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There are some things in life that everybody just knows, like where the Eiffel Tower is, or why it’s okay to catch a butterfly with your hands, but not a bee. These are examples of the kind of knowledge that is so basic, you just pick it up naturally throughout your life and couldn’t possibly [...]
Posted by Simon Griffin on Friday, May 17, 2013 at 12:01 am
Filed under Bizarre, History · Tagged Alexander Graham Bell, Antonio Meucci, big bang, big bang theory, charles darwin, Charles Lindbergh, Columbus, Darwin, Erasmus Darwin, first President of the United States, George Washington, John Alcock, LIght Bulb, President of the United States, presidents, printing, printing press, Thomas Edison
Standing in the frigid shadows of a superpower is never easy, but Canadians make it look so. Of course, part of the reason may be because they’re bigger than we are (barely) and consider themselves part of a worldwide commonwealth, but who knows. In any case, and despite our miniscule population (about a tenth of [...]
Posted by Jeff Danelek on Tuesday, February 21, 2012 at 12:01 am
Filed under People · Tagged Alex Trebek, Alexander Graham Bell, Avatar, Bobby Orr, Buffalo Springfield, canada, celine dion, Christopher Plummer, Edmonton, George Lucas, Gordie Howe, hockey player, James Cameron, James T. Kirk, Jeff Danelek, Jim Carrey, John Kenneth Galbraith, joni mitchell, Keanu Reeves, Mario Lemieux, michael j fox, Montreal, Neil Young, NHL, Ontario, pamela anderson, Peter Jennings, Pierre Trudeau, Quebec, Sandra Bullock, Sarah McLachlan, Shania Twain, Star Trek VI, Toronto, United States, wayne gretzky, William Shatner, www.ourcuriousworld.com
We all believe things to be true that are, in fact, quite wrong. Many of these “facts” we learned in school, while some of them we picked up from friends or on TV—or just “heard somewhere.” Whatever their source, however, they have subsequently proven to be erroneous, demonstrating once again that just because something is [...]
Posted by Jeff Danelek on Wednesday, June 1, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Education · Tagged 10% of Our Brain, Alexander Graham Bell, charles darwin, Charles Lindbergh, Columbus, Discover North America, facts, famous facts, First Man to Cross the Atlantic Ocean by Air, First to Fly an Airplane, JFK Assassination, Roosevelt’s New Deal, Telephone, Theory of Evolution, Thomas Edison, Thomas Edison Invented the Light Bulb, United States Lost the Vietnam War, wright brothers, wrong facts
How to determine who the greatest inventors in history were is often a passionate and, at times, even a heated debate. Many men can lay claim to having invented or, at very least, perfecting someone else’s obscure invention, making such a listing problematic at best. Fortunately, I don’t maintain any personal favorites, which will hopefully [...]
Posted by Jeff Danelek on Monday, January 24, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Engineering, History, People, Science · Tagged AC power system, activist, Al Iskandariyah Governorate, Alexander Graham Bell, Alexandria, and diplomat, Archimedes of Syracuse, author, Benjamin Franklin, cancer detection, Colorado, computer processor, Connecticut, consumer electronics, Deaf people, Deists, Denver, diamond coating technologies, Edwin Land, egypt, electric power systems, electricity, Franklin, Franklin stove, George Westinghouse, greatest inventors in history, Harvard University, Hero of Alexandria, hydrostatic electricity, invented devices, invention, Jeff Danelek, Jerome, Jerome Hal Lemelson, Nikola Tesla, Thomas Edison, United States
While we often imagine that the twentieth century was the era in which the greatest advances in technology and science occurred, many often overlook the remarkable advances that came out of the preceding century—advances which in themselves were equally as astonishing in their era as those of the twentieth century were for us. It’s also [...]
Posted by Jeff Danelek on Monday, August 9, 2010 at 12:01 am
Filed under Engineering, Science · Tagged 19th century inventions, Alexander Graham Bell, Alfred Vail, cotton gin, Diesel locomotive, electricity, Elisha Gray, Energy, Energy conversion, energy source, Engine, guns, Industrial Revolution, internal combustion engine, inventions, ironclad ships, Johann Reis, light blub, Locomotive, metal monsters, photography, rifle, Samuel Morse, Steam engine, Steam power, Telephone, THE TELEGRAPH, tom thumb
History books will often lead you to believe that the world’s great inventions and discoveries were the work of a single person with a flash of genius, but the reality is rarely that simple. In most cases, it was only after years of work and input from countless inventors that something was finally created. Still, [...]
Posted by Evan Andrews on Friday, May 28, 2010 at 12:01 am
Filed under Bizarre, History, Science · Tagged airplane, Alexander Graham Bell, Antonio Meucci, Astronomer, Auguste Lumiere, Calculus, discoveries, Electrical engineers, Elisha Gray, Engineering, film projection systems, flying machine, ford, Ford Motor Company, Frederick Albert Cook, George Cayley, Gustave Whitehead, HIV, Invention of Radio, Invention of the telephone, inventions, inventors, Isaac Newton, Jean-François Pilâtre de Rozier, Johann Philipp Reis, John Couch Adams, Joseph Wilson Swann, Karl Jatho, LIght Bulb, louis le prince, Louis Lumiere, Luc Montagnier, mathematician, National Geographic Society, Neptune, Nikola Tesla, north pole, Oliver Lodge, Patent law, patent officer, radio, Ralph Plaisted, Richard Pearse, Robert Gallo, Robert Kearns, Robert Peary, savvy businessman, science, technology, telecommunications, Telephone, Telephony, Thomas Edison, U.S. Supreme Court, Wilbur Wright, William Friese-Greene, Windshield Wiper