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Camp stove generates electricity for USB charging

Transformers Movie Intro - 1986

brunopuntzjones says...

I saw this in theaters as well. I remember the day as I burned my hand on the stove and had to wear an ice pack to the movies. I would have been 6 or 7. I remember crying when Optimus died as well.

However, just watching the intro, holy shit there were some huge names in this. I knew Orson Wells was, but didn't know the other half dozen more that showed. Judd Nelson, Eric Idle, Leonard Nimoy, etc.

Mojito Chicken Recipe

chingalera says...

Should be yummy enough~Do you own one of those iron grilles? Those are pretty handy for the stove-top. Most sporting goods stores have a range of iron that includes one of these but nothing beats the added flavour of smoke from a proper BBQ! Also, definitely marinate the poultry at least 2 hours. Use a dark rum, eh? There's a cheap Haitian sort that's also perfect for a Mojito~Barbancourt.

Penn's Obama Rant

notarobot says...

If we let the people out of prison, who will operate the factories they are attached to? Where will we get our cheap paint and crappy fiberboard office furniture?

(In the United States)the federal prison industry produces 100% of all military helmets, ammunition belts, bullet-proof vests, ID tags, shirts, pants, tents, bags, and canteens. Along with war supplies, prison workers supply 98% of the entire market for equipment assembly services; 93% of paints and paintbrushes; 92% of stove assembly; 46% of body armor; 36% of home appliances; 30% of headphones/microphones/speakers; and 21% of office furniture. Airplane parts, medical supplies, and much more: prisoners are even raising seeing-eye dogs for blind people. (...)

Profits are so good that now there is a new business: importing inmates with long sentences, meaning the worst criminals. When a federal judge ruled that overcrowding in Texas prisons was cruel and unusual punishment, the CCA signed contracts with sheriffs in poor counties to build and run new jails and share the profits. According to a December 1998 Atlantic Monthly magazine article, this program was backed by investors from Merrill-Lynch, Shearson-Lehman, American Express and Allstate, and the operation was scattered all over rural Texas. That state's governor, Ann Richards, followed the example of Mario Cuomo in New York and built so many state prisons that the market became flooded, cutting into private prison profits.

After a law signed by Clinton in 1996 - ending court supervision and decisions - caused overcrowding and violent, unsafe conditions in federal prisons, private prison corporations in Texas began to contact other states whose prisons were overcrowded, offering "rent-a-cell" services in the CCA prisons located in small towns in Texas. The commission for a rent-a-cell salesman is $2.50 to $5.50 per day per bed. The county gets $1.50 for each prisoner.

Source=/globalreasearch.ca/Vicky Pelaez/2008


The prison system is meant to bring in free labour for privately owned factories housed in taxpayer funded for-profit prisons. Changing the laws that put people in those systems means that changing a system that makes rich people richer. And that is the kind of change the rich don't much care for.

Quick Tip: How to Make Perfect Bacon Every Time

chingalera says...

Must agree with the baking pan with foil method~425 till golden perfect PLUS: No greasy over-spray on stove and saturated greased-air floating through the house soaking everything in a cloud of bacon odor.:))

Levitron Revolution and IKEA Shelf Demonstration

Casting a Hexagonal Pewter Stool at the Beach

heathen says...

>> ^Trancecoach:

so because of the low melting point, the pewter liquifies when placed in the sand under plywood on the beach?


Looks like he has a little propane camping stove, you can see it very briefly at around 8 seconds.

This is Coffee (1961)

spoco2 says...

Fascinating to see some of the time capsule bits:
* The huge waste of water, using about a sink full just to clean the pot, then leaving the tap running on full while taking cups of water.
* The details, the steps, the lack of automation...


Also, fascinating to see this American focused coffee making instructional. Here in Australia it's FAR more prevalent to have a home espresso machine, which makes a damn good cup of coffee, and a whole lot quicker than these convoluted methods (of course stove top percolating is a lot cheaper, very simple process really).

I sit here watching this while drinking my mid morning Flat White and thinking how different tastes are around the world

Cat plays with fire

xxovercastxx says...

Cats have an extremely high pain tolerance, especially when it comes to heat. They say if your cat acts like he's in pain, he's really in pain.

A friend of mine from years ago had a cat that jumped up next to the (gas) stove while it was on and accidentally put his tail in the flame. Within seconds the fire had spread up his tail and back (like a flaming skunk stripe) but he sat there cleaning himself like nothing was wrong. They wrapped him in a dish towel to smother the flame. He had minor burns on his skin but he came out fine.

Stephen Fry in a Tea Commercial

cito says...

I love tea but that's bit too funky for me, hot and with milk? wtf thats how I like Coffee

being from Georgia I like good ol' southern Iced Tea.

best way is to set pitcher of water out with tea bags in the sun and let it steep in the sun or you can boil it on stove

then sweeten with sugar put in fridge to get ice cold

drop couple ice cubes in perhaps garnish with wedge of lemon.

perfect southern iced tea

"Building 7" Explained

bcglorf says...

>> ^LordOderus:

A match burns at around 1000 degrees Fahrenheit, so I have no problems believing thousands of pounds of paper, wood (from furniture) fabrics and plastics (which are made from petroleum) could easily exceed 1000 degrees after burning for 7 hours.


Other things that can exceed 1000F:
-The elements on your stove
-Well ventilated cigarettes
-candles(better than 1400F)

Oh, and well ventilated wood can top 3500F.

If marinara takes this to heart I'm sure he'll be back shortly with a newly discovered understanding of the difference between energy and temperature, and some brand new misunderstanding of how to apply that to the problem.

Riot Rant (Controversy Talk Post)

radx says...

>> ^hpqp:

Every action has some form of motivation, even a psycho's mass murdering spree; it's all good and fine to look for it, but in the meanwhile it's the protective action that counts, something the police force in GB took ages to do. As for the "bonehead militias", most of them were simply groups of neighbours and friends trying their best to protect their livelihoods. Most of them were immigrants who had worked hard to build a life for themselves abroad, only to find everything ruined because of unruly misguided youths high on violence.
As for blaming the violence on the bad decisions concerning social services, I beg to differ. Look at the protests/riots in Greece, Spain, etc. All of them had major peacefull counterparts, with actual demands being made. It's not like the so-called "disenfranchised youths" (and they were not all poor, nor young btw) of London and elsewhere did not have recent examples of protests that did not involve using social networking to best loot the fashion shop, and burning people's homes (Arab Spring anyone?).
I agree about the ridiculous consummer identity we have going on in society... "you are what you buy" really sickens me to the bone. As does the corporate criminels going on with their billionaire, society-crushing lifestyles. But is it possible to send a more counterproductive message than the one we've seen in England?
p.s.: what's and ASPO?

Judging by the public statements of officials, the "protective action" is bound to overshoot. Like I said, pillories, assembly-line-justice, the calls for harsher sentences, the calls to have the rioters' housing/benefits stripped, the thought of using the military -- civil liberties are put on notice, and that's putting it mildly. Let the rozzers do their job within the regular frame of the law, play it by the book, don't give them any reason whatsoever for another backlash. Take the kettle off the stove. Forcing a lid on the spout will only make matters worse sooner than later.


As for the Greece/Spain comparison, I would like to submit this: UNICEF 2007: An overview of child well-being in rich countries. Prior to the economic meltdown, Greece and Spain were paradise for kids, compared to the UK. I wouldn't dare to make comparisons nowadays, not with 40%+ youth unemployment in Spain and Greece. But it's clear that the UK has been growing worse over years and years. The lid was bound to blow someday. I figured it would be mass protests, nonviolent ones I might add. I certainly didn't see it taking the shape it has, but in retrospect, signs were abundant -- and ignored. The alarming streak of suicides among kids in recent years alone should have been more than enough.

These are long-term developments, long-term failures, not just the recent cuts. But they sure as hell didn't help, and neither does the prospect of even more cuts down the road. Small example: youth centers are closed down, so now you have kids bored out of their minds who are not allowed to loiter (see: ASBO).

That's what I meant when I said disenfranchised. The state has been on the retreat since Thatcher, the educational system is focused on testing, intolerance for kids in public places has been on the rise for decades and the social gap is wider than anywhere else in Europe. So the ones who drew the short straw are fucked. And so are their children. And theirs, until the cycle is broken. Look at the UN report, page 22: "Relationships" and page 26: "Behaviour and Risks". That doesn't appear overnight, it's at least two generations of failure. No stable relationships, no communities, no values, no respect, no prospect.

As for ASPOs: that's a typo. Or more precisely, a brain failure, because typing a P instead of a B is not an error I can blame on my fingers.

ASBO or anti-social behaviour order is the tool of choice to stop kids from loitering. Anywhere. The street, the park, the yard, the staircase, you name it. It is the formalized dislike for children in the public space. There are, of course, reasonable uses for it, but in certain areas it is used to harass kids. At least it was, no idea if it still is.

Quasi ein Platzverweis, der keines Anlasses benötigt.

Now That's Fast Food

steroidg says...

>> ^eric3579:

Can Anyone translate.
疯狂厨师同炒12锅饭 "大勺哥"绝技倾众生 郑大哥俨然已经成了这个小吃一条街上的਴
6;星,很多第一次来的顾客都忍不住拿出手
426;记录一番!一个人、12个炉灶
、12个大勺,最快的时候一分钟内能同时炒
986;10份炒面,这­就是卖炒面的郑大哥独具特&#
33394;、也是最吸引人的一项绝
活!郑大哥的炒面摊就摆在三好街的一处小×
07;一条街里,每天中午之前郑大哥就和妻子
3558;一切准备妥当,等待第一懼br /> 客的到来­。


Known as "Big spoon brother", this crazy chef amazes the crowd by cooking with 12 woks simultaneously. The chef is Big brother Zheng and has became a true star on this street, many first time customers can't help themselves but to take out their mobiles and record the feat! One man, 12 stoves, 12 big spoons (woks I presume), at best, he manages to finish 10 fried noodles within a minute, this is the unique talent of Big brother Zheng, as well as his main attraction! Big brother Zheng's fried noodle shop is located with a street called San Hao (Three good), every day before noon Big Brother Zheng and his wife would have preprepared the stand awaiting for the first guest to arrive.

Sometimes you plank the stove,sometimes the stove planks you

shagen454 says...

Haha, I remember when I was in second grade I had a boombox and probably a Vanilla Ice or Michael Jackson tape on hand. But, I wanted an extension cord so I could have the boombox on the otherside of the room, so I grabbed some wire stuck in one end of the power cord for the boombox and then plugged the cord in the wall. Fireballs. Fucking FIREBALLS. It was awesome. I'll never do it again.


>> ^ghark:

I remember standing in front of an electrical outlet when I was about 3-4 with a fork, thinking man, I'm so tempted to see what would happen if I poke this fork into these little holes.
Ahh, the good old days, before it became politically correct to safe'ify one's house for the chillun's.

Sometimes you plank the stove,sometimes the stove planks you



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