Wcgx From Google s Newest Pixels to a Tetris-Playing McNugget, These Were May s Coolest and Weirdest Gadgets
The initial reaction was a bit of curious disbelief, said Michael Brown, a conservation biologist with the Giraffe Conservation Foundation and the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute. In 2015, Brown and his colleagues were conducting photographic surveys of the Nubian giraffes in Murchison Falls National Park, Uganda, monitoring the animals abundance and geographic distribution. Sometimes, said Brown, the team can see hundreds of giraffes in a single day. That the animals all generally cut the same towering, gangly silhouette isnt a problem for figuring out whos who. We get to know the giraffes, and these populations, rather intimately, s
stanley becher aid Brown. Giraffes have unique coat patterns, and we are able to identify them as individuals using some pattern recognition. Gimli, a Ugandan giraffe that likely has skeletal dysplasia, takes a stroll. Photo: Michael Brown, GCF So when he and his team watched a distinctly short male giraffe strut out across the plain looking like a hasty Photoshop job in the flesh, it caught their attention. The [park] ranger we were working with and I, we looked at each other sort of to confirm that we w
stanley vattenflaska ere seeing the same thing, recounted Brown. The giraf
stanley thermos mug fe鈥攏icknamed Gimli, in honor of the dwarf character from Tolkiens Lord of the Rings鈥攈ad short legs but a typically proportioned neck, making it basically the corgi version of a giraffe. Three years later, the team found another male giraffe named Nigel with similar proportions on a priva Asay Watch Live as a Busted Boeing Starliner Returns to Earth Without Its Crew
From DARPAs invention of the modern electronic battlefield to an exploration of Buckminster Fullers FBI file 鈥?these were the longform blog posts you probably never found time to finish. Or the ones you never heard about in the first place. Either way, we hope you enjoy these articles from 2015 and wish you and yours a happy 2016. How
stanley cup the Vietnam War Brought High-Tech Border Surveillance to America From 1968 until 1973, the US military spent about $1 billion a year on a new computer-powered initiative intended to end the war in Vietnam. It went by many names over the years 鈥?including Practice Nine, Muscle Shoals, Illinois City and Dye Marker. But today its most commonly known as Operation Igloo White. Despite being a high-priced technological failure for the US military, Igloo White was the first real-time, computer-driven surveillance operation program, set up during the Vietnam War. The US military sought to build a virtual fence dividing North and South Vietnam. And in the process they helped to invent the modern electronic battlefield, whose technolog
stanley cup ies came back to the US in the early 1970s, where they were quickly deployed against drug cartels, smugglers, and anyone else trying to cross the border from Mexico. Igloo White also formed the bedr
stanley usa ock of a border surveillance revolution thats ongoing today. At the US-Mexico border, drones stalk the skies and electronic sensors alert Border Patrol agents to anyone trying to cross into the United States. Read the full sto