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Category: News

Tetris Cartridge Has $1 Million Price Tag

Got a spare million dollars you want to drop on an old ass autographed Tetris game cartridge? No? Oh come on…it’s autographed!

Granted, this isn’t just any Tetris. It’s an original Japanese Mega Drive Tetris cartridge in like-new condition. I can see that you’re still not reaching for your stack of credit cards. Let’s sweeten the deal. The case is also signed by Tetris creator Alekséi Pázhitnov.

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Paying Red-Light Camera Fines Are For Suckers!

Did you get a red-light camera ticket? Did you pay the fine? If you did, then you’re a sucker.

That’s the message that motorists in Los Angeles got when it was revealed that red-light camera fines – some of which were as high as $476 – were actually “voluntary.”

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Dutch Railway Station Installs Slide For Busy Passengers

Dutch train passengers running late to their appointments have a quicker option for getting across Overvecht Station – and that option isn’t a new flight of stairs or an elevator.

Design firm HIK Ontwerpers recently installed a slide in the newly renovated station on the Utrecht-Kampen railway to add a little fun to the everyday lives of commuters. Officially called a “transfer accelerator,” the slide was installed in this underutilized area as part of HIK Ontwerpers ongoing urban installations series.


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Why Do Fingers Wrinkle When They Get Wet?

Changizi thinks that the wrinkles act like rain treads on [tires]. They create channels that allow water to drain away as we press our fingertips on to wet surfaces. This allows the fingers to make greater contact with a wet surface, giving them a better grip.

Scientists have known since the mid-1930s that water wrinkles do not form if the nerves in a finger are severed, implying that they are controlled by the nervous system.

“I stumbled upon these nearly century-old papers and they immediately suggested to me that pruney fingers are functional,” says Changizi. “I discussed the mystery with my student Romann Weber, who said, ‘Could they be rain treads?’ ‘Brilliant!’ was my reply.

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Is your shampoo making you fat?

For years, the explanation for weight gain was straightforward: it was all about energy balance, or calories-in versus calories-out. This Gluttony and Sloth theory held that obesity simply came from overeating and underexercising, and the only debate was about dieting — whether it was better to join the low-fat or the low-carb camp.

Some scientists explored genetic differences associated with fat, but others said genes couldn’t possibly explain the rate at which Americans were gaining weight: “We just aren’t evolving that fast,” one obesity expert noted.

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