Showing posts with label misc. Show all posts
Showing posts with label misc. Show all posts

Two Reactions to Sweet Yummy Stuff

Lunch is over and you feel full. At the sight of dessert, 'hedonic' eaters say, no thanks. But 'homeostatic' eaters don't listen to the body's built-in chemical that is secreted when over 3 lbs of food are eaten in one sitting. They're more likely to be obese.



EATING FOR PLEASURE
'the homeostatic system'

Seeing, smelling and even hearing the word 'cake' activates chemicals in the brain involved in shame, depression, and repression, triggering the release of epinepherine, the brain's "food" chemical.

Brain scans show that obese people have reactions to food similar to reactions experienced by sexual deviants.


EATING FOR SURVIVAL
'the hedonic system'

When food reaches the stomach, electrical signals from the brain speed up digestion and trigger the brain to eat more. Seeing cake becomes more appealing.

The hormone dopamine tells the brain to stop eating, but in obese people, the brain is unable to accept the chemical receptor.

Simple Description To Common Logical Fallacies



A logical fallacy is often what has happened when someone is wrong about something. it's a flaw in reasoning. They're like tricks or illusions of thought, and they're often very sneakily used by politicians, the media, and others to fool people. Don't be fooled! This poster has been designed to help you identity and call out dodgy logic whenever it may raise it's ugly, incoherent head.

STRAWMAN
Misrepresenting or exaggerating someones argument to make it easier to attack.

FALSE CAUSE
Presuming that a real or perceived relationship between things means that one is the cause of the other.

SLIPPERY SLOPE
Asserting that if we allow A to happen, then Z will consequently happen too therefore A should not happen.

AD HOMINEM
Attacking your opponent's character or personal traits instead of engaging with their argument.

SPECIAL PLEADING
Moving the goalposts or making up exceptions when claim is shown to be false.

LOADED QUESTION
Asking a question that has an assumption built into it so that it can't be answered without appearing guilty.

BANDWAGON
Appealing to popularity or the fact that many people do something as an attempted form of validation.

BEGGING THE QUESTION
A circular argument in which the conclusion is included in the premise.

APPEAL TO AUTHORITY
Using the opinion or position of an authority figure, or institution of authority, in place of an actual argument.

APPEAL TO NATURE
Making the argument that because something is "natural" it is therefore valid, justified, inevitable, or ideal.

COMPOSITION/DIVISION
Assuming that what's true about one part of something has to be applied to all, or other, parts of it.

ANECDOTAL
Using personal experience or an isolated example instead of a valid argument, especially to dismiss statistics.

APPEAL TO EMOTION
Manipulating an emotional response in place of a valid or compelling argument.

TU QUOQUE
Avoiding having to engage with criticism by turning it back on the accuser - answering them with criticism.

BURDEN OF PROOF
Saying that the burden of proof lies not with the person making the claim, but with someone else to disprove.

NO TRUE SCOTSMAN
Making what could be called an appeal to purity as a way to dismiss relevant criticisms or flaws of an argument.

THE TEXAS SHARPSHOOTER
Cherry-picking data clusters to suit an argument, or finding a pattern to fit a presumption.

THE FALLACY FALLACY
Presuming that because a claim has been poorly argued, or a fallacy has been made that it is necessarily wrong.

PERSONAL INCREDULITY
Saying that because one finds something difficult to understand that it's therefore not true.

AMBIGUITY
Using double meanings or ambiguities of language to mislead or misrepresent the truth.

GENETIC
Judging something good or bad on the basis of where it comes from, or from whom it comes.

MIDDLE GROUND
Saying that a compromise, or middle point, between two extremes is the truth.

All The Herbs You Need


Coughing?
ADD ROSEMARY
The eucalyptol in this aromatic herb is study proven to loosen chest congestion, making phlegm easier to expel. Plus, rosemary is rich in anti-inflammatory tannins, which soothe a sore throat.

Pairs well with: white beans, chicken, Brie cheese, roasted meats and poultry, potatoes, polenta, apples.



Crampy tummy?
ADD MINT
Peppermint contains menthol, a natural plant compound that relaxes pain-inducing intestinal spasms. This reduces belly discomfort by 40 percent, according to German researchers.

Pairs well with: eggplant, tomatoes, lamb, green peas, melon, couscous, hot and cold beverages.



Archy joints?
ADD CURRY POWDER
The curcumin in curry inhibits the body's production of prostaglandin E2, an inflammtory compound that over sensitizes nerves. This blunts joint and muscle pain as effectively as prescription medications.

Pairs well with: lentils, mangoes, rice, cauliflower, spinach





Bloated
ADD PARSLEY
Thanks to its stores of apiol and myristicin, parsley is a natural diuretic that relieves bloat-inducing water retention by preventing salt from being reabsorbed into bodily tissue.

Pairs well with: grains, onions, parmean cheese, pasta, salads, seafood, tomatoes





Menstrual cramps
ADD OREGANO
Enjoying 2 tsp. of  fresh oregano daily during menstruation reduces or eliminates cramps, according to a Greek study. That's because this herb's thymol and carvacrol relax uterine muscles to prevent painful contractions.

Pairs well with: mushrooms, tomato sauce, olives, summer squash, fish.




Upset  GI tract
ADD DILL
Indian scientists found that dill's limonene works as well as prescription antibiotics at killing harmful intestinal bacteria such as E.coli.

Pairs well with: salmon, eggs, cucumbers, chicken, cheddar, cheese, mixed, greens, clear soups, cream cheese, beets, carrots.




Congested
ADD CAYENNE
The fiery capsaicin in cayenne deactivates substance P, a neurotransmitter linked to inflammation, The result: less sinus congestion and pressure.

Pairs well with: root vegetables, roasted poultry, rice, chocolate, leafy greens, shrimp, eggs, popcorn, grilled-cheese sandwiches, beans, creamy soups.





Feeling down?
ADD BASIL
The eugenol and rosmarinic acid in basil boost the brain's production of dopamine and serotonin. According to indian researchers, this could lead to sunnier moods in as little as three days.

Pairs well with: tomatoes, olives, strawberries, melon, fresh mozzarella, pizza, pasta, white fish, feta cheese.



Nauseous?
ADD GINGER
Ginger's gingarol and shogaol calm digestive-tract spasms to reduce nausea better than motion-sickness drugs, according to a study at Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah.

Pairs well with: citrus fruit, tea, sweet potatoes, pork, coconut, miso soup, onions, relishes, pears, rice.



Always tired?
ADD CILANTRO
The carboxylic acid in cilantro binds to heavy metals such as mercury in the blood and carries them out of the body. Their removal reverses the toxin buildup that causes chronic fatigue, joint pain and depression.

Pairs well with: avocados, seafood, corn, black beans, steak.




Interesting Facts About The Human Body



Humans are the only animals capable of drawing a straight line.

Women blink twice as often as men.

There are over 100 viruses causing running nose.

Human DNA contains 80 000 genes.

Human brain produces 100 000 chemical reactions per second.

Fingernails grow 4 times faster than toenails.

Total weight of bacteria living in the human body is 4.4lbs.

The human eye is capable of differentiating 10 000 000 hues.

Babies are born without kneecaps, which form only at the age of 2 to 6.

Every human bends her finger 25 million times in a lifetime.

There are nearly 46 miles of nerves in an adult's body.

Human brain generates more electric impulses in a day than all telephones of the world combined.

In a lifetime, the female body produces 7 million egg cells.

The area of human lungs' surface is equal to that of a tennis court.

On average, an individual grows over 450 miles of hair in a lifetime.

There are approximately 40 000 bacteria in the human mouth.

The strongest muscle in the human body is the tongue.

Human body contains enough fat to produce seven pieces of soap.

Nearly half of all human bones are located in wrists and feet.

There are approximately 2000 taste buds in the human body.

An adult person makes approximately 23 000 breaths a day.

Tea vs Coffee, Both Good In Different Ways

Coffee or Tea? There's a growing body of research to suggest that both are good for you in different ways.


TEA

White tea has been found to have a higher concetration of antioxidants in it which may actually be more effective preventing some diseases than green tea.

White tea may help prevent obesity, White tea was found to inhibit the growth of new fat cells.

Green tea has thermogenic properties and promotes fat oxidation beyond that explained by its caffeine content.

Studies have shown that Green Tea reduces the risk of esophageal cancer in women by 60%.

White Tea was found that the anti-oxidants in White Tea had anti-ageing potential, may help prevent some cancers, aswell as inflammation and heart disease.

Drinking tea too hot increases the risk of Esophageal cancer.

COFFEE

There have been studies that show that properties found in coffee can raise cholesterol.

People who drink more coffee have been found to be less likely to suffer Alzheimers disease later in life.

Drinking coffee over a long period of time may reduce the risk of dying from heart disease.

Scientists believe that chemicals found in coffee could be used to make new drugs to treat hear disease and insomnia.

Over 1000 chemicals have been found in roasted coffee with 19 being carcinogens.





TEA AND COFFEE FACTS

TEA

Tea may help prevent the development of type 1 diabetes and slow the progression once it has developed.

Drinking 3 to 4 cups of tea a day can cut the chance of a heart attack.

Tea contains fluoride which protects teeth.

Men who drink more than 10 cups of green tea per day are less likely to develop disorders of the liver.

Tea can protect against heart disease and some cancers.

People who drink black tea 4 times a day for 6 weeks were found to have lower levels of the stress hormone cortisol.

Green Tea may offer some protection against lung cancer according to studies.

Tea hydrates rather than common conception that the caffeine in it dehydrates.

Tea may contain pesticides, even if it's been labelled as organic.

Tea contains a large amount of Tanin. Tanin reduces the absorbtion of iron in the body which can lead to Anemia

Tea contains caffeine which has been proven to cause anxiety and rises in blood pressure.

Adding milk may also stop the benefits tea has against cancer.


COFFEE

Studies have shown that coffee helps prevent type 2 diabetes.

Drinking coffee has been shown to decrease the risk of developing Gout in men over 40.

Caffeine increases the effectiveness of pain killers and coffee contains caffeine.

Coffee protects the liver, especially against cirrhosis and liver cancer.

Coffee improves short term recall as well as improved reaction times. The largest improvement was seen in the elderly.

Coffee causes tooth discoloration.

A study in Denmark showed that drinking 8 or more cups of coffee a day significantly increased the risk of stillbirths. 

Research has shown that coffee decreases blood flow to the heart.

Most Polluted Places Around The World


1. Sumgayit, Azerbaijan
- 250 000 potentially affected
- 40 factories manufacturing chemicals
- 120 000 tons of harmful emissions
- Cancer rates 51% higher than average

2. Linfen, China
- 3 million affected
- Provides 2/3 of nation's coal energy
- Worst air quality in China, pollutants include arsenic and sulphur dioxide
- High rates of lead poisoning in children

3. Tianying, China
- 140 000 affected
- Largest lead production base in China
- Lead concentrations are 10x higher than national health standards
- 85% of air samples have lead concentrations

4. Sukinda, India
- Contains 97% of India's chromite ore
- 30 million tons of waste rock
- 60% of drinking water contains twice the national standard of hexavalent chromium
- 2.6 million potentially affected

5. Vapi, India
- 400 km belt of industrial estates
- Waste products include heavy metals, cyanides, pesticides and other toxins
- Mercury in the groundwater is 96 times higher than WHO standards
- Very high incidences of respiratory diseases and numerous cancers

6. La Oroya, Peru
- Population of 35 000 and a polymetallic smelter
- 99% have blood lead levels exceeding acceptable limits
- Very high rates of premature deaths
- Vegetation destroyed by acid rain

7. Dzerzhinsk, Russia
- 300 000 tons of chemical waste was disposed here between 1930 and 1998
- In certain places the water has levels of dioxins 17 million times higher than what is deemed safe
- In 2003 the death rate exceeded birth rate by 260%
- Average life expectancy for me is 42

8. Norilsk, Russia
- Contains world's largest heavy metal smelting complex
- 2 million tons of sulphur dioxide is released into the air annually
- Life expectancy for factory workers is 10 years less than Russian average
- 15,8% of deaths among children are caused by respiratory diseases

9. Chernobyl, Ukraine
- Location of the world's worst nuclear disaster
- 20 years after the disaster the exclusion zone still remains uninhabitable
- 5 million people inhabit the affected area around Chernobyl
- Infertility and birth defects remain high

10. Kabwe, Zambia
- Mining and smelting of zinc and lead began in 1902 and ran until 1994
- Most workers and residents of the area have been exposed to toxic levels of lead due to a waterway running from the mine to town and the inhalation of dust
- In many cases children's blood lead levels are regarded as potentially fatal

Windows 7 Software Guide


Below is a list of recommended software for Windows 7, and a few tips to help you make the most of your computer.

Internet
web browser:              Chrome, Opera, Firefox
mail client:                   Thunderbird, Opera
instant message:           Miranda, Pidgin, Skype
relay chat (IRC):          mIRC, XChat, ChatZilla
FTP client:                   Filezilla, WinSCP
download manager:      jDownloader

Multimedia
video player:               MPC-HC
music player:               foobar2000, Winamp
codecs:                       CoreAVC, CCCP*
image viewer:              IrfanView, ACDSee Classic
image editor:               Photoshop, GIMP, Paint.NET
video converter:          Handbrake
audio converter:          foobar2000

*Not necessary with MPC-HC, but adds additional codec support to players like Windows Media Player.

System upkeep
antivirus:                     Microsoft Security Essentials, Nod32
firewall:                      your router, Windows default
defragmenter:             Defraggler, O&O Defrag
cleaner:                      CCleaner, Revo Uninstaller
file recovery:              Recuva
specs:                        Speccy,  CPU-Z, GPU-Z, HWMonitor

Files
archiver:                    7-zip, IZArc, WinRAR
drive encryption:        TrueCrypt, BitLocker

Documents
office suite:                Microsoft Office, OpenOffice.org
PDF viewer:             PDF-XChange, SumatraPDF
text editor:                Notepad++, Notepad2, SciTE

Customize desktop
You can download wallpapers, Windows themes, icons, and similar things at DeviantArt.com or Wallbase.net.

PC Maintenance
You should defragment your drives every couple of weeks and after large file transfers to keep them from slowing down. You can find the built-in utility at Start-> "defrag". Do not defrag SSDs!

You can disable unnecessary services for a very slight speed gain on old machines. Press Start and type "msconfig", go to "Services".

Configuring MPC-HC
Open the options at View->Options.

To use DXVA video card acceleration (CoreAVC is better on NVidia cards), go to Playback-> Output and choose "EVR Custom Pres", then go Internal Filters and make sure "DXVA" and not "FFmpeg" is checked for H.264 and VC-1. This may not work with intermediate filters/codecs (DirectVobSub, ffdshow, CCCP, etc), and will only work with supported cards (Radeon HD series, GeForce 8800/GT100 or newer).

To use CoreAVC (once installed), choose "EVR Custom Pres" as above, then go to External Filters, click "Add Filter", and choose "CoreAVC Video Decoder". Check "prefer" If you're not using DXVA.

Choosing a Browser
Chrome
Pros: Extremely fast; supports userscripts and extensions; simple UI that covers basic features; sandboxed for security.
 Cons: very little configuration; limited featureset compared to others; less powerful extension system than Firefox (eg no real ad blocking, can only hide).

Firefox
Pros: Very powerful extension system; best userscript engine (Greasemonkey); a lot of configuration via about: config.
Cons: The slowest of the "big 3", UI is only a few steps up from IE by default.

Opera
Pros: Tons of user configuration and built-in features; userscript support; very fast (sometimes close to Chrome).
Cons: No extensions; some pages render poorly or not at all.

Being Left-Handed Is Not That Bad


According to Scientific American, 15% of people are left handed. Males are twice as likely to be left-handed than females.

Left-handers are more likely to be geniuses - 20% of all MENSA members report being left-handed.

A study found left-handed men are, on average, 15% richer than right-handed men for those who attended college, and 26% richer if they graduated.

Left-handed people are three times more likely than right-handed people to become alcoholics.

If both parents are left handed, 50% of their offspring will be left-handed. Two righties only have a 2% chance of having a lefty.

Psychologists from Queen's University Belfast found that female cats are more likely to be right-pawed, while male cats tend to be left-pawed.

Lefties are more likely than righties to really, really hate spiral notebooks.

Research conducted by Dr.Nick Cherbuin shows that lefties are better at handling large amounts of stimuli, making them naturally better at playing video games.

Statistically, the older a mother is, the more likely she is to give birth to left-handed children.

Left-handers are believed to reach puberty 4 to 5 months after right-handers.

Living in a righty's world: only 50% of lefties report using a computer mouse with their left hands. Similarly, 68% use their right hand for scissors and 74% hold a dinner knife in their right hands.

Defying the odds: 4 of the 5 original designers of the Mac computer were left-handed. Of the last 5 presidents, 3 are left handed (Obama, Clinton, Bush Sr.).

According to one study, lefties have an average lifespan that is nine years fewer than of the righties.

Unorthodox Logical Fallacies To Avoid


AD HOMINEM
An ad hominem argument is any that attempts to counter anothers claims or conclusions by attacking the person, rather than addressing the argument itself. True believers will often commit this fallacy by countering the arguments of skeptics by stating that skeptics are closed minded. Skeptics, on the other hand, may faill into the trap of dismissing the claims of UFO believers, for example, by stating that people who believe in UFO's are crazy or stupid.

AD IGNORANTIAM
The argument from ignorance basically states that a specific belief is true because we don't know that it isn't true. Defenders of extrasensory perception, for example, will often overemphasize how much we do not know about human brain. UFO proponents will often argue that an object sighted in the sky is unknown, and therefore it is an alien spacecraft.

ARGUMENT FROM AUTHORITY
Stating that a claim is true because a person or group of perceived authority says it is true. Often this argument is implied by emphasizing the many years of experience, or the formal degrees held by the individual making a specific claim. It is reasonable to give more credence to the claims of those with the proper background, education and credentials or to be suspicious of the claims of someone making authoritative statements in an area for which they cannot demonstrate expertise. But the truth of a claim should ultimately rest on logic and evidence, not the authority of the person promoting it.

ARGUMENT FROM FINAL CONSEQUENCES
Such arguments, also called teleological, are based on a reversal of cause and effect, because they argue that something is caused by the ultimate effect that it has, or purpose that serves. For example: God must exist, because otherwise life would have no meaning.

ARGUMENT FROM PERSONAL INCREDULITY
I cannot explain or understand this, therefore it cannot be true. Creationists are fond of arguing that they cannot imagine the complexity of life resulting from blind evolution, but that does not mean life did not evolve.

CONFUSING ASSOCIATION WITH CAUSATION
This is similar to the post-hoc fallacy in that it assumes cause and effect for two variables simply because they are correlated, although the relationshop here is not strictly that of one variable following the other in time. This fallacy is often used to give a statistical correlation a causal interpretation. For example, during the 1990's both religious attendance and illegal drug use have been on the rise. It would be a fallacy to conclude that therefore, religious attendance causes illegal drug use. It is also possible that drug use leads to an increase in religious attendance, or that both drug use and religious attendance are increased by a third variable, such as an increase in a societal unrest. It is also possible that both variables are independent of one another, and it is a mere coincidence that they are both increasing at the same time. A corollary to this is the invocation of this logical fallacy to argue that an association does not represent causation, rather it is more accurate to say that correlation does not necessarily mean causation, but it can. Also, multiple independent correlations can point reliably to a causation, and is a reasonable line of argument.

CONFUSING CURRENTLY UNEXPLAINED WITH UNEXPLAINABLE
Because we do not currently have an adequate explanation for a phenomenon does not mean that it is forever unexplainable, or that it therefore defies the laws of nature or requires a paranormal explanation. An example of this is the "God of the Gaps" strategy of creationists that whatever we cannot currently explain is unexplainable and was therefore an act of god.

FALSE CONTINUUM
The idea that because there is no definitive demarcation line between two extremes, that the distinction between the extremes is not real or meaningful: There is a fuzzy line between cults and religion, therefore they are really the same thing.

FALSE DICHOTOMY
Arbitrarily reducing a set of many possibilities to only two, For example, evolution is not possible, therefore we must have been created (assumes these are the only two possibilities). This fallacy can also be used to oversimplify a continuum of variation to two black and white choices. For example, science and pseudoscience are not two discrete entities, but rather the methods and claims of all those who attempt to explain reality to fall along a continuum from one extreme to the other.

INCONSISTENCY
Applying criteria or rules to one belief, claim, argument, or position but not to others. For example, some consumer advocates argue that we need stronger regulation of prescription drugs to ensure their saftey and effectiveness, but at the same time argue that medicinal herbs should be sold with no regulation for either safety or effectiveness.

NON-SEQUITUR
In Latin this term translates to "doesn't follow". This refers to an argument in which the conclusion does not necessarily follow the premises. In other words, a logical connection is implied where none exists.

POST-HOC ERGO PROPTER HOC
This fallacy follows the basic format of: A preceded B, therefore A caused B, and therefore assumes cause and effect for two events just because they are temporally related(the latin translates to "after this, therefore because of this").

REDUCTIO AD ABSURDUM
In formal logic, the reductio ad absurdum is a legitimate argument. It follows the form that if the premises are assumed to be true it necessarily leads to an absurd (false) conclusion and therefore one or more premises must be false. The term is now often used to refer to the abuse of this style of argument, by stretching the logic in order to force an absurd conclusion. For example a UFO enthusiast once argued that if I am skeptical about the existence of alien visitors, I must also be skeptical of the existence of the Great Wall of China, since I have not personally seen either. This is a false reductio ad absurdum because he is ignoring evidence other than personal eyewitness evidence, and also logical inference. In short, being skeptical of UFO's does not require rejecting the existence of the Great Wall.

SLIPPERY SLOPE
This logical fallacy is the argument that a position is not consistent or tenable because accepting the position means that the extreme of the position must also be accepted. But moderate positions do not necessarily lead down the slippery slope to the extreme.

SPECIAL PLEADING, OR AD-HOC REASONING
This is a subtle fallacy which is often difficult to recognize. In essence, it is the arbitrary introduction of new elements into an argument in order to fix them so that they appear valid. A good example of this is the ad-hoc dismissal of negative test results. For example, one might point out that ESP has never been demonstrated under adequate test conditions, therefore ESP is not genuine phenomenon. Defenders of ESP have attempted to counter this argument by introducing the arbitrary premise the ESP does not work in the presence of skeptics. This fallacy is often taken to ridiculous extremes, and more and more bizarre ad hoc elements are added to explain experimental failures or logical inconsistencies.

STRAW MAN
Arguing against a position which you create specifically to be easy to argue against, rather than position actually held by those who oppose your point of view.

TAUTOLOGY
Tautology is an argument that utilizes circular reasoning, which means that the conclusion is also its own premise. The structure of such arguments is A=B therefore A=B, although the premise and conclusion might be formulated differently so it is not immediately apparent as such. For example, saying that therapeutic touch works because it manipulates the life force is a tautology because the definition of therapeutic touch is the alleged manipulation (without touching) of the life force.

THE MOVING GOALPOST
A method of denial arbitrarily moving the criteria for "proof" or acceptance out of range of whatever evidence currently exists.

TU QUOQUE
Literally, you too. This is an attempt to justify wrong action because someone else also does it. "My evidence maybe invalid, but so is yours."

UNSTATED MAJOR PREMISE
This fallacy occurs when one makes an argument which assumes a premise which is not explicitly stated. For example, arguing that we should label food products with their cholesterol content because Americans have high cholesterol assumes that: 1) cholesterol in food causes high serum cholesterol; 2) labeling will reduce consumption of cholesterol; and 3) that having a high serum cholesterol in unhealthy. This fallacy is also sometimes called begging the question.

Similarities Between Humans And Animals

Humans vs. animals
Humans have long considered themselves truly unique. But it turns out that the better word from "unique" is "most advanced". Every year scientists prove that some purely human traits are found in animals.


Long term memory
Clark's nutcrackers remember for at least half a year, where they put seeds - and they use 5 thousand caches in a 15-mile area.

Counting and complex communication
Chimpanzees have similar basic arithmetic mental, non-verbal skills as humans.
Although chimpanzees can't really communicate verbally, they can do it through sign language.

Emotions
Elephants feed and wait for crippled herd member, showing empathy.

Culture
Wild dolphins, which were recovering from an illness in adelaide dolphinarium, learned to tail-walk only from dolphins living in captivity, without human trainers.

Tool use and construction
Ravens use stones to crack eggs, sometimes immobilizing an egg with a bigger stone and hitting it with a smaller one.

Sense of humor
Apes in the wild have been recorded to taunt tiger cubs by pulling their ears, tails and patting them - and escaping later, only to return and do it again.

Self-awareness
All great apes, dolphins, elephants and magpies recognize their reflection in the mirror, if they see anything unusual they try to rub it and remove it.


Speed
Human body is inferior to animals - except long-distance running.

Peregrine falcon while diving reaches 320 km/h
White-throated needletail is the fastest flying bird in level flight, reaching 170 km/h
Fastest running animal is cheetah 120 km/h
Fastest swimming fish - shortfin mako shark 50 km/h

Eyesight
Eagles boast vision 8 times sharper than humans.

Hearing and communication range
A whales sound will travel up to 1800 km.

Lifespan
Longest living animal is quahog clam, the record is 405-410 years. Some tortoises live up to 200 years.

Size
Biggest animals are blue whales, heaviest weighted 190 tons

Long distance running
But no animal beats humans when it comes to long distance running. Yiannis Kouros, leading ultramarathon runner, did 160 km in 11h 46m

Pandemics That Shaped Our World


Because a virus doesn't care about state lines or national borders, it can wipe out millions and span multiple continents rapidly. Here is a look at the infectious diseases the world has battled throughout the history.

What is a Pandemic?
Derived from the greek word pandemos meaning "pertaining to all people," a pandemic is a widespread disease that affects humans over a wide geographic area.

SMALLPOX 10,000 BC - 1979
300+ million dead.
Symptoms: Fever, Headache, Fatigue, Vomiting, Diarrhea, Lesions.

In terms of an estimated death toll, smallpox is the deadliest pandemic in history. The highly contagious, rash- inducing infection has killed more than 500 million people. Some believe that 90 percent of the native population of the New World was wiped out by the disease.

MEASLES 7th Century BC - 1963
200 million dead.
Symptoms: Fever, Rash, Cough, Sore Throat, Red Eyes.

SPANISH FLU 1918 - 1919
50-100 million dead.
Symptoms: Fatigue, Fever, Headache, Skin Discoloration, Bleeding, Vomiting.

BLACK DEATH 1340 - 1771
75 million dead.
Symptoms: Bubo (it's an abnormal swelling of the lymph nodes).

Ring Around the Rosie, a Pocket Full of Plague.
Legend says the Black Death plague inspired the children's rhyme "Ring Around The Rosy," which alluded to the rash-like rings and ashes of the deceased victims.

HIV / AIDS 1981 - Today
25+ million dead.
Symptoms: Fever, Chills, Bubo, Weight Loss.

PLAGUE OF JUSTINIAN 541 - 750
25 million dead.
Symptoms: Fever, Chills, Seizures, Bubo, Skin Discoloration.

THIRD PANDEMIC 1855
12 million dead.
Symptoms: Fever, Headache, Fatigue, Vomiting, Diarrhea, Lesions.

TYPHUS 430 BC - Today
4 million dead.
Symptoms: Lesions, Fever, Cough, Headache, Nausea, Vomiting.

CHOLERA 1817 - Today
3 million dead.
Symptoms: Diarrhea, Vomiting, Nausea, Dehydration.

HONG KONG FLU 1968 - 1969
1 million dead.
Symptoms: Fever, Headache, Fatigue, Vomiting, Diarrhea, Lesions.

Honorable Mentions
Although the following viruses do not have a figure for total amount of lives claimed, they continue to terrorize various areas around the world.

MALARIA 1600 - Today
Common symptoms: Chills, Headache, Fever, Jaundice, Muscle Pain, Nausea, Vomiting, Seizures.
Death toll: According to the World Health Organization's 2010 "World Malaria Report," an estimated 781,000 people are killed by the virus every year.

TUBERCULOSIS 700 BC - Today
Common symptoms: Chest Pain, Cough, Fever, Chills, Fatigue.
Death toll: There are almost 2 million tuberculosis-related deaths worldwide every year.

YELLOW FEVER 16th Century - Today
Common symptoms: Bleeding, Fever, Nausea, Vomiting, Delirium, Seizures, Jaundice
Death toll : Worldwide, 30 000 deaths are caused by the infection every year.

Photoshop vs GIMP



The question of which is better, Gimp or Photoshop, basically revolves around whether you’re a graphic designer or someone who just needs to get a job done. Apple/Macintosh and Windows users war with Open Source purists over issues like these, and Adobe experts duel with oftentimes frustrated Linux users. Things like this can easily get ugly, especially since Adobe has not seen fit to port their high end graphics programs to Linux.

For the sake of clarity, let's look at some of the attributes and liabilities each of these programs bring to the table with them.


Photoshop wins the feature battle hands down. It's an older, far more mature project with a huge staff of capable programmers. That said, ordinary users need only a tiny fraction of what either Photoshop or Gimp are capable of doing. If you want to create a great looking logo or some icons or dress up a web page, Gimp is more than adequate. If you work in a graphic production environment for print publications, you can forget Gimp. It doesn’t have the kind of CMYK+ support print people need, and its font handling is atrocious compared to Photoshop.

Both programs are difficult for a complete novice to learn. Even things that would seem simple, like drawing a rectangle, require way more insider’s knowledge than most users bring with them. While Gimp’s UI is quirky but somehow still productive, Photoshop’s is far more polished with loads more fit and finish.

Adobe’s Photoshop documentation is well integrated, comprehensive, and feels like the work of a competent team that put hundreds of man-years into the job. Gimp’s documentation is hard to find and comes as a separate download. It’s much lower rent-looking and not at all pretty, but it’s thorough and will help you get the job done once you can find it.

There are a couple of good books on Gimp. No bad ones that I’ve seen. There are literally hundreds of books on Photoshop, many of them of very high quality. If you think of websites as documentation there are thousands devoted to each one, but Photoshop still wins hands down. Gimp folk will tell you about Gimpshop, which makes Gimp look a lot like Photoshop.

Gimp is free. Photoshop is comparatively expensive, though given its feature set, Photoshop is amazingly cheap.

Gimp support is haphazard. They don’t have a central support team, like Adobe. But it’s free, and if you’re persistent you will most certainly find the answer on a forum somewhere without paying a cent. On the other hand, Adobe support is expensive but has higher availability. Third party support for Photoshop is a universe of its own, with everything from your local PC configurator guy’s girlfriend to straight off the Adobe Classroom certification.

Photoshop isn’t copy protected, but you do have to register it. Adobe is generous about letting you run on both a desktop and a laptop, for example, and they haven’t balked even though I go through computers suspiciously fast (nothing sinister, they just deteriorate quickly in my house). Still… Gimp is free and certainly doesn’t require registration. 

Photoshop is much nicer to use than Gimp. It's highly polished and clearly at the head of the class. Gimp is still full of rough edges, for example its difficult to use text tool.

Programming Gimp is not for the fainthearted. Photoshop has a much more comprehensive automation model. You can do lots of awesome stuff with Gimp nonetheless. Much of its default functionality is in the form of plugins built with Gimp’s unusual Script-Fu language. You can hack Gimp in Python, but that means a less unified experience. 

All graphic artists know Photoshop. They have to. It pays the bills. Only a tiny fraction of professionals know and use Gimp. If you want to find good artists cheap, stick to Photoshop. 

Photoshop is measurably better than Gimp in every significant way. To me the most persuasive reasons to go with Photoshop are the availability of good artists and the greatly increased likelihood that in case of emergency, you will do much better finding a solution with Photoshop due to the vast third party landscape.


Mumble vs Teamspeak 3


Mumble and Teamspeak 3 are both high quality voice over ip programs, but which one is better? We all know that teamspeak is the popular one, but just because it's popular doesnt make it the best Voip. Stability on both seem to be relatively same.

Mumble has a reliable overlay whereas teamspeak 3 will crash in every couple of hours or so for most users. The overlay doesnt even work with some of the video cards and if it does it's seriously glitched or making the game crash itself. Though overlay is not needed if you're playing with close friends because you easily recognize their voices but if you are put together with 20 strangers, it becomes a problem.

If your internet connection is not that great mumble also lowers your voice quality, it might sound a bit robotic but it doesnt break up the connection, like it would in teamspeak. So you dont have to repeat yourself several times.

Speedwise mumble wasn't that great awhile back but now both are equal, mumble being faster about 2 milliseconds.


Mumble
Operating systems - Linux, Mac OS X, Windows, Android
License - BSD
Protocols/based upon/compatible with - CELT / Speex
Encryption - TLS and OCB-AES128
Max conference peers - No max (limited only by server bandwidth and memory)
Other capabilities - Chat with (limited) embedded HTML, Automatic Gain Control, Access Control Lists for user management, Customizable In-Game Overlay, Directional Audio, Plugin Support, Nested Channels, Echo cancellation, Logitech G15 support


TeamSpeak
Operating systems - Linux, Windows, Mac OS X
License - Freeware Closed / Proprietary
Protocols/based upon/compatible with - Speex
Encryption - Yes (Optional)
Max conference peers - Unknown
Other capabilities - Conferencing, File Transfers, Plugin Support, Logitech G15 support, In-Game Overlay


Overall when it comes down to it they are almost the same thing, more bells and whistles in TS3 then Mumble but Mumble was made to me simplistic anyways and if your friends are already on TS3 it's hard to switch over to Mumble.