Pennsylvania Dustin Birch Beer

I'm awesome.
Nov 25
Permalink
Permalink

Ants count their steps.

Nov 24
Permalink
megzilla:



Boozecats.com, the site that Photoshops out alcohol and replaces it with cats. Where Edward Fortyhands becomes Edward Boozecathands.

megzilla:

Boozecats.com, the site that Photoshops out alcohol and replaces it with cats. Where Edward Fortyhands becomes Edward Boozecathands.

Permalink
B-fast of champions

B-fast of champions

Permalink

There once was a boy named Dustin...

That the world on him is always bustin’.
Broken windshield made him mad
Miles of traffic made him sad
And a Mazda3 he wants to get in.

Nov 23
Permalink

What a shit morning.

I got to stay up with a brutal stomach ache this morning so I could get my windshield smashed by something on the highway. Then when I got to work whatever my stomach was angry about wanted it gone. The Internet at work is down so I can’t research anything I need to and my iPhone will probably die before the end of the day. Awesome as hell.

Permalink
[Flash 10 is required to watch video.]

I made this on my DSi using flipnote studio.

Permalink
Fuck you too, life. Fuck you.

Fuck you too, life. Fuck you.

Nov 20
Permalink
Permalink
Permalink
Permalink
Alternate universe vampire batman

Alternate universe vampire batman

Nov 18
Permalink

motorless robot arm “air muscles”

Nov 17
Permalink

Scientists from Tokyo University discoveres a new material, that can “walk like a inchworm”. As you can see in this video, it’s very small - and very revolutionary, because the material can move, without electrical power. It’s coming all from a chemical reaction inside the material.
Shingo Maeda and colleagues made the colour-changing, motile gel by combining polymers that change in size depending on their chemical environment. This is based on an oscillating chemical reaction called the Belousov–Zhabotinsky (BZ) reaction. The result is an autonomous material that moves without electronic stimulation.

In short, the concentration of one or more compounds in the gel periodically increases and decreases, resulting in this “walking pattern”. Discovered by the Shuji Hashimoto applied physics laboratory the Waseda University in Tokyo.

Permalink

pianos played right can speak words