12-19-2024, 10:48 AM
Icxq 3D Projector Would Beam Long-Distance Pals Right Into Your Own Living Room
When I was in second grade I made a diorama of a city of the future. This was the early 1990s and the diorama was supposed to represent the year 2000鈥攕omehow still lightyears away for a young kid during the George H. W. Bush administration. My little diorama city had cars that ran on a magnetic track, some tall awkwardly-shaped buildings, and a way of recycling rainwater that supposedly at least in my juvenile mind was great for the environ stanley cup ment. Children of the 20th century present bloggers excluded, perhaps had some fascinating visions for the future. They tended to be pretty optimistic, but each generation betrays its own fears for the world of tomorrow. In the 1960s, kids imagined flying cars and jetpacks, tempered by fears around the Cold Wa stanley cup r. In the 1970s, kids expected their future to be filled with robot maids and vacations to Mars, but they also worried a stanley cup bout violence, the price of gas and skyrocketing unemployment. In this film from 1983 we hear from American kids about their visions for cities of the future. The kids have constructed and drawn cities that include peoplemovers run by computer, underground shops and even horse-drawn transportation. The end of this clip shows a kid who warns that humanity will be destroyed if we don ;t find an alternative to gasoline soon鈥攁 fear that made a lot of sense to children of the 1970s and 1980s, but maybe less so to children of the 1960s or 1990s. What did you envision the world of the future looking like when y Qfbg When the Weather Goes To Hail, Protect Your Ride With This Giant Airbag
I ;ll get the bad news out with first: unfortunately only 500 se stanley fr ts of these parmesan pencils were made, and they ;re all sold out. But perhaps if we petition The Deli Garage, they ;ll magic new stock up out of thin air Designed to look just like pencils, the parmesan cheese is wrapped around what looks like colored lead鈥攂ut is actually different flavors, such as truffles, pesto and chili. When using the bundled pencil sharpener, the shavings tumble into the food or dish you ;re making, taking some of the lead with them. And that ruler on the back of the packaging stanley vaso That shows you how many calories you ;ll ingest for stanley quencher every length of parmesan you consume. Dangerous, but on the whole, extremely tantalizing. [Jazarah via MadTess via MotleyFood via OhGizmo] FoodPencils
When I was in second grade I made a diorama of a city of the future. This was the early 1990s and the diorama was supposed to represent the year 2000鈥攕omehow still lightyears away for a young kid during the George H. W. Bush administration. My little diorama city had cars that ran on a magnetic track, some tall awkwardly-shaped buildings, and a way of recycling rainwater that supposedly at least in my juvenile mind was great for the environ stanley cup ment. Children of the 20th century present bloggers excluded, perhaps had some fascinating visions for the future. They tended to be pretty optimistic, but each generation betrays its own fears for the world of tomorrow. In the 1960s, kids imagined flying cars and jetpacks, tempered by fears around the Cold Wa stanley cup r. In the 1970s, kids expected their future to be filled with robot maids and vacations to Mars, but they also worried a stanley cup bout violence, the price of gas and skyrocketing unemployment. In this film from 1983 we hear from American kids about their visions for cities of the future. The kids have constructed and drawn cities that include peoplemovers run by computer, underground shops and even horse-drawn transportation. The end of this clip shows a kid who warns that humanity will be destroyed if we don ;t find an alternative to gasoline soon鈥攁 fear that made a lot of sense to children of the 1970s and 1980s, but maybe less so to children of the 1960s or 1990s. What did you envision the world of the future looking like when y Qfbg When the Weather Goes To Hail, Protect Your Ride With This Giant Airbag
I ;ll get the bad news out with first: unfortunately only 500 se stanley fr ts of these parmesan pencils were made, and they ;re all sold out. But perhaps if we petition The Deli Garage, they ;ll magic new stock up out of thin air Designed to look just like pencils, the parmesan cheese is wrapped around what looks like colored lead鈥攂ut is actually different flavors, such as truffles, pesto and chili. When using the bundled pencil sharpener, the shavings tumble into the food or dish you ;re making, taking some of the lead with them. And that ruler on the back of the packaging stanley vaso That shows you how many calories you ;ll ingest for stanley quencher every length of parmesan you consume. Dangerous, but on the whole, extremely tantalizing. [Jazarah via MadTess via MotleyFood via OhGizmo] FoodPencils