publicación de Foto reblogueada desde I'm Remembering! con 12 390 notas
See-Through Phones
[Etsy]
Fuente: imremembering
publicación de Foto reblogueada desde National Post con 27 notas
Poop, scoop and hang: The doo-doos and don’ts of dealing with your dog’s droppings
“Would you hang your kid’s dirty diaper on a shrub in your backyard?” asks Janice Palmer, a retired biology teacher and volunteer who plants native trees and shrubs in Sherwood Park. “It’s crap, for God’s sake, and it’s plastic in a natural area. It’s unsanitary, it’s unsightly and it’s disrespectful of other park users and it’s disrespectful of nature.”
Fuente: nationalpost
publicación de Set de fotos reblogueada desde prosthetic knowledge con 4 369 notas
Bulavkus USB Flash Drive
A memory stick in the form of a safety pin:
Bulavkus—a USB flash drive disguised as a classic safety pin—keeps your data safely pinned.
For finding Bulavkus in a flash, simply fasten to any fabric material and spare yourself frustration of digging through pockets.
Wear your data proudly.You can find out more here, and can see the conceptual development process of the idea here
Fuente: artlebedev.com
publicación de Set de fotos reblogueada desde The Daily con 58 notas
Have you tried out Paper, the totally rad, beautifully-designed drawing app for iPad? If not, you should! Even real artists like Andrew Kim (creator of that dinosaur) are creating impressive works like these on it.
Fuente: thedaily.com
publicación de Set de fotos reblogueada desde The Daily con 58 notas
Joel Sartore is on a mission to save endangered species from extinction. And his most powerful weapon in his fight is his camera.
“If we don’t change our ways, we are going to lose these species,” Sartore told The Daily. “My work focuses on what we can do to save them.”
For more images, visit Sartore’s website.
Fuente: thedaily.com
publicación de Set de fotos reblogueada desde The Daily con 183 notas
Professional wildlife photographer Will Burrard-Lucas and his brother Matthew captured these jaw-dropping photos of a lion pride up close by strapping a camera on top of what looks like a remote-control car.
Fuente: thedaily.com
publicación de Foto reblogueada desde LightBox con 149 notas
It’s that time of year again — feast your eyes on the 2012 World Press Photo of the Year (above) by Samuel Aranda.
The winning photograph shows a woman caring for a wounded relative, inside a mosque used as a field hospital by demonstrators against the rule of President Ali Abdullah Saleh, during clashes in Sanaa, Yemen on October 15, 2011. Samuel Aranda was working in Yemen on assignment for The New York Times. He is represented by Corbis Images.
Read more about the winning photo — and see more of the winning images here.
Fuente: timelightbox
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