tumble into a gaping hole.
They blame the state for selling land that became the Hideaway Hills subdivision despite knowing it was perched above an old mine. Since the sinkholes began opening up, they and about 150 of their neighbors sued the state for $45 million to cover the value of their homes and legal costs.
Sinkholes are fairly common, due to collapsed caves, old mines or dissolving material, but the circumstances in South Dakota stand out, said Paul Santi, a professor of geological engineering at the Colorado School of Mines. The combination of such large sinkholes endangering so many homes makes the Hideaway Hills situation one to remember.
Crews built Hideaway Hills, located a few miles northwest of Rapid City, from 2002 to 2004 in an area previously owned by the state where the mineral gypsum was mined for use at a nearby state-owned cement plant.
In court documents, the state traced the area’s mining history to the 1900s, noting a company that mined underground and on the surface before 1930. Beginning in 1986, the state-owned cement plant mined for several years.
The state claimed it wasn’t liable for damages related to the underground mine collapse because the cement plant didn’t mine underground and the mine would have collapsed regardless of the plant’s activities. Around 1994, a horse farmer bought the land and then later sold the property to a developer who encountered a deep hole, the state said in documents.
In 2000, the South Dakota Legislature approved the sale of the state cement plant. A voter-approved trust fund created from proceeds of the sale stands at over $371 million.
The man who traveled through Greenland and Patagonia was shocked by what he saw on Hatteras Island. At Cape Hatteras, vast piles of sand had been cut loose from their binding mat of vegetation. Like waves of water on the ocean, these sand waves, or live dunes, as the island’s inhabitants called them, moved across the island, burying the remnants of the maritime forest and everything else that stood before them. As the dunes moved on,ghost forests were exposed, the dead wood left bleaching in the sun and rain. Spears contrasted the desolation of 1890 to past forest riches: Fifty years ago Hatteras Island, from inlet to inlet, a distance of over forty miles, was almost completely covered with a prodigious growth of trees, among which live-oak and cedar were chief insize and number. Growing everywhere in this forest were grape-vines of such great length and extent that the boys of that day (the white-haired men of this) were in the habit of climbing into the tree-tops and crawling from tree to tree, often for a distance of over one-hundred yards, on the webs the vines had woven.
When Spears looked at the subsistence economy of the Outer Banks, he did not see a way of life finely tuned to the landscape it existed in. He saw laziness and indolence and condemned it. The Bankers, he claimed, “are a contented race. . . .[T]he islander . . . takes the greater part of a week to accomplish what he might do if he had to, in twelve hours. . . . If his attention is by any chance called to the sand-wave,he languidly says that it won’t reach the Sound in his time. . . .”
In Spears’s eyes, the islanders’ desire for the things that money could buy, and their unwillingness to work hard, led them to unwisely harvest trees for firewood and boat building. Spears saw the desolation of Hatteras Island as a morality tale: “Thoughtless greed destroyed the protecting oaks and cedars, and now the desolating sand wave is upon the hallowed spot [the Kinnakeet cemetery].” It was this destruction, he believed, that turned the live dunes loose to wander across the island,with dire consequences for the island’s human community. “Powerless against this tidal wave of sand they must flee away and hide themselves from its fury in a part of the island below the cape, where stunted groves may yet protect them in the years to come; or to wander Ishmael-like on the mainland.”
A California toddler's first school photos are going viral for the funniest reason.
Mom Keishaun Anderson shared her 2-year-old son's photos in a post on the social platform X, formerly called Twitter, where it's quickly gone viral with over 17 million views.
"(Y'all) my son took his first school pictures," Anderson wrote in the caption, alongside four snapshots of her son Arris with his black hoodie up, looking thoroughly displeased with the cherished rite of passage that is Picture Day.
Anderson told "Good Morning America" Arris, who she described as "super outgoing," is usually a smiley and photogenic kid who loves attending preschool, where he's in his first year.
When she went to pick up her son at school after the photos were taken on Sept. 10, Anderson said the teacher was waiting for her with the photo printout.
"She had a paper in her hand and she just kind of held it close to her and started laughing," Anderson recalled. "And I was like, Wait, what's wrong? And when she handed me the pictures, I was lost for words."
I must be old. Back when I was his age, I wouldn't be shipped off to school for another 4 years. I can totally relate to the expression on his face.berkeman said:Not so much Weird News, more like very funny...
View attachment 351477
View attachment 351478
https://abc7news.com/post/mom-shares-sons-hilarious-1st-school-photos-family-memory-us/15325017/
(Bloomberg) -- ANZ Group Holdings Ltd.’s Chief Executive Officer Shayne Elliott said an alcohol ban would be “difficult to implement” as the bank works to restore an embattled reputation following a series of scandals in its trading arm.
While Australia’s fourth-largest lender hasn’t ruled out imposing such a policy after complaints of inebriated staff on the trading floor, it wouldn’t be easy to do so and maintain, . . .
Elliott said he’s “not encouraging the use of alcohol,” but prohibiting it would be complicated by the fact that “most of our people are in the business of dealing with customers, are going to events and lunches and all sorts of things.”
A bomb, probably dropped in World War Two, exploded at an airport, around one minute after a passenger plane passed the site.
No one was injured at Miyazaki Airport, in south west Japan, . . . .
At least the website is now warning us not to believe it:Ibix said:Apparently Britain is going to be destroyed by the weather today:
View attachment 352038
There's a glitch in the data pipeline somewhere apparently which is giving stupid wind speeds that are then (somewhat conservatively) classified as "hurricane force", presumably because there's no higher category.
Airports sometimes get stuck with abandoned airplanes. Big ones.nsaspook said:https://www.wsj.com/business/retail/redbox-vending-machine-kiosk-dvd-movies-4e285ee8
Bankruptcy Took Down the Redbox Machine. If Only Someone Could Take Them Away.
The DVD vending machine pioneer is out of business, sticking Walgreens, Walmart and other merchants with 24,000 abandoned big red machines
https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/com...only-someone-could-take-them-away/ar-AA1s1XTc
Want a Redbox?
View attachment 352057
nsaspook said:Want a Redbox?
There are probably some on this site that could readily do that, but...Swamp Thing said:This is the kind of opportunity that some DIY tech YouTuber could take up. Buy up as many as you can afford and make a parallel computing cluster from their processors... Or something. The thing is to create an appealing story arc that also educates about some technical concepts and attracts lots of views.