Category Archives: Fun

Frohe Ostern

Deutsche Welle Lifestyle: How to celebrate Easter in Germany. “Watch out for sugar-coated lambs, fire and lots and lots of chocolate. Here’s what to expect during the four-day Easter holiday in Germany.”

Deutsche Welle Kultur: Die Deutschen und das Ei – eine Liebesbeziehung. “Die Deutschen haben eine ganz besondere Beziehung zu Eiern: Sie haben dafür eigene Becher, “Sollbruchstellen-Verursacher” – und färben sie bunt. Ein Überblick über die Kultur der deutschen Ei-Veredelung.”

Music Video

Upside Down & Inside Out by OK Go has to be one of the coolest and most impressively made music videos this geek has ever seen. Check it out!

I heard of the band and their impressive videos before when a colleague recommended This Too Shall Pass (Rube Goldberg machine). It’s blocked in Germany because of GEMA issues, but should be viewable elsewhere.

Ok Go – Needing/Getting (This American Life – The Invisible Made Visible). The corresponding This American Life show is Live at BAM, the radio version is Invisible Made Visible (episode 464).

It’s a puzzle consisting of puzzles

MeFi Projects: Fractal Jigsaw Puzzle. “A jigsaw puzzle in which the pieces are jigsaw puzzles. Runs in your browser.”

The finished image is, of course, from one of the most famous fractals, the Mandelbrot set.

Warning: This is addicting! To quote the author: “There are a lot of pieces in this puzzle. I don’t expect anyone to finish it.” You might just find yourself trying to prove him wrong.

In about half an hour last night, I finished 11 of the 29 puzzle pieces that make up the whole image – or is it just one piece of the next level?!

Update: Here’s the MetaFilter thread: “There are a lot of pieces in this puzzle.“ .

… like riding a bike

It’s common knowledge that there are some things that you cannot unlearn once you’ve learnt them, like riding a bike. Right?

Destin Sandlin, creator of the educational video series Smarter Every Day, learnt how to ride a bike that goes left when steered right and vice versa. It took him eight months until it “clicked” – but then he found that he couldn’t ride normal bikes any more!

I’d love to try riding his Backwards Brain Bicycle. When I first tried to ride a recumbent bike I had a similar experience because on a normal bike, you steer mostly by shifting your body weight and only turn the handlebars a little bit to help. On a recumbent, you can’t really shift your weight much, so you have to steer by making lots of tiny movements with the handlebars. (This is especially hard if your recumbent has under-seat steering, though I’ve heard that pivot steering is even harder). It took me a few tries until I managed stopped my brain from trying to shift my weight, but once it clicked, riding the recumbent was not too difficult. Since the directions are not reversed, I can still ride an upright bike like before.