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Sunday, January 15, 2012

BuzzFeed Latest: Predictions Of What 2011 Would Be Like From A 1911 Newspaper and More!


Today’s Hottest Buzz

Madonna Takes A Swipe At "Reductive" Lady Gaga On "20/20"

"Look it up." Two days after tugging on Lady Gaga's wig in an interview with Newsweek, Madonna went and snatched off the whole damn thing on last night's "20/20," the first time she publicly addressed the issue of similarities between Gaga's "Born This Way" and her song, "Express Yourself."

Predictions Of What 2011 Would Be Like From A 1911 Newspaper

Aerial war-ships? Check. Grand opera telephoned to private homes? Yep. Mosquitoes, house-flies, and roaches "practically exterminated?" Who dropped the ball on that one?

Colbert Super PAC Goes Negative On Romney In First South Carolina Ad

Brands him "Mitt the Ripper" for "corporations are people" line.

Items That Got Stuck Inside People Last Year [NSFW]

The Sun Sentinal has created a handy database of emergency room records that includes the top insertions that get stuck inside of humans. Here they are, categorized by orifice and with illustrations, to help you visualize. You're welcome.

This Is A Real Tourism Poster

In North Dakota the women will have sex with you, apparently. Lovely state. Highly recommend it.

How To Endanger Your Life With Liquid Nitrogen

Here's a safety tip: Don't do this. Not at home. Not ever.

Best Big Brother Ever

He's doing it right.

5 Stephen Colbert Campaign Posters

This week, Stephen Colbert announced his bid for the White House. The designers at Tauntr.com have shown their support by creating a series of campaign posters for the presidential hopeful.

Pharmacist Punches Man In The Face

Meet Bill Shipley. He's clearly the baddest drug store man in all of Council Bluffs, Iowa.

11 Geeky Beer Pong Tables

Because if we're going to drink like frat boys, we may as well revert all the way back to childhood.

More on BuzzFeed ›

ScienceDaily: Top News

ScienceDaily: Top News


Brain glia cells increase their DNA content to preserve vital blood-brain barrier

Posted: 13 Jan 2012 06:10 PM PST

Scientists report that as the developing larval fruit fly brain grows by cell division, it instructs subperineurial glia (SPG) cells that form the blood-brain barrier to enlarge by creating multiple copies of their genomes in a process known as polyploidization.

Energy within the cell: Energy-saving chaperon Hsp90

Posted: 13 Jan 2012 06:06 PM PST

A special group of proteins, the so-called chaperons, helps other proteins to obtain their correct conformation. Until now scientists supposed that hydrolyzing ATP provides the energy for the large conformational changes of chaperon Hsp90. Now a research team has demonstrated that Hsp90 utilizes thermal fluctuations as the driving force for its conformational changes.

Dark side of the moon revealed: Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter's LAMP reveals lunar surface features

Posted: 13 Jan 2012 06:06 PM PST

New maps produced by the Lyman Alpha Mapping Project aboard NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter reveal features at the moon's northern and southern poles in regions that lie in perpetual darkness. LAMP uses a novel method to peer into these so-called permanently shadowed regions, making visible the invisible.

Most recent European great ape discovered

Posted: 13 Jan 2012 06:03 PM PST

Based on a hominid molar, scientists from Germany, Bulgaria and France have documented that great apes survived in Europe in savannah-like landscapes until seven million years ago.

Tiny transmitter sets frequency record: Revolutionary terahertz transmitter developed

Posted: 13 Jan 2012 06:02 PM PST

A terahertz transmitter has generated the highest frequency ever attained by a microelectronic device. The innovative device is also minuscule and operates at room temperature, which could lead to it paving the way for new applications in, e.g., nondestructive testing or medical diagnostics.

Charges going astray: New transfer paths for electrons discovered

Posted: 13 Jan 2012 05:59 PM PST

In the development of materials for energy production and distribution, knowledge of molecular processes in electrical charge transfer is fundamental. Scientists have once more discovered that nature provides interesting templates for long-range electron transfer.

Cancer sequencing project identifies potential approaches to combat aggressive leukemia

Posted: 13 Jan 2012 05:56 PM PST

Researchers have discovered that a subtype of leukemia characterized by a poor prognosis is fueled by mutations in pathways distinctly different from a seemingly similar leukemia associated with a much better outcome. The findings highlight a possible new strategy for treating patients with this more aggressive cancer.

Gene identified as a new target for treatment of aggressive childhood eye tumor

Posted: 13 Jan 2012 05:54 PM PST

New findings help solve mystery of retinoblastoma's rapid growth in work that also yields a new treatment target and possible therapy.

Give support to repulsion, and you'll see attraction. We know why

Posted: 13 Jan 2012 05:54 PM PST

When two objects repel each other under the action of one force, we usually expect that addition of another force, also repulsive one, will accelerate separation. This intuitive view is, however, not always true. Researchers have now managed to explain surprising results of experiments with mixtures, where two repulsive interactions have lead to a strong attraction.

Concept of 'overactive bladder' serves commercial interests rather than patient interests, experts say

Posted: 13 Jan 2012 05:54 PM PST

Experts question the concept of the 'overactive bladder syndrome'. According to researchers, the definition of this syndrome is mostly beneficial to those with commercial interests, while from the patient perspective and for the development of treatments, it may be detrimental.

Opioids erase memory traces of pain

Posted: 13 Jan 2012 05:49 PM PST

Medical researchers have discovered a previously unknown effect of opioids. The study shows that opioids not only temporarily relieve pain, but at the right dose can also erase memory traces of pain in the spinal cord and therefore eliminate a key cause of chronic pain.

Major environmental study finds traces of many drugs in Swedish waters

Posted: 13 Jan 2012 05:49 PM PST

High levels of the anti-inflammatory substance diclofenac are released from wastewater plants, according to a new study.

ScienceDaily: Top Technology News

ScienceDaily: Top Technology News


Dark side of the moon revealed: Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter's LAMP reveals lunar surface features

Posted: 13 Jan 2012 06:06 PM PST

New maps produced by the Lyman Alpha Mapping Project aboard NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter reveal features at the moon's northern and southern poles in regions that lie in perpetual darkness. LAMP uses a novel method to peer into these so-called permanently shadowed regions, making visible the invisible.

Tiny transmitter sets frequency record: Revolutionary terahertz transmitter developed

Posted: 13 Jan 2012 06:02 PM PST

A terahertz transmitter has generated the highest frequency ever attained by a microelectronic device. The innovative device is also minuscule and operates at room temperature, which could lead to it paving the way for new applications in, e.g., nondestructive testing or medical diagnostics.

Charges going astray: New transfer paths for electrons discovered

Posted: 13 Jan 2012 05:59 PM PST

In the development of materials for energy production and distribution, knowledge of molecular processes in electrical charge transfer is fundamental. Scientists have once more discovered that nature provides interesting templates for long-range electron transfer.

Give support to repulsion, and you'll see attraction. We know why

Posted: 13 Jan 2012 05:54 PM PST

When two objects repel each other under the action of one force, we usually expect that addition of another force, also repulsive one, will accelerate separation. This intuitive view is, however, not always true. Researchers have now managed to explain surprising results of experiments with mixtures, where two repulsive interactions have lead to a strong attraction.

Slippery when stacked: Theorists quantify the friction of graphene

Posted: 11 Jan 2012 10:40 AM PST

Similar to the way pavement, softened by a hot sun, will slow down a car, graphene slows down an object sliding across its surface. But stack the sheets and graphene gets more slippery, say theorists who developed new software to quantify the material's friction.

The Cynical Girl: Day Off

The Cynical Girl: Day Off

Link to The Cynical Girl

Day Off

Posted: 14 Jan 2012 03:45 AM PST

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