Search This Blog

Thursday 9 January 2014

You Won't Believe This Is A Video Game

Psychologists Say Our Names Affect What Careers We Choose, You Will Not Believe This Is A Video Game, Bizarre Photos Of Upside Down People Wearing Clothes That Appear Right Side-Up, What Roger Ailes Did To His Hometown Newspaper, Meet The Guys Who Drove Across The U.S. In A Record 65 Hours (In 1931)
The Daily Digg
Thursday, January 9, 2014
Digg
THE DESTINY OF ANTHONY WEINER
Psychologists Say Our Names Affect What Careers We Choose
newrepublic.com
Can we blame Ron Paul's political ambitions on his last name? Research suggests that people choose—or are unconsciously drawn to—careers that resemble their own names.
BASICALLY REAL LIFE
You Will Not Believe This Is A Video Game
digg.com
Yesterday, we put up a tech demo of the engine being used to generate what is frighteningly close to photo-realistic video game graphics. This is the trailer for the game based on that engine. Although it's easier to pick apart when you're looking at human faces, pretty much everything else is hard to separate from reality.
DOES NOT WORK WELL WITH TANK TOPS
Bizarre Photos Of Upside Down People Wearing Clothes That Appear Right Side-Up
laughingsquid.com
In the bizarre photo series "Head Over Heels," people perform handstands while wearing their clothes inverted (shirt on legs, pants on upper body), resulting in a topsy-turvy image of an upside down person wearing clothes that appear right-side-up.
CITIZEN AILES
What Roger Ailes Did To His Hometown Newspaper
nymag.com
When the head of Fox News moved to Garrison, New York, he bought a little newspaper and tried to instill his own brand of American values.
AND WEREN'T PROSECUTED FOR IT
Meet The Guys Who Drove Across The U.S. In A Record 65 Hours (In 1931)
jalopnik.com
Ed Bolian may have been able to cross the country in just 28 hours and 50 minutes in a modified Mercedes CL55 AMG and modern highways, but in 1931, things were a lot more difficult. Here's the story.
Read more on Digg.com →
NO GIANT ENEMY CRAB THOUGH
Image: Sony CEO and President Kazuo Hirai gives his keynote address on the opening day of the 2014 International CES on January 7, 2014 in Las Vegas, Nevada.
Sony CEO and President Kazuo Hirai gives his keynote address on the opening day of the 2014 International CES on January 7, 2014 in Las Vegas, Nevada. Credit: ROBYN BECK/AFP/Getty Images/Newscom
Digg for iPhone & iPad   •   Twitter   •   Facebook
digg.com   •   Unsubscribe
© 2014 News.me Inc. 416 West 13th Street #203, NY, NY 10014

No comments:

Post a Comment