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When Nerds Attack! This is awesome. Science applied to B-movies. You gotta be a little geeky to want to read it, but it’s fascinating.

The Biology of B-Movie Monsters

As for the contest with the spider, the battle is indeed biased, but not the way the movie would have you believe. Certainly the spider has a wicked set of poison fangs and some advantage because it wears its skeleton on the outside, where it can function as armor. But our hero, because of his increased metabolic rate, will be bouncing around like a mouse on amphetamines. He wouldn’t struggle to lift the sewing needle–he’d wield it like a rapier because his relative strength has increased about 70 fold. The forces that a muscle can produce are proportional to its cross-sectional area (length squared), while body mass is proportional to volume (length cubed). The ratio of an animal’s ability to generate force to its body mass scales approximately as 1/length; smaller animals are proportionally stronger. This geometric truth explains why an ant can famously life 50 times its body weight, while we can barely get the groceries up the stairs; were we the size of ants, we could lift 50 times our body weight, too. As for the Shrinking Man, pity the poor spider.

Found (where else) at Boing, Boing

I don’t want just any green-glowing pig, Daddy, I want one of these green-glowing pigs, and I want one now!

::stomps feet::

For full effect, I’m pointing you to the boing boing entry, since this is exactly how I found it.

Boing Boing: ROFL alert: asymmetrical gentlemen’s-genital-cozy

A little support is a good thing, I suppose…

Jenga!!

Ok, this is really, really neat: Jenga Sears Tower. Somebody has much more patience than I (and probably consumes less coffee than I do)

found via Boing, Boing.

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Okay, now, THIS

Is way too cool.

Wow.

Link found thanks to Boing, Boing

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