Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Ala. ban of wine with nude label is marketing boon

Friday, July 31st, 2009

Can our Southern states get any lamer. They ban a wine because of a drawing of a nude nymph on it? They seriously need to revise some laws there. And check out the picture here. It’s like a 1920’s drawing!! Not even sexual!!! Wake up people!!
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By PHILLIP RAWLS, Associated Press Writer Phillip Rawls, Associated Press Writer – Fri Jul 31, 7:09 am ET

MONTGOMERY, Ala. – Alabama’s ban on a wine that features a nude nymph on the label became a business opportunity for a California vintner who is preparing a marketing campaign to capitalize on being “Banned in Bama.”

The Alabama Alcoholic Beverage Control Board recently told stores and restaurants to quit serving Cycles Gladiator wine because of the label. Board attorney Bob Martin said the stylized, art-nouveau rendition of a nude female with a flying bicycle violated Alabama rules against displaying “a person posed in an immoral or sensuous manner.”

Bill Leigon, president of Hahn Family Wines in Soledad, Calif., said Thursday that visits to the company’s Web site have increased tenfold since news of the ban broke late last week, and callers from across the country have been asking where they can buy the wine.

Because of the interest, he’s developing store displays that say “Banned in Bama” and “Taste What They Can’t Have in Alabama.”

Hahn said he will never miss the 500 cases sold annually in Alabama. “There is going to be a significant increase in our sales,” he predicted.

Rosanna Guardagno, a social psychologist at the University of Alabama, said a ban often increases people’s interest in a product.

“The ABC Board, without realizing it, is going to boost their sales,” she said.

The wine’s label is copied from an 1895 French advertising poster for Cycles Gladiator bicycles. It shows a side view of a full-bodied nymph flying alongside a winged bicycle.

Martin said the ABC Board rejected the label last year, which meant the product wasn’t supposed to be sold in Alabama. A citizen recently sent a bottle to the board to show it was still being sold in the state, prompting the letter to restaurants and stores to stop sales, he said.

Hahn’s president said he was unaware of the ABC Board’s rejection until the letter was sent to retailers. He said the poster is a classic piece of art, with originals selling for as much as $50,000.

Although nude art bothers the alcohol board, it’s not a problem for some other branches of Alabama government.

The Alabama Tourism Department distributes a brochure with a cover featuring Hiram Powers’ 19th century nude statue, The Greek Slave, which is on display at the Westervelt Warner Museum of American Art in Tuscaloosa. It is available in museums statewide, interstate highway welcome centers and visitors’ bureaus statewide.

“We haven’t had any concerns about it,” Tourism Director Lee Sentell said.

And Alabama’s Capitol has historic paintings on display, including two that show several topless female Indians.

Guardagno, who studies social influences, said people allow more freedom of expression in art than in advertising.

“With art, you have to be really explicit with how a person’s body is displayed before people are offended,” she said.

Woman finds ’stolen’ Audi in neighbor’s garage

Friday, July 31st, 2009

See!! Here we go again. There has got to be something seriously wrong in Germany!!!

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From The Associated Press.

Thu Jul 30, 9:04 pm ET

BERLIN – An Audi sedan written off by an elderly German woman as stolen two years ago has resurfaced — in her neighbor’s garage beneath a thick layer of dust. Police said Thursday the 82-year-old from the northern city of Hildesheim took the car in for repairs two years ago and had the mechanics drive it back to her house and park it in her garage.

She got the keys and papers from her mailbox, but when she went to get the car it was nowhere to be found. So she reported it stolen.

Fast forward to Wednesday when her neighbor went to clean up his unused garage so it could be rented. He found the car under “a centimeter-deep coating of dust.”

It didn’t take police long to piece together that the mechanics had parked it in the wrong garage.
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The neighbor doens’t look in his garage for 2 freaking years!! Who doesn’t go into their garage for that freaking long? This is just way to lame.

Hayden Panettiere in her first nude scene

Friday, July 10th, 2009

Oh man!! I have been waiting for this for a while! Hayden is smokin’ hot! And I just found out that she will be doing her first nude scene in the new movie “I Love You Beth Cooper” released today July 10th.

Check out this article about her in OMG where she still talks about her insecurities, yet she says that she’s always been an exhibitionist. Running around in the nude freely and happily!

OMG article.

Damn!! I wish I had known more girls like her when I was in school! You know, then enjoying running around naked part. Would have made growing up way more fun and interesting.
Anyways! As I said….She is way hot!

Happy B-day Nikola Tesla

Friday, July 10th, 2009

Today we celebrate Nikola Tesla’s Birthday!! One of the greatest scientific minds of all. The father of modern electricity and inventor of crap loads of stuff we use everyday. He also is the father of modern radio even though Marconi got credit for it. Check out my Tesla page here. He was a man way ahead of time and sadly many believed him to be crazy for the ideas he had. Today we still use many of those ideas and some that were thought crazy then are actually being looked into now. Recently there was a news article of about I forget which phone company that says they are developing a cell phone that can charge itself by absorbing the ambient radio signals in the area around. This was something Tesla was working on 100 years ago. being able to extract limitless power from the surrounding area. He was laughed at and now it is being looked at as a viable technology. I suggest to anyone reading this to go out and learn as much about Tesla as possible. Go out and pick up some of the books written about him. They are great reads. You can also read about how the US government entered his lab after his and confiscated everything. I bet they knew something about we didn’t. That they knew that his experiments were amazing and wanted complete control of them for themselves. Here’s some books about Tesla you may Enjoy.

I personally one each of these and they all have great information about this amazing genius. Happy Birthday Tesla!

Some interesting useless facts

Wednesday, June 17th, 2009

Did you know…..

As an advertising gimmick, Carl Mayer, nephew of lunch meat mogul Oscar Mayer, invented the company’s “Wienermobile”. On July 18, 1936, the first Oscar Mayer “Wienermobile” rolled out of General Body Company’s factory in Chicago. The Wienermobile still tours the U.S. today.

and…..

A device invented as a primitive steam engine by the Greek engineer Hero, about the time of the birth of Christ, is used today as a rotating lawn sprinkler.

13 Things to Know About Daylight Saving Time

Wednesday, June 17th, 2009

Americans will set their clocks ahead by an hour this weekend, as daylight saving time begins Sunday. “Springing forward” creates another hour of sunlight in the evening. It also has some effects on health and public safety that many people are unaware of. Interesting facts about daylight saving time include:

1. Officially, it’s “daylight saving time,” not “daylight savings time.” But don’t feel bad if you thought there was a final “s” on “saving”; far more people Google the incorrect phrase than the correct one.

2. Daylight saving time has mixed effects on people’s health. Transitions into and out of DST can disturb people’s sleeping patterns, for example, and make them more restless at night. Night owls tend to be more bothered by the time changes than people who like mornings, Finnish researchers concluded last year.

3. There’s a spike in heart attacks during the first week of daylight saving time, according to another study published last year. The loss of an hour’s sleep may make people more susceptible to an attack, some experts say. When daylight saving time ends in the fall, heart attacks briefly become less frequent than usual.

4. People are safer drivers during daylight hours, and researchers have found that DST reduces lethal car crashes and pedestrian strikes. In fact, a study concluded that observing DST year-round would annually prevent about 195 deaths of motor vehicle occupants and about 171 pedestrian fatalities.

5. A U.S. law signed by President George W. Bush in 2005 extended the length of daylight saving time by four weeks. It now begins at 2 a.m. on the second Sunday in March. It ends on the first Sunday in November.

6. Also in 2005, Kazakhstan abolished daylight saving time, citing negative health effects. The country’s government reportedly calculated that 51.6 percent of Kazakhs responded badly to the time change.

7. Many other countries observe daylight saving time, but not all do so on the same day. That can create confusion for international travelers, business communications, and more.

8. Daylight saving can also cause confusion close to home. In March 2007, a Pennsylvania honor student was mistakenly accused of threatening his school with a bomb. He had actually called an automated line to get info about scheduled classes. Someone else made the bomb threat an hour later.

9. Two states–Arizona and Hawaii–and three U.S. territories–American Samoa, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands–don’t observe daylight saving time. Indiana adopted DST in 2006.

10. Local time determines when DST begins, so America’s eastern time zone makes the switch before the rest of the country. This Sunday, cities like New York and Atlanta will be two hours ahead of the central time zone, instead of the usual one-hour difference, from 3 a.m. to 3:59 a.m. EDT. New York City will be four hours ahead of Los Angeles–instead of the usual three–from 3 a.m. to 5:59 a.m. EDT.

11. Daylight saving time was first used during World War I, as part of an effort in the United States and other warring countries to conserve fuel. In theory, using daylight more efficiently saves fuel and energy because it reduces the nation’s need for artificial light.

12. The first American to advocate for daylight saving was Benjamin Franklin. He realized in 1784 that many people burned candles at night yet slept past dawn in the summer, wasting early-morning sunlight.

13. The effect of DST on energy use has changed over time and varies from place to place. Experts even disagree on whether DST still saves the nation energy. But so many people like to “spring forward” that it might be hard for officials to end the tradition, even if they determined it’s wasteful.

This article written by Ben Harder and appeared in Yahoo News on 03/06/09 (more…)

Nikola Tesla

Wednesday, June 17th, 2009





One of the greatest and least know of all the inventors.
Nikola Tesla was born July 9/10 in Smiljan, Croatia (nobody knows exactly when because of his mother) and died January 7, 1943 in New York City. He was a Serbian-American inventor and researcher who discovered the rotating magnetic field, the basis of most alternating-current machinery. He emigrated to the United States in 1884 and sold the patent rights to his system of alternating-current dynamos, transformers, and motors to George Westinghouse the following year. In 1891 he invented the Tesla coil, an induction coil widely used in radio technology.


Tesla was from a family of Serbian origin. His father was an Orthodox priest; his mother was unschooled but highly intelligent. A dreamer with a poetic touch, as he matured Tesla added to these earlier qualities those of self-discipline and a desire for precision.


Training for an engineering career, he attended the Technical University at Graz, Austria, and the University of Prague. At Graz he first saw the Gramme dynamo, which operated as a generator and, when reversed, became an electric motor, and he conceived a way to use alternating current to advantage. Later, at Budapest, he visualized the principle of the rotating magnetic field and developed plans for an induction motor that would become his first step toward the successful utilization of alternating current. In 1882 Tesla went to work in Paris for the Continental Edison Company, and, while on assignment to Strassburg in 1883, he constructed, in after-work hours, his first induction motor. Tesla sailed for America in 1884, arriving in New York, with four cents in his pocket, a few of his own poems, and calculations for a flying machine. He first found employment with Thomas Edison, but the two inventors were far apart in background and methods, and their separation was inevitable.


In May 1885, George Westinghouse, head of the Westinghouse Electric Company in Pittsburgh, bought the patent rights to Tesla’s polyphase system of alternating-current dynamos, transformers, and motors. The transaction precipitated a titanic power struggle between Edison’s direct-current systems and the Tesla-Westinghouse alternating-current approach, which eventually won out.

Tesla soon established his own laboratory, where his inventive mind could be given free rein. He experimented with shadowgraphs similar to those that later were to be used by Wilhelm Röntgen when he discovered X-rays in 1895. Tesla’s countless experiments included work on a carbon button lamp, on the power of electrical resonance, and on various types of lighting.


Tesla gave exhibitions in his laboratory in which he lighted lamps without wires by allowing electricity to flow through his body, to allay fears of alternating current. He was often invited to lecture at home and abroad. The Tesla coil, which he invented in 1891, is widely used today in radio and television sets and other electronic equipment. That year also marked the date of Tesla’s United States citizenship.


Westinghouse used Tesla’s system to light the World’s Columbian Exposition at Chicago in 1893. His success was a factor in winning him the contract to install the first power machinery at Niagara Falls, which bore Tesla’s name and patent numbers. The project carried power to Buffalo by 1896.


In 1898 Tesla announced his invention of a teleautomatic boat guided by remote control. When skepticism was voiced, Tesla proved his claims for it before a crowd in Madison Square Garden.


In Colorado Springs, Colo., where he stayed from May 1899 until early 1900, Tesla made what he regarded as his most important discovery– terrestrial stationary waves. By this discovery he proved that the Earth could be used as a conductor and would be as responsive as a tuning fork to electrical vibrations of a certain frequency. He also lighted 200 lamps without wires from a distance of 25 miles (40 kilometres) and created man-made lightning, producing flashes measuring 135 feet (41 metres). At one time he was certain he had received signals from another planet in his Colorado laboratory, a claim that was met with derision in some scientific journals.


Returning to New York in 1900, Tesla began construction on Long Island of a wireless world broadcasting tower, with $150,000 capital from the American financier J. Pierpont Morgan. Tesla claimed he secured the loan by assigning 51 percent of his patent rights of telephony and telegraphy to Morgan. He expected to provide worldwide communication and to furnish facilities for sending pictures, messages, weather warnings, and stock reports. The project was abandoned because of a financial panic, labour troubles, and Morgan’s withdrawal of support. It was Tesla’s greatest defeat.


Tesla’s work then shifted to turbines and other projects. Because of a lack of funds, his ideas remained in his notebooks, which are still examined by engineers for unexploited clues. In 1915 he was severely disappointed when a report that he and Edison were to share the Nobel Prize proved erroneous. Tesla was the recipient of the Edison Medal in 1917, the highest honour that the American Institute of Electrical Engineers could bestow.


Tesla allowed himself only a few close friends. Among them were the writers Robert Underwood Johnson, Mark Twain, and Francis Marion Crawford. He was quite impractical in financial matters and an eccentric, driven by compulsions and a progressive germ phobia. But he had a way of intuitively sensing hidden scientific secrets and employing his inventive talent to prove his hypotheses. Tesla was a godsend to reporters who sought sensational copy but a problem to editors who were uncertain how seriously his futuristic prophecies should be regarded. Caustic criticism greeted his speculations concerning communication with other planets, his assertions that he could split the Earth like an apple, and his claim of having invented a death ray capable of destroying 10,000 airplanes at a distance of 250 miles (400 kilometres).


After Tesla’s death the custodian of alien property impounded his trunks, which held his papers, his diplomas and other honours, his letters, and his laboratory notes. These were eventually inherited by Tesla’s nephew, Sava Kosanovich, and later housed in the Nikola Tesla Museum in Belgrade. Hundreds filed into New York City’s Cathedral of St. John the Divine for his funeral services, and a flood of messages acknowledged the loss of a great genius. Three Nobel Prize recipients addressed their tribute to “one of the outstanding intellects of the world who paved the way for many of the technological developments of modern times.” (I.W.H.)

As you no doubt have guessed, Tesla is one of my favorite of inventors. His wish to provide free energy to the world was honorable. If it hadn’t been for the greedy corporations we have, I believe the world to day would be much different. Tesla’s belief that all can enjoy Free Energy is shared by thousands who still try to relearn all of Tesla’s secrets. Check out this site for lots more Free Energy ideas and views. Also search for more Tesla related info here. If you would like more info feel free to order any one or all of the books I listed above. You’ll be surprised you knew so little of this man.

Cool Cats!!!!

Friday, February 27th, 2009

These cats are rocking!! Very well choreographed! I’m impressed!!! HAHAHAHHA!!!

Gallery

Wednesday, February 11th, 2009

Stuff I have finished.

My Growler:

The Syko Ward’s War Room

Wednesday, February 11th, 2009

Welcome to…. Syko Ward’s War Room. Here at the Syko Ward we believe games are a
relaxing way to unwind, and what better way to unwind, than to destroy an opponent
on the field of battle! Here we will be showcasing some of our favorite games that we
love to play or just collect. Here you will also find information on terrain building, sculpting,
conversions, casting and more. We will be posting Battle Reports so you can see the
outcome of our own battles. Also feel free to submit any interesting article or tid bits
of information you think will benefit others in our hobby. For now… feel free to visit all
our rooms here at Syko Ward’s War Room.

First up. I’ve made some very badly needed improvements….Like updates! I’ve
added a whole lot of pictures here to show my ever growing progress. Most recently my brand new and updates WAAAGH!!!! Drool…all the new GW Ork stuff is so cool!!!

I’ve gotten into a major building and painting spree. I’ve been putting together a
whole bunch of models and figures as well as getting them painted. Imagine
that…painted figs! Whooda thunk it!

You’ll find stuff here that haven’t seen the light of day my house in upto five years in
some cases some longer and some shorter (as you know we can never stop buying
new stuff :)

So keep on the look out for more posts here!!!

The Gallery – Finished Projects