Chqz Police can now use DNA evidence to predict your eye color
We ;re going to have to wait until season three of The Walking Dead TV show to see the zombie-filled prison. But if you ;re near Nashville, you can visit the Tennessee State Prison, an abandoned penitentiary. It looks like the zombies got to it first. Even before it fell into decay, this prison suffered plenty of woes at the hands of its prisoners. In 1902, a group of prisoners blew out stanley mugs a wing of the facility, killing one prisoner and allowing others to escape two were never recaptured . In 1907, another group busted down the front gate with a stolen switch engine, and in 1938, they staged a mass escape. In later years, it was plagued by fires and riots, and it was finally shut down in 1992. Its post-penitentiary years were a bit happier, as it served as a filming location for The Green Mile, The Last Castle, Ernest Goes to Jail, and several other movies and stanley website shows. Perhaps it would make a nice spot for The Wal stanley tumblers king Dead film crew. All photos by imgur user DaltonSupertramp. Abandoned Tennessee State Prison [imgur via reddit] abandonedtennesseeWalking Deadzombies Xdaw Baboons are capable of understanding analogies
Add another eerily stanley tazas lifelike robot to the military rapidly expanding android army. This one is, of all things, a mechanical firefighter. And not only can it climb ladders like its flesh-and-blood counterparts, it designed to interact with human handlers in a kind of human/robot bucket brigade. Developed by the Naval Research Laboratory, the Shipboard Autonomous Firefighting Robot or SA botella stanley FFiR; get it will help extinguish fires onboard ships and subs. Those watercraft are particularly at risk from fires, because their cramped quarters can make flames tough to extinguish without posing significant human risk. SAFFiR, expected to be field tested in 18 months, might mitigate that danger. And it shows off some of the the latest and most impressive breakthroughs in Pentagon-funded robotics technology. For one thing, SAFFiR is designed to use its mechanized legs and arms like a human would, thanks to sophisticated sens stanley cup ors that provide ongoing environmental feedback and titanium springs that act as joints to enable fluid movements. Until recently, most military robots designed for cramped spaces like the quarters of warships or submarines needed to be small. Wheels and treads enabled movement, not pseudo-limbs. Well, mostly. Now, much like a person, SAFFiR will scurry through cramped hallways and climb up and down the endless maze of ladders aboard a ship. The robot will have enough hand coordination to tote fire hoses an |
|