Jul 5

Anyone reading this site who isn’t aware of the increasing popularity of personal blog websites has either been living under a rock or is, more likely, a little bit lost.

However, what few of us English-speakers are likely to know is that our mother tongue is not the most commonly used by bloggers – it is, in fact, Japanese.

English in second!!!!

Even though Japan’s population is around 130 million – compared to almost three times that number who speak English as their first language – the country accounts for 37 per cent of all blogs.

English comes next, at 36 per cent, with Chinese a distant third on just eight per cent.
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Jul 2


World’s Only Thermometer Museum. Image: eurovancation [Flickr]


There are over 5,000 thermometers in the museum! Image: eurovancation [Flickr]

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Jun 28

I’ve always been bad at that game where you look at clouds and see shapes in them. I said this to a friend a few weeks ago on a day with perfect blue skies and lots of fluffy clouds to scrutinize.

Me: “Cotton candy?”
Bridget: “No, that looks like an upside-down rubber duck floating in a sea of crystal shards.”

Despite my obliviousness, even I can see the shapes in these objects. Here are a few natural occurrences of nature that look a lot like… well, things that don’t naturally occur in nature.

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Jun 27

Did you know that the word “cubicle” used to mean sleeping quarters (actually, it still is for some people), “suit” came
from the uniforms of stable servants, and “team” used to mean beasts of burden? Here are the origin of words you hear a lot in the office … and after you read this, get back to work!

Boss

This word came from the Dutch word baas, meaning “master.” But early americans didn’t like using master - it was too aristocratic to survive as a general term. So they started using “baas” in the late 18th century. It caught on (against the objections of some word snobs) and eventually became “boss.”
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Jun 14

Just when we feel comfortable enough to say “wow, cell phones have really changed the way we operate,” things get even weirder. Here are 10 facts about cells from around the world that show the scale and style of our contemporary global use; sometimes for bad, but sometimes for real, cool, innovative good.

many cell phones1. There Are LOTS of Them

There are half as many active cell phones on the planet as there are people. When you think of the general wealth distribution across the planet, it’s pretty remarkable to have over 3.3 billion active mobiles. Then again,Luxembourg’s mobile phone penetration rate is 158%. Yep - that’s 158 active cellphones for every 100 people.

Source

2. And They Make a Mess

125+ million phones are discarded every year. Given the rate at which people go through cell phones (Koreans replace on average every 11 months), it’s easy to see how the environmental side can get out of control. At least there’s gold in the garbage! Yarr.

Source

estonia technology3. M-Voting in Estonia

While the 2008 US election is abuzz with web penetration, E-stonia’s been leading the global technopolitical charge. As Lithuania books a seat on the e-voting (online voting) train, Estonia’s letting mobile phones both act as a convenient vote delivery platform, but also a personal identity confirmation, ushering in a new era of what is being called “m-voting”.

Source
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May 21
10 Strangest Names EVAR!
icon1 sosys | icon2 Facts | icon4 05 21st, 2008| icon35 Comments »


For more Bizarro, check out Dan Piraro’s website and blog.

This Bizarro comic inspired me to look for bad (but real) names on the Web - and boy was I floored with the result that Google returned for the search terms “bad names” (6 million results!) and “worst names” (499,000 results). It seems that some parents are either cruel or mad when they name their kids.

Here are a few that are particularly strange:

• Urhines Kendall Icy Eight Special K. Yes, that’s right: a baby named after the illicit drug ketamine. Oh, and that’s pronounced “Your Highness,” by the way.

Urhiness Kendall was born on Saturday, February 15, 2003, weighing 8 pounds 8 ounces. The baby shared birthdays with another guy with a weird name: Galileo Glilei, who went on to become a famous mathematician and astronomer. (Source - previously on Neatorama here)

• GoldenPalaceDotCom Silverman. In 2005, the Internet casino GoldenPalace.com paid $15,000 to name a baby after itself and got more than it paid for in media attention. Sure most people condemned this sort of outrageous publicity stunt - some even calling it a form of child abuse - but the good news was that GoldenPalaceDotCom Silverman was born healthy at 7 pounds, 10 ounces on May 19, 2005.

Actually, baby Silverman wasn’t the only human in the world named after the casino: In the same year, a 33-year-old mother of five named Terri Ilagan auctioned off the right to her name on eBay, which the casino won for a mere $15,199. The re-branded Mrs. GoldenPalace.com said: “To my kids and to my husband, I will always be Terri. My husband is real supportive. He thinks it’s funny. As long as they get to call me Mom, they don’t care. They are already starting to tease me and call me Goldie.” (Source)

These two will join a GoldenPalace’s branding of a Glaswegian woman’s cleavage and their purchase of a decade-old “Virgin Mary” grilled cheese in the annals of the company’s publicity stunts (Source)

• Joker Arroyo. Don’t laugh: Mr. Arroyo is a Senator in the Philippines (What? Don’t believe me? Check it out here).

His name “Joker” is derived from his father’s fondness for playing cards. His brother is named “Jack.” No words if there are any other siblings named Queen or King.

Unusual names are pretty common in the Philippines: Bing, Bong, Ping, Ting, Led Zeppelin, Mick Jagger, Nirvana, Jejomar (yes, a combination of Jesus, Joseph and Mary) and Hitler Manila, whose sons are named Himmler and Hess. And no, Hitler Manila is a peaceful guy who doesn’t share his namesake’s Nazi ideology. (Source)

• Brfxxccxxmnpcccclllmmnprxvclmnckssqlbb11116 (Pronounced “albin”). In 1991, Elisabeth Hallin and Lasse Diding wanted to protest the naming law of Sweden, which states that the court can diapprove of names that “for some obvious reason are not suitable as a first name.” They were fined 5,000 kronor (about $680 at the time).

The parents claimed that the 43-character name as “a pregnant, expressionistic development that we see as an artistic creation.” The court didn’t buy it and upheld the fine. Then the parents tried to resubmit the name as “A” (yes, one letter - also pronounced “albin”). The court didn’t buy that either, saying that one letter names are prohibited.

The baby finally went with “Albin Hallin” though in his passport his name was given as “Icke namngivet gossebarn” meaning “unnamed little boy.” (Source)

• KentuckyFriedCruelty.com. Well, technically, this is not his parents’ fault but what Christopher Garnett did was pretty strange so we’ll include him on this list.

In 2005, Christopher, a youth outreach worker for the People for Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) agreed to change his name legally to KentuckyFriedCruelty.com to protest animal abuse by the food chain KFC. (Yes, and he’s got a driver’s license to prove it).

He did promise his mom that he’d change his name back when PETA’s campaign against KFC was over in 2006. Throughout all this time, his parents continued to call him Chris (how unsupportive!)

(Source)

 

 

• Nicholas Unless-Jesus-Christ-Had-Died-For-Thee-Thou-Hadst-Been-Damned Barbon (1640 - 1698). Nicholas’ shall we say “unique” name apparently ran in the family: his father was Praise-God Barbon. No, I’m not kidding - Nicholas was a real guy. He was an English economist, physician and financial speculator. He took part in the rebuilding of London after the Great Fire of 1666 and even founded the city’s first fire insurance company. By all accounts, he went by Nicholas throughout his life. (Source)

• God Shammgod. God plays professional basketball, currently for the Portland Chinooks of the International Basketball League. He played in the NBA for one season (with the Washington Wizards in 1997).

He even invented a streetball move, called The Shammgod, useful for creating space between you and your defender. And yes, God is on MySpace. (Photo: Hoops Addict)

• Batman Bin Suparman. This young Javanese man is blessed with being named after not just one, but two superheroes: Batman and Superman. And he’s got an identity card to prove it …

• Dick Assman. Yes, you read that right. Dick is a gas station owner in Saskatchewan, Canada, whose name made him a minor celebrity when David Letterman found him in 1995. Dick pronounced his German lastname as “uzman,” but we all know better… (Source)


Photo: Frame enlargement of the short film, “Saskatchewan Part 2 (That’s My Wonderful Town) by Brian Stockton (from Wikipedia)

• @. And finally, let’s go full circle to “@,” pronounced “ai ta” or “love him” by an unidentified Chinese couple:

The unidentified couple and the attempted naming were cited Thursday by a Chinese government official as an example of bizarre names creeping into the Chinese language.

“The father said ‘the whole world uses it to write emails and translated into Chinese it means’love him’,” Li Yuming, the vice director of the State Language Commission, said at a news conference.

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