Culinary Pet Names: 11 Monikers Reminiscent Of Food And Drink

From Vetstreet’s Kristen Seymour:

While there are plenty of popular kitten and puppy names out there, finding a totally unique (but still completely adorable!) pet name can be a bit more challenging.

To find some of the most unusual and little-known names out there, we dug through Vetstreet’s database of more than 89 million dogs and 49 million cats to find names that appeared just once. From there, we divided them into categories and selected our favorites. So, with no further ado, we present the cutest unique pet names with a food or drink theme!

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Woman, 27, Scams, Professes Love To 85-Year-Old Man, Prosecutors Say

A 27-year-old woman is accused of swindling a man in his 80s, claiming she needed money to claim her dead husband’s estate in probate court.

Candy Marabanian met the 85-year-old Gold Coast Man on July 25 as he was leaving the Newberry Library, Assistant State’s Attorney Erin Antonietti said friday. She offered to help him carry his books home, and they had lunch, she said.

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This Levitating Matchstick Trick Is a Great Excuse to Play With Fire

Need an excuse to go play with matches? Too bad, you’re getting one anyway. Turns out if you place a couple matches up against each other just right and then light them on fire (duh), you can actually perform a crazy little levitation trick!

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Gluten-Free Singles Lets You Find Your Gluten-Free Match

It’s a match made in gluten-free heaven every time – if you find your match on Glutenfree Singles, that is.

There’s no guarantee that you’ll stay together all throughout each other’s lifetimes, but at least you can avoid one problem most gluten intolerant people run into on first dates: incompatible diets.

Gluten Free Dating

It seems like a trivial thing, but it’s not so trivial if you have strict diet requirements because you have a health problem. Like gluten intolerance, for example.

Whether you have celiac disease, are gluten intolerant or choose to be gluten free for health reasons, we welcome you to GlutenfreeSingles, a website committed to building a national and global community for those who are gluten free.

Living a gluten-free life can be challenging, especially in a world where gluten-soaked foods are just about everywhere. At GlutenfreeSingles, you are not alone!

The site boasts that it’s a dating and networking site so “you never have to feel alone, awkward, or [like] a burger because you are gluten-free.” The world is full of other gluten-free-diet-loving people, and this site more or less promises to help you find your match.

Check the site out here.

[via Geekologie]

Rosanna Davison’s PETA Ad Is Hot … Like A Chili Pepper (NSFW PHOTO)

Talk about a lady in red.

PETA Europe’s newest ad featuring former Miss World winner Rosanna Davison is certainly hot. You know, like all those chili peppers she’s laying on. Davison is promoting PETA‘s latest project, “Vegans Are Red Hot,” a step up from a 2011 campaign when she walked the streets of Dublin in a mini-dress made of lettuce leaves to promote vegetarianism.

She’s definitely not the first to pose au naturel — reality star Courtney Stodden stepped out in a lettuce bikini last month to promote a meat-free lifestyle. Other notable (and clothed) celebrities have joined with the animal welfare organization in the recent past, including Emily Deschanel and Ryan Gosling.

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Israeli Settlements At Forefront Of Palestine Peace Talks

BARKAN, West Bank — Micha Drori is living the Israeli dream: a house, a yard, a wife and three kids. The 42-year-old businessman has found an affordable alternative to Israel’s booming real estate market in a quiet community he loves, with a commute of less than half an hour to his job near Tel Aviv.

What’s the catch? He’s a West Bank settler.

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Hi! Magnetic Voice Recorder

hi-recorderFor the older generation out there, to leave a reminder for your family members or colleagues, you would more often than not rely on the standard Post-It note. The thing is, if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it. Good thing us humans are an enterprising lot – and some of us out there love to reinvent the wheel (and actually succeed), which is why there is the existence of the £12.99 Hi! Magnetic Voice Recorder that will come in blue and red shades.

With the Hi! Magnetic Voice Recorder, you will be able to use it to record your very own messages that would max out at 10 seconds in length (definitely better than a 6 second video, don’t you think so?), allowing you to be as helpful, remorseful or silly as you like. Made out of an extremely soft silicone rubber, when accompanied with a handy magnetic back, it should be able to stick to the home’s fridge for the rest of the family to know what kind of 10-second message you have in store for them for the day. All it takes is a single press of a button to record your message, and you’re good to go.
[ Hi! Magnetic Voice Recorder copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]

Philips Hue Lightstrips and Bloom: An Eyes-on Review

A few months back, I outfitted my man-cave/media room with Philips Hue LED light bulbs in all of my recessed ceiling fixtures. This has given me the ability to set different moods in the room, and even automatically dim the lights to a warm, theater-like quality when I want to go watch a movie. However, up until now, the Hue ecosystem was pretty much limited to reflector bulbs. Recently, Philips released their first “Friends of Hue” products, which include the Hue Lightstrips and the now-Hue compatible Bloom lamp. Philips was kind enough to put both of these in my hands so I could see how well they worked alongside my other Hue lights.

philips hue lightstrips bloom

I first cracked open the Hue Lightstrips, which allow you to add colorful accent lighting under furniture, on top of shelves or in other locations where you can conceal a strip of lights. Each Lightstrip is a 2-meter-long (~6.56 feet) bendy strip covered with LEDs about every 1-1/2 inches. The strip itself is covered with a flexible, optically transparent cover to protect the delicate LEDs and circuitry.

hue lightstrips 1

Each strip is connected to a cord which has a small wireless receiver pack and a small power adapter on the end. The strips can be cut at pre-marked locations about every 4 inches, but there’s no way to reconnect sections once cut, so you need to be careful to only trim off sections of LEDs you don’t ever plan to use again. Once you pick a location to install your Lightstrips, you can stick them in place using the sticky 3M adhesive on the back of the strip, or for less permanent installations, you can just lay the Lightstrip in place, and use cord clips to hold it in position.

hue lightstrips 2

One thing to keep in mind is that the Lightstrips are best used in straight lines or very large curves. It’s basically impossible to bend them into sharp angles, so if you want to achieve that sort of effect, you’ll need to buy multiple Lightstrips and cut them to length. I’m hoping that down the road Philips offers some sort of angle connectors so you can splice cut segments to each other.

hue lightstrips arcade under

The strip itself produces bright and saturated accent colors, though it can’t really achieve the pastels and whites of Hue light bulbs. That’s just fine by me, since these are really meant to be accent lights. Each LED can produce a range of 16 million colors and is quite bright.

hue lightstrips 3

Once plugged in, the Lightstrips work like any other Hue bulb. They can be easily paired with the base station using the Hue app, and also worked brilliantly with the LivingColors remote I have from an older Philips lamp I have in my room. Of course, it’s also compatible with the Hue API and 3rd party Hue apps too. Hue also works with IFTTT recipes, so you can do things like trigger your lights to change colors when you receive an email from a specific person, or based on the weather forecast.

In my case, I ended up installing the Lightstrips under the front lip of my custom arcade cabinet, adding bright and colorful illumination to the artwork on the base of the cabinet. I suppose if I had more strips, I would have put underside lighting on my couch, but a single Lightstrip wasn’t enough for my sectional.

hue lightstrips arcade

Next up is the Bloom lamp. This lamp has actually been around for a little while as a LivingColors product, but is now being sold as a member of the Hue family, so it works out of the box with the Hue bridge and apps with no fiddling about. It’s also about $10 cheaper, since there’s no LivingColors remote included with the Hue version. The 120-lumen Hue Bloom is a 16 million color RGB accent light, delivering punchy colors, and is great as a wall wash lamp.

philips hue bloom 1

It was hard to tell, but the lamp appears to be made from metal, so it’s substantial for its size. This little 4-inch diameter lamp is bright enough to splash colors which can be seen clearly from the back of my 30-foot-long basement media room.

philips hue bloom 2

I placed the lamp behind one of my media towers, but it would also work great behind a television to increase perceived contrast, or just to make it look cool, like I’m doing with my older LivingColors Gen. 2 lamp.

Here are a few pics of my room, with all of my Hue lamps in action:

philips hue whole room 300x250
philips hue whole room colors 300x250
philips hue whole room red 300x250
philips hue whole room purple 300x250
philips hue whole room rainbow 300x250
philips hue whole room white 300x250

Overall, I’m impressed with everything about the Hue ecosystem, and am happy that Philips is starting to add new lamps to the series. Lightstrips can really add colorful accent lighting behind pictures, under sofas, and under cabinets – though their inability to be bent at sharp angles is a little limiting.

The complete Hue lineup is available from Apple Store locations. Lightstrips sell for $89.95(USD), and the Bloom lamp sells for $79.95. Keep in mind that all Hue products require the Hue bridge, which is only available in the $199.95 Hue starter kit, which also include three Hue bulbs.


Disclosure: Philips provided the products for review in this article. However, all reviews are the unbiased views of our editorial staff, and we will only recommend products or services we have used personally, and believe will be good for our readers.

‘Here to There’ is a Map of Manhattan – As Described by Strangers

Most people mean well when they give you directions. However, they often give pretty confusing directions that might get you lost when you try to follow them.

Turning these hand-scrawled directions into an art project, though, is New York conceptual artist Nobutaka Aozaki.

Handwritten Map

His piece is called Here to There and his goal is to make a map of Manhattan using handwritten directions and maps that he asked for from strangers.

here to there 2

Aozaki walks around the streets dressed in a souvenir baseball cap while toting a Century 21 shopping bag around, posing as a tourist. He then approaches random people to ask about directions on the part of the map he’s working on.

Handwritten Map2

Aozaki’s goal isn’t to create an accurate map (those already exist and his method doesn’t really lead to this end), but rather, he wants to keep track of his daily routine and create a mapped diary of sorts for that.

So if you happen to live around that area, take a closer look at the people around you. Who knows? You might actually run into Aozaki himself.

[via Spoon & Tamago via Colossal]

Meta and Steve Mann want to mediate your reality for $667

“Demo or die.” That’s the unofficial motto of Meta and it’s a bedrock principle espoused by Raymond Lo, the company’s CTO. Lo spent a decade under the tutelage of Professor Steve Mann (known to many as the father of wearable computing), and is one of the few to make it through Mann’s Ph.D. program at the University of Toronto. As an instructor, Mann requires tangible results on a regular basis from his students’ projects, and now, with Lo as CTO and Mann as chief scientist, Meta’s operating with the same ethos as it develops augmented mediated reality headsets. Meta’s idea is to meld the real and the digital together in a fully functional computing environment. It wants to augment your reality, and, in fact, mediate it.

We saw a prototype mediated reality headset from Meta a couple months ago, where we witnessed some rudimentary demos: typing in thin air and grabbing and moving digital objects with our hands. Naturally, the company’s made some improvements in the interim. The latest prototype hardware has morphed into a slightly more integrated design, but it still has the boxy and rough appearance of a 3D -printed prototype. Which, of course, it is. The Kinect-stuck-atop-a-pair-of-Rec Specs look is only temporary however, as Meta is finally ready to start taking orders for its first production headset, the Meta.01. You can pre-order one for $667.00 on Meta’s website, with deliveries set to begin in November. As opposed to the prototype you see in the image above, renders of the commercial device look like a cross between ski goggles and a pair of Oakleys. The magic of Meta doesn’t lie in its looks, however.

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