A photograph showing the owner of a lost camera has gone viral Monday after being posted on Facebook, Reddit and other websites. Internet users are teaming up to put the camera back into the owner’s hands.
Text on the viral photo reads, “This guy lost his camera with more than 2,800 photos in Amsterdam. Who knows him? Please contact anke.appel@gmail.com.”
On Facebook, people have shared the picture more than 24,000 times in the 13 hours after Roland van Gogh uploaded it.
The photo hit Reddit on Monday afternoon, with people offering tips and making jokes. “This could use more drama,” wrote redhousebythebog. “Threaten to erase a picture every 10 minutes until the owner is found.”
Researchers find ancient Roman beads in Japan – then find an East Asian man in Rome
Ancient Roman beads in Japan
Glass jewellery believed to have been made by Roman craftsmen has been found in an ancient tomb in Japan, researchers said Friday, in a sign the empire’s influence may have reached the edge of Asia.
Tests have revealed three glass beads discovered in the Fifth Century “Utsukushi” burial mound in Nagaoka, near Kyoto, were probably made some time between the first and the fourth century, the Nara National Research Institute for Cultural Properties said.
The beads, which have a hole through the middle, were made with a multilayering technique — a relatively sophisticated method in which craftsmen piled up layers of glass, often sandwiching gold leaf in between.
Via – Yahoo! News
East Asian man in ancient Rome
Some people of Italian ancestry, like me, might have a surprise in the family tree—a man of east Asian descent, who was living and working 2,000 years ago in the boondocks near the heel of the Italian boot. The discovery is the first good evidence of an Asian living in Italy during Roman times.
Researchers tested his mitochondrial DNA, which is passed down through your maternal lineage. And this fellow had east Asian genes. The finding appears in the Journal of Roman Archaeology.
It’s impossible to say if the man trekked to Italy himself or one of his ancestors did. But it’s clear that this first known Roman Asian wasn’t some aristocratic diplomat. He was just a poor worker, buried with a single pot.
Via – Scientific American
Surf Film: A postcard from Santa Barbara
A short travelogue from Santa Barbara featuring surfing by Trevor Gordon.
Film and direction by Alex Kopps with special thanks to Sudden Oak for the music.
Archaeologist discover Shakespeare’s original theater
The remains of London’s second playhouse, The Curtain Theatre, could be unearthed in Shoreditch as part of a development by Plough Yard Developments.
The Curtain Theatre was home to William Shakespeare’s company, the Lord Chamberlain’s Men, before they settled at the Globe and staged several of Shakespeare’s plays including Romeo and Juliet. Despite being immortalised as “this wooden O” in Henry V, which had its premier at The Curtain Theatre, little detailed information is known about this early playhouse. Excavations are expected to provide great insight into its history.
Archaeologists from Museum of London Archaeology (MOLA) have been undertaking exploratory digs at the site of The Curtain Theatre in Hackney. They have discovered what is believed to be one of the best preserved examples of an Elizabethan theatre in the UK. The discoveries include the walls forming the gallery and the yard within the playhouse itself.
Learn more – Remains of Shakespeare’s Curtain Theatre discovered in Shoreditch
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A visit to the Huntington Library
Analysis of Egypt’s election – Mohammed Morsi won, but is not in charge
They sent customary congratulations from round the world – the Iranians and the Emiratis, the US, the British and Hamas.
Even Israel said it “respected the outcome”. William Hague, the foreign secretary, was almost effusive.
“I congratulate the Egyptian people for their commitment to the democratic process,” he said.
The US called on the government to be a “pillar of regional peace”.
It was as if the Muslim Brotherhood were just any other party, Mohammed Morsi just another politician, and Egypt any other democratic country.
It is not, of course. For one thing, nobody really knows now who is in power. Mr Morsi, just about everyone agrees, is not. He is answerable to two men: Field Marshal Mohammed Hussein Tantawi, the chairman of the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces and defence minister; and Mohammed Badie, the Murshid or Guide of the Brotherhood, to whom he also owes obedience.It is easy to see why the liberal activists who started last year’s revolution against Hosni Mubarak feel betrayed….
Keep reading – Egypt analysis: Mohammed Morsi may have won, but he is not in charge
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‘Tropical’ lakes of methane are found on Saturn’s moon of Titan
Infrared imaging by JPL’s Cassini spacecraft has shown the existence of large methane lakes near the equator of Saturn’s moon Titan. One of them is about the size of Utah’s Great Salt Lake at its lowest recorded level and is at least three feet deep. The spacecraft also discovered smaller, shallower “ponds” nearby similar to marshes on Earth, with knee- to ankle-level depths.
Astronomers have previously observed large methane lakes near Titan’s poles, but the discovery of the “tropical” lakes is a surprise because it was generally assumed that this region was too warm to allow such lakes to exist for any length of time. Titan’s weather system is similar to Earth’s in one respect, but with liquid methane instead of water. The methane near the equator evaporates and is transported by winds to the poles, where it condenses back into a liquid.
…Like water vapor, which dissociates in the upper atmosphere to form ozone, methane is also dissociated by sunlight to produce reactive carbon atoms that can combine to form organic chemicals such as amino acids. Such compounds have been detected in Titan’s atmosphere and are the basis of some researchers’ speculation that Titan may harbor life forms of some sort.
Keep reading – Cassini spacecraft finds ‘tropical’ lakes on Saturn moon Titan
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Getting your home ready for an electric vehicle (EV)
Owning a plug-in electric car means a new way to fuel. The convenience of charging at home can reduce or even eliminate your trips to the gas station, but it also comes with choices.
Get a lower rate
We offer 2 rate plans specifically designed for people with electric cars. These plans provide lower rates when you charge at night and during off-peak hours. Your selected rate plan and charging level (or voltage) will determine whether you’ll need to upgrade your home’s electrical wiring.
Do you need a charging station?
If your electric car has a smaller battery, or if you simply drive less, you can charge your electric car within a few hours using a standard household 120-volt outlet. If your electric car has a larger battery or you drive more, you may want a home charging station or dock for faster charging.
Resources
- Visit GoElectricDrive for more information on electric cars, charging, and incentives.
- Learn more about state and federal programs for which you may qualify.
- U.S. Department of Energy’s Database of Federal & State Alternative Fuel Incentives
- California’s DriveClean Buying Guide and Incentive Finder
- Charging Station Map:
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Zero-waste moving – Recopack moving boxes – made from recycled plastic trash
Welcome to Rent A Green Box, the first Zero-Waste pack and move solution in America!
Do you ever wonder why we’re cutting down our trees to make cardboard moving boxes that are used once, maybe twice, and then tossed into a landfill? After all, cardboard boxes aren’t just wasteful and inefficient, they’re also expensive, hard to tape, hard to stack, easily crushed, dirty and dusty. With over 16% of the population packing and moving each year, don’t you think it’s time for a CHANGE?
Be part of the “green” solution
You have the ability to choose between disposability and sustainability – and you’ll be excited to learn that choosing sustainability and moving green actually saves you money!
- Cut your moving costs in half.
- Recopacks, are made from recycled plastic trash.
- Delivered for free, direct to your door and then picked up for free after you have them all unpacked.
- They’ve got comfortable handles, stack perfectly, are easily locked during transport.
Prices:
- Studio – $99 for 5 medium, 17 large, 3 extra-large (new cardboard $129)
- Small – $149 for 10 medium, 30 large, 10 extra-large (new cardboard $219)
- Medium – $229 for 20 medium, 40 large, 15 extra-large (new cardboard $319)
- Large – $269 for 30 medium, 50 large, 20 extra-large (new cardboard $398)
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Behind the scenes feature – making of an animated short film
Before we started with the production we spend weeks of experimenting. We ripped books apart, assembled traditional rigs, turned book pages a thousand times, and finally we figured out a technique and style that could work out for the story.
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