Our Favorite Images From NASA’s Incredible New Apollo Gallery
Earlier this week, NASA uploaded an incredible treasure trove of images to a new gallery on Flickr: unprocessed photographs from all of the manned Apollo missions. They represent an incredible look into what the astronauts saw on their missions to the moon.
NASA’s astronauts are known for taking some of the world’s best pictures, but this gallery is a chance to see the raw results: untouched and unprocessed pictures of space. They’re high-resolution images that are perfect for reprocessing.
You can check out the entire gallery here, but we’ve pulled out some of our favorites from the over 8,400 images:
Apollo 7
S-IVB stage during rendezvous maneuvers.
Rendezvous with the S-IVB stage.
Looking down into the clouds.
Apollo 8
Earthrise.
Lunar Surface.
Looking back on the way home.
Apollo 9
Lunar Lander rendezvous and extraction.
Russell Schweickart’s EVA.
Apollo 10
The lunar surface.
Command Module Charlie Brown.
Apollo 11
Buzz Aldrin on the ride out.
Neil Armstrong, shortly after landing.
Buzz Aldrin carrying sensors.
LEM returning home.
Apollo 12
Astronaut on the lunar surface.
Lunar surface
Research
Astronaut Alan Bean.
Earth on the ride out.
Lunar Module landing
Apollo 13
Damaged parts.
Lunar Lander, unused.
Apollo 14
Lunar EVA
Commander Alan Shepherd Jr.
Lunar experiments
LEM
Apollo 15
Experiments
Lunar mountains
Astronaut and Lunar Rover
Astronaut, LEM and Lunar Rover
Apollo 16
Astronaut Thomas Mattingly
Commander John Young
Mattingly
Young
Apollo 17
Commander Gene Cernan
Commander Eugene Cernan during Lunar EVA
Pilot Ron Evans retrieving film canisters.
Command Module
Cernan, post EVA.
Photo Credits: NASA
via Gizmodo
Our Favorite Images From NASA’s Incredible New Apollo Gallery
News in Brief: Report: Increase In Gun Sales To Be Most Concrete Result Of Obama’s Pro-Gun-Control Speech
WASHINGTON—Researchers at the Urban Institute published a study Friday confirming that a sharp increase in gun sales nationwide would be the most concrete result of the impassioned pro-gun-control speech that President Obama delivered following yesterday’s mass shooting in Oregon. “According to our analysis, by far the most tangible impact of the president emotionally urging the nation to consider how their votes can prevent mass shootings like this will be a 17 percent spike in revenue for firearm vendors across the U.S.,” said report co-author Kyle Bieler, who found a direct link between the estimated $58 million uptick in gun sales over the next month and Obama’s use of the phrases “common-sense legislation,” “only advanced country,” and “not enough.” “The portion of the president’s remarks in which he asked for support from state legislatures and governors will, based on our projections, nearly double the number of …
via The Onion
News in Brief: Report: Increase In Gun Sales To Be Most Concrete Result Of Obama’s Pro-Gun-Control Speech
Watch previously unreleased footage of 1955 atomic bomb testing in glorious HD
Atom Central recently published these four unreleased videos of atomic bomb testing in 1955. The footage, taken from Operation Teapot at the test site in Nevada, is in glorious HD so it’s pretty incredible but watch out for the blinding light. Even in a small little YouTube window, it hurts.
SPLOID is delicious brain candy. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube.
via Gizmodo
Watch previously unreleased footage of 1955 atomic bomb testing in glorious HD
Save Time and Money With Make-Ahead Breakfast Burritos
I love me a good breakfast burrito. They’re great for when you’re on the go, and if you’re generous with the stuffing, they can really fill you up. But if you’re like most busy American men, you just don’t have time to whip up a breakfast burrito in the mornings. Sure, you could do one […]
via The Art of Manliness
Save Time and Money With Make-Ahead Breakfast Burritos
The Most Epic Image of This Week’s Super Blood Moon Eclipse
What could be more awe-inspiring than a super blood moon eclipse? Oh, I dunno, how about a super blood moon eclipse over a lightning storm? That’s the jaw-dropping scene photographer Jose Antonio Hervás managed to capture this past Sunday over Ibiza, an island off southeastern Spain.
The image above was digitally constructed from over 200 individual photographs, all captured from the same location during the course of the rare astronomical event Sunday night. Soak it in, Earthlings–the next opportunity for a shot like this isn’t coming until 2033.
Image reproduced with permission from Jose Antonio Hervás. You can check out more of his work on Vimeo and Facebook.
via Gizmodo
The Most Epic Image of This Week’s Super Blood Moon Eclipse
Here’s a candle burning underwater
Here’s a fun little thing that you think shouldn’t be able to happen but totally understand why it happens after you see it happen. If you stick a candle in a bowl of water and let it burn, the flame will actually be able to be under the water level for a good amount of time. It’s underwater fire!
DaveHax shows why in the video below.
SPLOID is delicious brain candy. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube.
How to Fix OS X El Capitan’s Annoyances
With the release of any new operating system, you’ll always find some quirks. El Capitan is a small enough update that it doesn’t have many annoyances, but they’re still around. Here’s how to fix some of its more annoying problems.
Disable SIP to Get Your System-Level Utilities Working Again
System Integrity Protection (SIP), is a new feature in El Capitan that protects system processes and folders so even a root user cannot get access to them. This is meant to protect your system against malware and other software that could mess with your computer. As you’d expect, this takes away some of your power as a user. Subsequently, you may run into problems with some utilities working with El Capitan. One example is the original version of Bartender, which has since been updated. Similar apps that change core features in OS X have the same problem, including TotalFinder and TotalSpaces. Most apps will likely update, but if you’re a power user and you’re comfortable turning the feature off, it’s possible. We do not recommend this unless you really know what you’re doing.
- Reboot your Mac into Recovery Mode by restarting your computer and holding down Command+R until the Apple logo appears on your screen.
- Click Utilities > Terminal.
- In the Terminal window, type in
csrutil disableand press Enter. - Restart your Mac.
SIP is now disabled. You can reenable it at any by following the above instructions and substituting csrutil enable in for the Terminal command.
Reset Spotlight’s Location by Clicking and Holding the Magnifying Glass in the Top Right
This one was driving me nuts. In El Capitan, you can now move Spotlight to wherever you want, which is great, but also means it pops up wherever you left it last. If you prefer to have a little more normalcy in your life, you can send Spotlight back to its default location by clicking and holding the Spotlight icon (the magnifying glass) in the menu bar.
Get the Old Mission Control Behavior Back
Mission Control no longer groups windows together by app, which in most cases is really nice, because you get a better view of exactly what you have open. However, if you want the old behavior back, where your thumbnails are stacked, it only requires changing one setting. Open up System Preferences > Mission Control and check the box next to “Group windows by application.”
Turn Off the Mouse Wiggle
When you wiggle your mouse in El Capitan, it gets bigger so you can easily find it on the screen. This is handy if you have a big monitor, but it’s pretty silly if you have a laptop. It’s also a pain if you use photo editing tools or play games. Thankfully, it’s easy to turn off. Head to System Preferences > Accessibility > Display and uncheck the box that says “Shake mouse pointer to locate.”
Update Your Apps
With every new operating system comes the headache of updating your apps. El Capitan isn’t terribly different than Yosemite, but that doesn’t mean updating won’t cause problems. This time around, some users are reporting that Office 2016 is crashing a lot, so if you’re an Office user, you might want to hold off until a fix is in place. Otherwise, you can always check out Roaring Apps for a list of compatible software.
Image remixed from Biro Emoke.
Lost for 70 Years, These Drawings Show Germany’s Sneakiest World War II Boobytraps
The chocolate bomb intended to kill Winston Churchill became the stuff of wartime legend. But depictions of the device and other cleverly concealed explosives were only recently rediscovered.
During World War II, German sabotage experts invented an array of cleverly disguised bombs. At the time, Britain’s MI5 counter-sabotage and explosives unit, B1C, contained only three people—Victor Rothschild, scientist; his secretary, Teresa Georgina Mayor, later his wife; and Donald Fish, a police detective inspector. While we like to imagine huge wartime spy-tech operations like those portrayed in Captain America, many of the tiny unit’s efforts came of their own initiative and ingenuity.
Rothschild, scion of the wealthy Rothschild family, put his vast resources to use in the service of countering sabotage. He wanted an artist to depict the boobytrapped devices that were making their way into Britain: the chocolate bar, set to explode when a piece was broken off; army food tins with secret bombs beneath the food; transformed oil cans rigged to cause destruction. Rothschild once famously disabled an explosive concealed in a shipment of onions, describing his actions on the phone the whole time, so that if the bomb went off, they would know to go in another direction next time.
For the project of documenting their efforts, Donald Fish recommended his son, a young draughtsman named Laurence Fish, who had honed his technical drawing chops on Alvis cars. There was no end of crafty devices to draw; along with assassination attempts, the Germans meant to conceal the bombs on British ships, where they would pass unnoticed until explosion. Aside from everyday items, the drawings show schematics for more complex explosives like magnetic limpet mines, which also targeted ships.
Rothschild had discovered many such traps and learned to disarm them, but he needed a record, intended to become a manual for others to recognize and neutralize the devices. He commissioned Laurence Fish via letters marked “Secret,” and the results are an incredibly detailed array of technical artwork. Fish’s attention to detail and precision drawing in a pre-computer age is incredible and, from the space of years, quite beautiful.
After the war, the drawings were thought to be lost, until the Rothschilds recently found them in “deep storage” in a chest of drawers. Victor Rothschild’s daughter Victoria sent them to Fish’s widow, Jean Bray. Bray hopes that the drawings will find a home in a museum or archive. Her favorite shows a complex, 21-day timer with a rotating disk. The BBC describes Fish’s rendering, which no doubt saved lives:
At the top, it says, in especially bold letters, “Do not unscrew here.” At the bottom, equally bold, are the words: “Unscrew here first.”
I hope the drawings find their way to a museum where they can be seen after so much time away from public appreciation. The disguised devices were ingenious, but so were the people who found, disarmed, and drew them for posterity.
[BBC]
Images: Antony Thompson/TWN
via Gizmodo
Lost for 70 Years, These Drawings Show Germany’s Sneakiest World War II Boobytraps
‘Back To The Future’ Trilogy Is Free For Amazon Prime Members In October
Hold on to your 1.21 gigawatts. Amazon is offering the Back to the Future trilogy for free to Prime members for the whole month of October.
This year marks the 30th anniversary for BTTF. Super fans may recall October 21, 2015, is also the date Marty McFly heads into the future to see what can be done about his kids. Read More
via TechCrunch
‘Back To The Future’ Trilogy Is Free For Amazon Prime Members In October