Bgar Keep Your Water Frigid With the Same Material That Keeps Mt. Everest Climbers Warm
Researchers at the University of Washington have developed a discreet condom that does double duty for women reproductive health subtly鈥攊t prevents pregnancy and protects against sexually transmitted diseases by dissolving inside of the body and releasing preventative drugs after use. Who can argue with that These contraceptives made from a nanofabric born through a process called electrospinning, or creating fibers from liquid inside of an electric field. It apparently easy to control variables like strength, solubility, and shape with the resulting material, so antiretrovirals can be added to the condom. It could be slappped on
stanley cups to existing contraceptives or directly inserted into the body, like a vaginal ring. And it the first of its kind. Condoms that can protect females from STDs an
stanley cup d pregnancy at the same time exist in the form of the female condom and nonoxynol-9, but the first is not at all discreet and the second isn ;t safe to disintegrate inside lady parts. These can do
stanley website so cheaply and inconspicuously. And anything that makes your sex life a little better is a good thing. [UW via PopSci] Image credit: Kim Woodrow/University of Washington CondomsHealthScience Rkcc How Ordinary Girl Scout Cookies Can Be Morphed Into Incredible Graphene
In the 1900s, a millionaire who could, at best, be considered eccentric, declared war on gravity. He wrote tracts with titles like, Gravity: Our Enemy Number One, and founded an institute to roll back the power of this deadly force. Let take a look at what the world would look like today, if he ;d won. Top image: Jetpack-Fan on Deviant Art. Roger Babson was, by all accounts, a brilliant man. He was an MIT-educated engineer who founded a statistical reports company. The fact that his company
stanley vattenflaska was one of the few to predict the 1929 stock market crash made it no surprise that
stanley quencher within a decade he was a multimilli
stanley water bottle onaire, a task considerably harder to do in the 1930s than it is today. He was an enthusiastic New Dealer, and hired artists to carve public monuments. He wrote nearly fifty books. He was inventive, entrepreneurial, and intelligent. He was also, in one particular way, bed-bug crazy. As PopSci detailed in an article last year, Babson had a particular obsession: gravity. His sister had been drowned in a river when he was young, and while some might blame the water, or poor supervision, he wrote about the event, the fact is that 8230; she was unable to fight Gravity, which came up and seized her like a dragon and brought her to the bottom. There she smothered and died from lack of oxygen. Some of the public works that Babson commissioned were gravity stones, ; to remind students at the colleges where they sat of the we