Szek What are the most beautiful places on Earth, as seen from space
Fast Company weaves an amazing story about Indian inventor Arunachalam Muruganantham, who lost his wife, friends, and, well, almost everything in his quest to build a better sanitary napkin by wearing one himself鈥攁long with a goat blood-filled bladder. After learning his wife along with the overwhelming majority of women in India couldn ;t afford a sanitary napkin Muruganantham set out to invent an inexpensive al
stanley us ternative. And although he tested his designs on women, he also ate his own dogfood by as Fast Company CoExist puts it Fashioning his own menstruating uterus by
stanley mugs filling a bladder with goat blood, Muruganantham went about his life while wearing women underwear, occasionally squeezing the contraption to test out his latest iteration. Amazingly, it worked. Kind of. As yo
stanley cups u might imagine, he needed to test it on women as well. Yet the process is even more amazing than the bladder. High school drop-out Muruganantham essentially punked multinationals into sending him sample raw materials they used to make napkins, and reverse engineered them to build a machine that creates low-cost cellulose that can in turn be used to make low-cost sanitary napkins. About $.25 for an 8-pack. But he doesn ;t sell the napkins. He sells the machines, which are funded by NGOs, and not only provide sanitary maxi pads to rural communities, but also jobs. The entire story is kind of mind-blowing, kind of inspirational, and kind of gross. Jhdn Darth Vader Will Guide You to the Dark Side. Or Maybe to the Store. Depends.
Yesterday we showed you a few methods for quickly chilling your Superbowl libations, but none are as fast, or easy, as West Coast Chillers new can which lowers the energy drink temperature by 30 degrees at the push of a button.
https://gizmodo/3-ways-to-chill-your-super-bowl-beer-fast-2-updates-5882160 Now you ;ve probably heard of these self cooling cans before, and that
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stanley thermoskannen because they ;ve actually been in development for over 18 years now. In fact, back in 1998 Pepsi was all set to use these same cans, but it was discovered that the refrigerant used contributed to greenhouse gases. So it was back to the drawing board for another 12 years while the company developed a suitable replacement that now uses environmentally-friendly activated carbon and carbon dioxide. The science behind how the cans actually work seems like it a closely guarded secret, but once the West Coast Chillers start popping up in stores for about $3 a can, I ;m sure we ;ll have the opportunity to open one up and see how it ticks. But, since the cooling mechanism is recyclable, maybe we
stanley termosy should just leave it a mystery. [West Coast Chill via Gizmag] ContainersFoodScience