Tuesday, January 28, 2014

The Image That Can Break Your Brain

The iPod Is Over, These Guys Build The World's Tallest Flagpoles For Dictators, Insane Movie Props You Can Buy On eBay Right Now, The Image That Can Break Your Brain, People Aren't Having Sex Nearly As Much As You Think
The Daily Digg
Tuesday, January 28, 2014
Digg
PLAYED OUT
The iPod Is Over
theverge.com
Apple's game changer is riding into the sunset.
YOU KNOW WHAT THEY SAY ABOUT FLAGPOLES
These Guys Build The World's Tallest Flagpoles For Dictators
vice.com
Marc Summers and David Chambers have a pretty unusual job. Together, through their company Trident Support Corporation, they build the world's tallest flagpoles for the authoritarian regimes of Central Asia and the Middle East.
SCHWARZENEGGER'S HEAD
Insane Movie Props You Can Buy On eBay Right Now
theweek.com
Who doesn't have a hundred grand to blow on a "Jurassic Park" velociraptor cage?
AVERT YOUR EYES
The Image That Can Break Your Brain
digg.com
Things that can hurt you just by looking at them are science fiction and fantasy, right? Well, not quite.
EVERYONE'S GOT COLD SHEETS
People Aren't Having Sex Nearly As Much As You Think
nerve.com
A new survey shows your dry spell is pretty normal.
Read more on Digg.com →
LIKE CIVIL WAR REENACTMENTS, BUT IN SNOW
Image: World War II re-enactors dressed as Soviet Red Army's (top) and Nazi Germany's (bottom) troops take part a staged battle to mark the 70th anniversary of the final raise of the Nazi blockade of the city of Leningrad, now St. Petersburg, in the village of Porogki in Leningrad region, on January 26, 2014. The German and Finnish siege and blockade of Leningrad was broken on January 18, 1943 but finally lifted a year after, on January 27, 1944. The city's name was changed back from Leningrad to St. Petersburg after the 1991 Soviet collapse.
World War II re-enactors dressed as Soviet Red Army's (top) and Nazi Germany's (bottom) troops take part a staged battle to mark the 70th anniversary of the final raise of the Nazi blockade of the city of Leningrad, now St. Petersburg, in the village of Porogki in Leningrad region, on January 26, 2014. The German and Finnish siege and blockade of Leningrad was broken on January 18, 1943 but finally lifted a year after, on January 27, 1944. The city's name was changed back from Leningrad to St. Petersburg after the 1991 Soviet collapse. Credit: OLGA MALTSEVA/AFP/Getty Images/Newscom
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