Monday, January 18, 2010


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Wednesday, May 27, 2009

DOES WHAT........A SPIDER DOES WHAT? You likely acknowledged that honeybees generally break down after they sting you, since their barbellate stingers are bust by their bellies. But did you know that after copulating, a few virile spiders break off the ends of their palps—the organ used to transfer sperm—inside the female? That’s right. And afterward, this mutilated "eunuch" will stick around the female’s web and prevent her from shacking up with his competitors. Oh yeah! Spider stalking at its best! In a paper in this month’s issue of the journal Evolution , Jonathan Coddington of the Smithsonian Institution, along with colleagues Matjaz Kuntner and Jutta Schneider, considered the development from the genital organ of males and females in thirty-two species of Nephilid spiders, including the golden orb weaver. Whereas all but analyzes of sexual choice have centered on how males compete with one another because ascendence and how females pick their mates, spider genitalia tell another side of the history: that the fight of the sexes continues during and, even after sex. Males want to ensure that their sperm—and only their sperm—fertilizes the females’ eggs, while females would like to keep their options open. The result, is that male and female genitalia have grown increasingly complex over evolutionary time. Males gradually developed hooks, ridges, and twists on their palps as female genitalia transformed from a slit with a straight, short duct to a series of elaborate chambers making them more difficult to "plug". "Sex is one of the more powerful driving forces behind evolution," And it just so happens that spiders have some of the most bizarre sex of animals on Earth." DOES WHAT?


DOES WHAT?... A BLIND MAN!A blind man flying with his wife from City of Brotherly Love to Belgium was contained and dragged away from the airplane once he stood up and necessitated to know, how come they were sitting on the tarmac, with no beverages and no news. The apprehending police officer did not allow him to take hold of his cane, but instead charged him of falsifying blindness, and then characterised his problems leaving the airplane as "protesting." He was confined nightlong without being evidenced of his charges, reading his rights, or given access to a lawyer -- and he hurt himself while there because he didn't have his cane. Cantisani alleged he talked with the chief, who told him the airplane constituted accepting mechanical problems. He then returned to his seat. Before long another passenger made a comment about the crew, prompting three Philadelphia policemen to accompany that man off the airplane, Cantisani said. Then, police attempted to dispatch Cantisani as well, he said... the policemen jerked him from his seat and dragged him off the airplane, hurting his hand, which was grappling his seat belt Then they forced him into a wheelchair. At one point, a policeman grapped him "by the throat," he said. During the scramble with police, Cantisani said, he lost his retractable walking cane, making him unable to get around. Policemen told him they had done the "blind test" and didn't believe he was blind, he said. Vanore said he knew of no "blind test" administered by police. DOES WHAT?


DOES WHAT?...SUDOKU! I’m pretty sure that many of you have discovered this brainpower game…"Sudoku". Everywhere I go, I will question people and they are so busy struggling to figure out sudoku’s problem. Some of them have already become addicted with this mind-blowing puzzle. It really challenges your brain and once you get started as a beginner you will want to complete it as an advance player. As for myself, I in reality beginning experienced approximately the game when I constituted on the Qantas plane last year. it has been published monthly in the inflight magazine. At that time, I was not really keen to try to solve since I got stucked for my first time playing it. Only for the last few weeks when my 7 year old niece asked me to teach her how to play sudoku. On that reason, I made the initiative to start to learn about it. I bought a sudoku book and do sudoku exercise almost everyday until yesterday, at last I managed to settle one puzzle. Sudoku is originally from Japan and in Japanese it means "single number". This game is incredibly good exercise for your brain everyday. The reason I said that because according to many researches done, when you do sudoku it will challenge your brain capability as it needs you to "learn new tricks". This will help you prevent Alzheimer’s disease and dementia as you age. Not only that, it can also make you feel relief from the stress and keep you mentally balanced and socially connected. DOES WHAT?