Spend The Night In A Tesla For $85
Posted in: Today's ChiliIf you are in the Phoenix area and need a place to crash, Steve Sasman is standing by. Through Airbnb, Sasman is renting out his Tesla car as a place to sleep — for $85 a night.
If you are in the Phoenix area and need a place to crash, Steve Sasman is standing by. Through Airbnb, Sasman is renting out his Tesla car as a place to sleep — for $85 a night.
It doesn’t happen very often, but astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson was wrong this week. And like any good scientist, he’s not afraid to admit it, correct it and explain himself.
On Monday, the director of the Hayden Planetarium at the American Museum of Natural History took to Twitter in an attempt to deflate the New England Patriots’ Deflategate excuse.
Coach Bill Belichick had said atmospheric pressures and balls being transported from the warm indoors out onto a cold field could have caused them to lose enough pressure to fall below league standards. But Tyson tweeted that to lose as much pressure as the balls did, they would need to be inflated with 125-degree air.
“My calculation used the well-known gas formula that relates pressure to temperature within a fixed volume,” Tyson explained on Facebook on Tuesday. “Quite simply, the two quantities are directly and linearly related. e.g. Halve the temperature, you’ve halved the pressure. Triple the temperature, you’ve tripled the pressure.”
He wrote that his mistake was using absolute pressures instead of gauge pressures. Going by gauge pressures, the balls would need to be inflated with 90-degree air.
“A delightfully moot point since neither temperature absolves the NE Patriots even as we all know that the NE Patriots, in their 45 to 7 victory over the Colts, would have won the game no matter the ball pressure,” he wrote. “And, as far as I am concerned, the Patriots would have won that game even in the vacuum of space.”
Tyson could have left it at that. But he didn’t, adding a postscript that explains how these same calculations are at work in far more significant ways than football deflation:
“A version of this principle even applies to the universe itself. When the famous cosmic microwave background was formed, the temperature of the universe was about 3,000 degrees (K). Since then, the universe has expanded by a factor of 1000, dropping the temperature to 1/1000th of 3,000 degrees. Or about 3 degrees (K), the current temperature of the universe.”
Here’s his full explanation, as posted on Facebook:
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Romina, 18, sparked outrage when she published a video online in which she tells her social media fans — and five million other viewers: “If your boyfriend hits you or beats you up, stay with him. He loves you, because he’s risking for you to press charges on him, calling the police — a guy that’s willing to do that for a girl, that’s amazing.” The teen says she considers herself a role model to her more than 153,000 Facebook followers, but she says she has suffered backlash and feels misunderstood.
Dr. Phil questions Romina’s reasoning about her controversial statement. “Your theory is that because they’re willing to put themselves at risk of going to jail, paying fines, whatever, that you must mean an awful lot to them, or they wouldn’t put themselves in harm’s way for you?” he asks her in the video above. “And therefore, you must really be loved?”
“Exactly,” she replies. “Not anyone is just going to go to jail for you … You know, they’re investing time and money, and it’s just a lot. So, like, he must really care.”
“Do you really believe that, or are you just goofing on everybody?” Dr. Phil asks the teen.
“I really do believe that,” she says.
Dr. Phil tells Romina that he normally would not share her story on his show because her logic is so flawed, but because the video has millions of views, he wants to make sure her followers hear his message too. “I am very concerned that the idiotic message that you’re putting out there could cause an innocent young girl to put herself in harm’s way following that logic and get herself hurt,” he says. “I think what you’re saying is irresponsible. I think it is ridiculous. Somebody needs to tell you straight up what’s wrong with what you’re saying.”
On Dr. Phil Wednesday, a woman who says an abusive partner doused her with gasoline and set her on fire when she was 19 has a message for Romina. And, find out the nine warning signs that you’re in an abusive relationship. Click here to see more from this episode.
During the cold walk to the subway, your nose starts running and you casually dab it with your gloved hand. On the train, you hold onto a railing, touched by thousands. On the walk to the office, you rub your nose again.
If you look at anything closely, you’ll begin to see things you never saw before. That’s why it’s super fun to look at really common objects up close because it reveals a whole ‘nother side, the world is both beautifully detailed and disgusting from up close. Pyanek did that in the series Amazing Worlds Within Our World.
Believe it or not, scientists aren’t yet finished discovering new ways to 3D print body parts. A team at the Feinstein Institute for Medical Research has developed a 3D printing technique that lets them produce cartilage for repairing damaged trachea…
This movie poster by Silenzio actually shows 35 different movies coming out in 2015, all represented with just one icon. Can you tell which movie is which? Some are easy because the sequel numbers are listed while others are just a little bit tougher. How many can you recognize?
If you’ve been curious enough about virtual reality to buy Samsung’s Gear VR headset, you’ve had to visit either AT&T’s website or Samsung’s to pick one up. Not very convenient, is it? Your VR shopping just got a little bit easier, though, as Best Bu…
At $200 Million and counting, American Sniper has touched a nerve and set off a national debate on who is real and who is fake. After being maligned by journalists, morning anchors, and bloggers, the Fake Baby from American Sniper is telling his side of the story. And yes, he did it in one take.
This time of year is the ultimate challenge for those of us who suffer from wanderlust: The holidays are over, but the frost is still sticking. Spring still seems to be eons away.
However, a remedy exists for this existential monotony, and that is to plan a trip. Where better to go than paradise?
Yes, it really does exist — in the form of the Islands of Tahiti, also known as French Polynesia. Only an 8 hour flight from L.A., Tahiti is pretty close to perfection, both literally and metaphorically.
As the great Belinda Carlisle once confirmed, heaven truly is a place on earth, which in our estimation is in the form of 118 islands, in the midst of the Pacific Ocean. Read on to find out why the Islands of Tahiti need to be your next “get-away-from-it-all” spot, brought to you in partnership with Tahiti Tourisme North America.
Proof #1: The physical landscape is straight out of a fantasy novel.
Maybe we should just let these images speak for themselves:
Proof #2: Tahitians are awesome. And have been for centuries.
Proof #3: Tahitian cuisine puts the mythological ambrosia to shame.
Proof #4: It’s the perfect tourist destination (and doesn’t even need to try).
Proof #5: Did we mention how romantic it is?
Discover the escape of a lifetime today. Visit Tahiti Tourisme North America for special offers, sample itineraries and much more.