Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Wee little car



This is great when driving through the office!

--Cheski

WAKE UP!!!



--Cheski

The Gethuman 500 Database

Hate the automated menus that you have to deal with when calling your service providers... whether it be credit card companies... ISP... insurances... whatever...

Check with this database and get right to a human.

I want to speak to a damn human!


You know how it feels.

--Cheski

Bender the Cat



Broneal dressing up Bender.
--Cheski

White Castle Pyramid



We ordered 6 "Crave Cases". This is only a fraction if the boxes.
--Cheski

Zombie outbreak- Top 5 causes at Cracked.com

Full Article

We found out recently that if you try to leave a little kid in a graveyard late at night, he'll freak out. Even if you offer to leave him a gun to protect himself. Why? It's because on some instinctual level, all humans know it's just a matter of time until the zombies show up.

Our culture is full of tales of the undead walking the Earth, from our religions to our comic books. But, some sort of zombie apocalypse isn't actually possible, right?

Right?

Guys?

Actually, yes. It's quite possible. Here's five ways it could happen, according to science.



Go read--- it's great!

--Cheski

Thursday, October 25, 2007

High speed photography




--Cheski

Friday, October 19, 2007

Zoom Zoom



Weeeeeee Zoom Zoom!

--Cheski

Thursday, October 18, 2007

Clip from the Halo movie



--Cheski

Thursday, October 04, 2007

OCD on an extreme level

Cool little Japanese indie film



--Cheski

Wurstfest?

CNN reported that Sausage Fest is no more....

NEW BRAUNFELS, Texas (AP) -- Any old town can have its own Oktoberfest. The beer stein-hoisting events pop up all over in late September and early October.

But New Braunfels, a Central Texas town with strong ties to its German heritage, waits till a little later in the fall to honor a specific piece of Deutschland tradition: sausage.

The city has been holding "Wurstfest: The 10-day salute to sausage," for the last 46 years, drawing curious, and hungry, visitors from the world over. A large, lush park near a spring-fed river transforms every fall into the international center of Gemutlichkeit -- "fun and fellowship, German style."

The fest kicks off with the traditional "biting of the sausage" and always begins on the Friday before the first Monday in November. This year that's November 2.

But why wurst -- the German word for sausage?

The town began the event in 1961 to drum up business for local restaurants, markets and sausage makers and extend the tourist season later into the fall, when Texas weather becomes bearable, even pleasant. Originally the one-day "Sausage Festival," it has evolved into the longer event it is now. Estimates say the fest will get more than 125,000 visitors this go-around. In the past it's pulled in as many as 200,000.

If you go ...

Wurstfest: Nov. 2-11; Landa Park, New Braunfels, Texas; http://www.wurstfest.com or 800-221-4369. Daily admission: $8 ($6 if purchased before Nov. 1). Located 35 miles north of San Antonio.

The rest of the story here
HAHAHAHA too classic


--Cheski