Every once in a while you stumble upon extraordinary people that make you really re-think about the current affairs and the ways of the traditional education systems.
Speculating about future is is most of the time futile, let alone about the distant 100,000 years kind of future. But we can always guess and if there is science involved we even might be onto something.
Crows are one of the smartest birds around, but they don't stand a chance against lightning fast and agile falcons. Watch this amazing video to learn how falcons hunt in mid-air from their very perspective.
Sailing stones, also called sliding or moving rocks is a geological phenomenon where rocks tend to move and leave long tracks into a valley surfaces like deserts without human or animal intervention.
Apparently Google Glass lets you take pictures by only a wink gesture. It has a second little cam/sensor facing the person wearing it which is suppose to detect eye movement and blinking gestures.
Another amazing project using the legendary Lego bricks. Photographer and talented photoshopper created mind-blowing images of Lego-build Star Wars scenes.
Daylight saving was first introduced by European countries during World War I, with much of the U.S. joining the party in 1918. The idea was that more hours of daylight would "conserve coal for the war effort.