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Sunday 10 August 2014

The Week's Best Videos: Cooking Frozen Steaks, Anti-Gravity Fluids, And An Industrial-Strength Paper Cutter

Apparently You Shouldn't Be Thawing Your Frozen Steaks Before Cooking, There Are Ways To Clean A Camera, But This Isn't One Of Them, One Tiny Edit Can Make Any Commercial Infinitely Better, These Are The Countries Currently At War, This Industrial-Strength Paper Cutter Makes The Most Satisfying Sound, The Imagery In This Short Would Make Alejandro Jodorowsky Blush
The Daily Digg
Sunday, August 10, 2014
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HIGH STEAKS SCIENCE
Apparently You Shouldn't Be Thawing Your Frozen Steaks Before Cooking
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Do not just read that headline and run into the kitchen. We don't want you starting a grease fire.
'ADD A LITTLE SOAP'
There Are Ways To Clean A Camera, But This Isn't One Of Them
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As advertised, this probably cleaned the sensor of this man's camera. As a bonus it's almost certainly broken now.
DIGG PICKS
One Tiny Edit Can Make Any Commercial Infinitely Better
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A new subreddit is recontextualizing your favorite old commercials, one dirty joke at a time.
IT'S NOT JUST ISRAEL AND GAZA
These Are The Countries Currently At War
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Remember Libya? As much as the media is currently enthralled by Israel and, to a lesser extent, Ukraine, that's totally still happening.
*VZHOUUU*
This Industrial-Strength Paper Cutter Makes The Most Satisfying Sound
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One of the many benefits of your dad owning a printing press is being able to play with this awesome "instrument" that can totally chop your whole arm off.
'IRON SKY'
The Imagery In This Short Would Make Alejandro Jodorowsky Blush
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If you've always wanted to watch "The Holy Mountain" but didn't think you could handle a feature-length fever dream, this beautiful short is for you.
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YOU'RE SUPPOSED TO GO DOWN, IDIOT
Image: A new material developed by MIT makes fluids forget about gravity — a seemingly impossible task accomplished by a series of tiny hair-like structures that respond to magnetism. Science, you've done it again.
A new material developed by MIT makes fluids forget about gravity — a seemingly impossible task accomplished by a series of tiny hair-like structures that respond to magnetism. Science, you've done it again. Credit:
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