trivia

Cities in 2006

Posted by | trivia | No Comments

Following Jason’s My Year in Cities, 2006 (kottke.org). Here’s lists of cities visited this year: (The reason I’m doing this is I’m collecting lists for some new Wists features, which I’ll be able to show shortly). New York, NY Philadelpia, PA Austin, TX San Francisco, CA Seattle, WA London, England Geneva, Switzerland Paris, France Barcelona, Spain and bonnie Selkirk!

Read More

Number crunching

Posted by | trivia | No Comments

What is both rare and everywhere? – Uranium is rare, but everywhere. One ton of an ordinary rock, such as granite, contains 16g of Thorium and Uranium. A kilogram of Uranium is equivalent to 20,000 tons of TNT, which is approx. the same as the energy potential of 20,000 tons of gasoline. One ton of common-or-garden rock contains the equivalent fuel of 320 tons of gasoline. It could take a lot less than that to extract it. Until recently, what did environmentalists and Car/Oil companies have in common? – A reason to hate nuclear power. It used to be very easy to make a case against nuclear energy, and if you are either a treehugger or a oil exec. you would be historically allied.

Read More

Dolphins are not intelligent.

Posted by | trivia | No Comments

Dolphins have had a rough time lately, they used to be considered intelligent and kind – then researchers pointed out that they gang rape females to death when mating. Now it turns out they they may not even be intelligent. In fact they may be not be much smarter than a goldfish. Their big brains are mostly fat with very few neurons. Research shows dolphins dimwitted but happy

Read More

Compound interest rates.

Posted by | trivia | No Comments

Want to work out compound interest rates in your head? Use the Rule of 72 ln 2 is 69.3% – which is approximately equal to 70 which is close to 72 – which has many factors making it easy to do mental division. So to work out compound interests rates’ doubling times divide 72 by the Interest rate. At 6% $100 becomes $200 in 72/6 = 12 years

Read More

A chicken cost $150 in the medieval era, today’s $2 chickens must be medievally bad.

Posted by | trivia | No Comments

I just saw an ad for a whole roast chicken – for under $2. $2 to raise, kill, prepare and cook an animal. So I did some research to see just how insanely cheap mechanized farming produce has become. In the middle ages, an unplucked, unroasted chicken cost 5/8 of the daily wage of a master mason. This was a very highly paid and esteemed position for the day, but lets be conservative and assume that the equivalent would be someone on a current US salary of $60K per annum. This would mean that a chicken cost around $150. Gives some kind of perpective on what pumping oil into the ground and hormones into mammals can do. The site below has some really interesting data on medieval food. Spices and Their Costs in Medieval Europe

Read More

Historical timeline of food.

Posted by | trivia | No Comments

The Food Timeline: food history reference & research service “Ever wonder what foods the Vikings ate when they set off to explore the new world? How Thomas Jefferson made his ice cream? What the pioneers cooked along the Oregon Trail? Who invented the potato chip…and why? Welcome to the Food Timeline.”

Read More

Maculate ception

Posted by | trivia | No Comments

Not needing an umbrella, due to the clement weather, she furled the small, weildy flag with both hands, full of ruth at one so vincible, pervious to her own pain. Although he had been maculate, with peccable taste, he was gainly and couth and his love for her was truly requited…

Read More