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...something completely different from this website... an article from 2010...

http://www.thenakedscientists.com/HTML/articles/article/humble-honey-bee-in-national-security/

Humble Honey Bee Helping National Security


Fri, 1st Oct 2010
Are sniffer bees the new sniffer dogs?
Anna Khot

The humble bee is being put to work. But they aren’t just making honey; they are busy being trained to sniff out drugs and explosives.

By becoming ‘sniffer bees’, the honeybee, Apis mellifera, could soon be Britain’s answer to combating national security threats and drug smuggling. Honeybees have an acute olfactory sense, which can be thought of as a very sensitive sense of smell. By training the bees to associate an odour with a reward, scientists are able to train the bees to detect almost any odour.


RTEmagicC_800px-ApisDorsataHive.jpg

Honey Bees

This technology, which has been developed by Inscentinel Ltd., a small spin-out company based at Rothamsted Research in Harpenden, has a variety of potential applications, including the detection of illegal drugs and explosives in airport security and the military, as well as in medical diagnostics and food quality control.

“Bees are at least as good as sniffer dogs but are cheaper and faster to train, and available in much larger numbers. It is dependent on the specific odour, but bees can detect some odours that are present in parts per trillion - that’s equivalent to detecting a grain of salt in an Olympic-sized swimming pool,” says Dr Nesbit, a research scientist at Inscentinel Ltd.

Training bees

Honeybees have the ability to learn and memorise. The bees are loaded onto individual holders where they sit comfortably whilst exposed to an odour which is passed over them in short pulses. Whilst exposed to the odour, the bees are simultaneously rewarded with a small drop of sugar syrup, which the bees stick their proboscis (tongue) out to receive. This is a classical Pavlovian conditioning method. Once conditioned, if the bees pick up the odour they’ve been trained to detect, they stick their probosces out in anticipation of the syrup, before the syrup is offered. This proboscis extension reflex is the signal that the scientists use to determine successful conditioning. It takes between two and eight rounds of training which is completed in just a few hours, with the reflex lasting for several days.

Making the science reality


Once trained, up to 36 bees are loaded into a handheld sensing device. The bees can be trained to detect the same odour, or smaller groups of bees can be trained to detect different odours within the same device. The bees are exposed to a constant stream of clean, filtered air until a sample of air from an area requiring testing is sucked into the machine. An optical sensor records any bees extending their proboscis, which is then interpreted by software. Based on a statistical population of bees, a simple odour present/absent response follows. The whole detection process takes around six seconds.

What about bee welfare?


The bees are not harmed whilst performing their sniffing duties; the health and comfort of the bees dictates the performance of the sensing device. Each bee works for a maximum of a two-day shift before it is returned, healthy and unharmed, to the hive, to enjoy the rest of its life working for its colony.

Nesbit explained that the bees have potential uses in other fields as well as national security: “We are currently involved with a project commissioned by a fruit juice factory who wants to use the bees to detect if the oranges they buy for juicing are infested with storage pests. Alternatively, the bees can also be used in medical diagnostics” she said. Nesbit explained that as some diseases are linked to a specific odour being released in the urine, blood or breath, the bees can be used as a method of detection, producing a medical diagnosis.


...to me that is just bloody amazing... the things that scientists think of... it says that it has a variety of potential applications, 'including the detection of illegal drugs and explosives in airport security'... imagine a drug courier going through customs with a stash of drugs up his buttonhole and a swarm of bees suddenly hang around there?... it would be a tad bit embarrassing I imagine... cheers.
 
This is quite interesting...

[video=youtube;o8TssbmY-GM]http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=o8TssbmY-GM[/video]
 
...Jam... I love that video... how extraordinary... that was the last thing that I expected to happen... god it must be fun for those Astronauts to be able to carry out experiments like that in amongst all the other jobs that they have to do... thanks for posting it... cheers.
 
This is clever, but very odd...

[video=vimeo;53963103]http://vimeo.com/53963103[/video]
 
This is clever, but very odd...

[video=vimeo;53963103]http://vimeo.com/53963103[/video]

*bumps to remove the %$#@!#$%&* ad*

All I can say is... art teachers have a hell of a lot to answer for when it comes to general weirdness in the world...
 
...Jam... what a fabulous find!... it's incredible to see how some peoples brains tick over in order to produce something like that... they kind of remind me of a Stegosaurus with the plates on their backs with those sails... I love them... cheers.
 
An artist builds resin goldfish layer by layer. It's hard to believe the finished product isn't real!

[video=vimeo;32967940]http://vimeo.com/32967940[/video]
 
This is clever, but very odd...

[video=vimeo;53963103]http://vimeo.com/53963103[/video]

Indeed, but I especially liked reading about his "wind lab"

LABATORY YPENBURG – The lab consists of a sandpit measuring 30x15 meter, a cabin, a large sea container and lots willow trees. There is the bone yard as well. Usually there are only one or two animals living at one time. As soon as the development of an animal is at its end, I declare it extinct and I push it onto the bone yard. The animals there can be seen as the fossils of extinct species. Exposure to sun and rain causes the tubes to fade, making these appear more bonelike with time. The sandpit is the pre-heaven for the beach animals. They are not yet ready to survive the real beach. I still have to train them. Usually I take them out once a year to the real beach to let them get a taste of their natural environment.

See: http://www.strandbeest.com/beests_storage.php
and: http://www.strandbeest.com/beests_wind.php

You can order/buy smaller versions of these air/wind powered beasties, too.

Loved how he is kinda copying and modifying wot our Creator has done. That these things basically "feed" on "wind" which is stored/pumped/channelled (like "blood") between lots of "hearts" made out of plastic cool drink bottles via lots of tubing and taps which channel the energy into the limbs (etc) to make the creatures walk and wave and change direction and all that.

What a wonderful and beautiful example of Intelligent Design ! :D

regarDS
 
An artist builds resin goldfish layer by layer. It's hard to believe the finished product isn't real!

[video=vimeo;32967940]http://vimeo.com/32967940[/video]

how can we be sure this isn't actually a form taxidermy ?

... which should now get you thinking about how various life-sized statues and pond/garden/cemetary ornaments are made, eh ? >;)

Would certainly help explain a percentage of missing persons ... and gold fish ! :D

regarDS
 
An artist builds resin goldfish layer by layer. It's hard to believe the finished product isn't real!

[video=vimeo;32967940]http://vimeo.com/32967940[/video]

...absolutely amazing... yet another brilliant find on your part Jam... well done... cheers.
 
...this is a future bus that is apparently in development in China... they're calling it a 'Land Airbus'... here is the title of the video...

Idea of future transportation - Straddling Bus in China

...cars can overtake the bus from underneath it whether the bus is moving or picking up passengers... images of the proposed bus itself...

bus 1.jpg bus 3.jpg
bus 2.jpg bus 4.jpg


...and finally the video of it... I think that it's a brilliant idea if they go ahead with it... my only question is... what if a semi-trailer wants to get past it?... then again there's nothing stopping them filling the Land Airbus with cargo instead of passengers to eliminate that problem is there?... clever people those Chinese... cheers.

[video=youtube;vaUTIIggEis]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vaUTIIggEis[/video]
 
...this is way beyond my imagination on how they built this table but wow!... on this link...


http://www.men-know-why.com/expandable-round-dining-table/


table.jpg


...the blurb for this table says...


Expandable Round Dining Table
March 7, 2013

For a fantastic design and space saving idea, check out the Fletcher Capstan Table. The expansion video is very cool. However, this cool table comes with a catch. It’ll cost you £25,000 to £35,000 ($50,000 to $70,000). The company’s site describes, “It is a round table which, when rotated at its outer perimeter, amazingly doubles its seating capacity and, just as astonishingly, remains truly circular. Very importantly it stores its expansion leaves within itself. Existing tables can seat six persons when small, and twelve or more when expanded, but there are other design possibilities. Operation, which has been described as ‘pure magic’ by Boat International magazine, really is a sight to behold and extremely quick, it taking only three seconds to complete an entire expansion or reduction cycle.”


...here is the video of this remarkable piece of furniture... cheers.


[video=youtube;10y28PD73vk]http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=10y28PD73vk[/video]
 
...now this is impressive... a car that runs on air!... that's right... not petrol... not gas... compressed air... they're going to eventually install a generator that runs on the emissions of the car itself that pumps the emissions back into it to refill the compressed air tanks continuously... which is close to being perpetual motion... here is the video... cheers.

[video=youtube;8TK7M-9fr-o]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8TK7M-9fr-o[/video]
 
...here is another one called the 'Airpod' that works along similar lines as to the previous one... they will be selling for around $10,000... not bad at all!... cheers.

[video=youtube;0RBl1LFUQ4c]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0RBl1LFUQ4c[/video]
 
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