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Even as an adult who understands the risks, I hate wearing a bike helmet, but do it anyways. Kids, however, aren ;t quite as understanding. So these fake helmet mohawks known as Fohawx are supposed to convince them that safety is cool. Maybe it because I haven ;t been seven-years-old for a while now, but I ;m not convinced the younger version of
stanley mugs myself would have thought these were cool enough to warrant wearing a helmet. But I also grew up in a time when giant throwable metal spikes called Lawn Darts were considered safe, so maybe I ;m not the best person to ask. At the moment the $20 Fohawx are available in five different designs, including brightly colored moh
stanley cup awks that stand up, and hanging dredlox ;. And they attach to the helmet via a strip of velcro so they can be easily removed once your kid gets to
botella stanley the age when being cool is actually important to them. [Fohawx via Coolest Gadgets] Mnmp How to Make Sushi That Glows in the Dark
Earlier this week, the US House Science, Space and Technology Committee held a hearing on asteroid defense. With the Russian asteroid strike fresh in the public mind, it was a good time to discuss how prepared we are for the next incoming space rock. The panel discussed everything from how we should track potentially dangerous asteroid
stanley cup becher s, to what we ;d do if a big one were thre
stanley cup usa e weeks away from smashing into the planet to the latter question, NASA head Charles Bolden replied, pray. We have some solutions on the way from the burgeoning space industry. The LA Times ; Amina Khan reports: The Silicon Valley-based B612 Foundations plan to send an asteroid-hunting space telescope called the Sentinel into space in July 2018 would solve that problem, [NASA planetary scientist James] Green told the senators. We have discovered 10,000 near-Earth asteroids thus far 8230;. Sentinel will
stanley cups uk discover roughly that number every two weeks, said B612 chair Ed Lu, a former astronaut and another witness on the panel. EarthSky Mike Brennan has a good report on the hearings. He writes: John Holdren said the best way to detect objects that might be on a collision course with Earth would be to put an infrared-sensing telescope in a Venus-like orbit. Holdren estimated the cost of such a telescope to be between $500 million and $750 million. Another costly and time-intensive undertaking would be mounting a mission to divert a threatening object