A MILLIONAIRE IDEA. THE ANTI STRESS CUBE
Many people need to hold an object in their hands, perhaps as an anti stress action or just as an obsession. It can be a pen you can flip, push the button or hit it on the table... or many other things. Think about it. Who "suffers" this condition the most? Those who work at home or in an office, of course!
This invention serves all those habits, and a bit more... and it's raised more than $3 million on Kickstarter when they only asked for $15,000.
If you wanna know more about the project,
click here.
Some days ago, Kaley Cuoco (Penny in "The Big Bang Theory"), was on everyone's lips because of a photo shared on Snapchat along with her stylist and friend Brad Goreski. This is the photo...
Kaley was one of the celebrities affected by the fappening... this is one of the pictures from the leak. This way you'll see what's hidden under the heart...
ANCIENT CIVILIZATIONS WITH SMARTPHONESImagine for a moment that ancient civilizations had smartphones. Instead of artistic carvings on stone or dusty manuscripts, the Mayans, pharaohs, and Roman emperors would have documented their daily lives with video selfies. What would their social media have looked like? What would Leonardo da Vinci have posted on his profile? And what if we had footage of the Titanic sinking, recorded by the passengers themselves?
Well, AI has done exactly that—recreating historical moments with mind-blowing realism, as if smartphones had always existed. From the Mayan civilization to the Victorian era, passing through the Roman Empire and Ancient Greece, these videos bring historical figures to life, capturing key moments through their own "cameras." Thomas Edison filming in his lab, the first woman to fly a plane sharing her achievement, or even the people of Pompeii recording their last day before the eruption of Mount Vesuvius.
Beyond how fascinating and surreal these images are, this opens up a huge opportunity in education. Imagine learning history not through boring books full of dates and names but by seeing the people of the past tell their own stories firsthand. Not just reading about the Library of Alexandria but watching it in its prime. Not memorizing facts about the Persian Empire but listening to its own citizens narrate their history.
With technology like this, social sciences would no longer be that dull subject we used to hate. Instead, they’d become an immersive experience, capable of transporting students directly into the past. History told by the people who lived it, with a level of closeness we could only dream of before.
# Watch video
The slow-motion clip of the day.