Showing posts with label Intersting And Strange. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Intersting And Strange. Show all posts

Friday, 22 March 2013

10 false facts most people think are true



Up until the late 16th century, everyone "knew" that the sun and planets revolved around the Earth. Up until the late 19th century, epidemic illnesses such as cholera and the plague were "known" to be caused by a poisonous mist filled with particles from rotting things. Up until the early 20th century, the most common procedure performed by surgeons for thousands of years was bloodletting, because we "knew" that blood drained from the body balanced the whacky humors responsible for poor health. Well alrighty then.
 
But as misinformed as all that may sound now, our predecessors believed these "facts" with the same certainty that we believe that the Earth is round and hot fudge sundaes make us fat.
 
Living in a time of such dazzling science and technology, we stand firmly behind our beliefs … even if so much of what we think we know to be correct is actually wrong. Here are some of the more common misconceptions, ideas that may have started as wives' tales or that came from a faulty study that was later proven wrong. Whatever the case may be, these facts are false.
 
1. Going out in the cold with a wet head will make you sick
"Put a hat on or you’ll catch your death of a cold," screeches every micromanaging momma as her charges march off into the winter wonderland. But in numerous studies addressing the topic, people who are chilled are no more likely to get sick than those who were not. And a wet or dry head makes no difference. (But these tips can help you stop a cold before it starts.)
 
2. Vikings wore horned helmets
Is there anything more "Viking warrior" than a helmet fitted with horns? Nary a portrayal shows the seafaring Norse pirates without the iconic headgear. Alas, horned hats were not worn by the warriors. Although the style did exist in the region, they were only used for early ceremonial purposes and had largely faded out by the time of the Vikings. Several major misidentifications got the myth rolling, and by the time costume designers for Wagner’s "Der Ring des Nibelungen" put horned helmets on the singers in the late 19th century, there was no going back.
 
3. Sugar makes kids go bonkers
The Journal of the American Medical Association published a review of 23 studies on the subject of kids and sugar, the conclusion: Sugar doesn’t affect behavior. And it's possible that it is the idea itself that is so ingrained as fact that it affects our perception. Case in point: In one study mothers were told that their sons had consumed a drink with a high sugar content. Although the boys had actually consumed sugar-free drinks, the mothers reported significantly higher levels of hyperactive behavior. That said, some scientists warn that sugar can make you dumb.
 
4. You lose most of your body heat through your head

Everyone knows that you lose somewhere around 98 percent of your body heat through your head, which is why you have to wear a hat in the cold. Except that you don’t. As reported in The New York Times and elsewhere, the amount of heat released by any part of the body depends mostly on the surface area — on a cold day you would lose more heat through an exposed leg or arm than a bare head.
 
5. You will get arthritis from cracking your knuckles

It seems reasonable, but it's not true either. You will not get arthritis from cracking your knuckles. There is no evidence of such an association, and in limited studies performed there was no change in occurrence of arthritis between "habitual knuckle crackers" and "non crackers." There have been several reports in medical literature that have linked knuckle cracking with injury of the ligaments surrounding the joint or dislocation of the tendons, but not arthritis
 
6. Napoleon was short

Napoleon's height was once commonly given as 5 feet 2 inches, but many historians have now given him extra height. He was 5 feet 2 inches using French units, but when converted into Imperial units, the kind we are accustomed to, he measured almost 5 feet 7 inches inches tall — which was actually slightly taller than average for a man in France at the time.
 
7. You have to stretch before exercise

Stretching before exercise is the main way to improve performance and avoid injury, everyone stretches … but researchers have been finding that it actually slows you down. Experts reveal that stretching before a run can result in a 5 percent reduction of efficiency; meanwhile, Italian researchers studying cyclists confirmed that stretching is counterproductive. Furthermore, there has never been sufficient scientific evidence that pre-exercise stretching reduces injury risk.
 
8. Cholesterol in eggs is bad for the heart
The perceived association between dietary cholesterol and risk for coronary heart disease stems from dietary recommendations proposed in the 1960s that had little scientific evidence, other than the known association between saturated fat and cholesterol and animal studies where cholesterol was fed in amounts far exceeding normal intakes. Since then, study after study has found that dietary cholesterol (the cholesterol found in food) does not negatively raise your body’s cholesterol. It is the consumption of saturated fat that is the demon here. So eat eggs, don’t eat steak.
 
9. Dogs age at seven years per one human year

Your 3-year-old dog is 21 years old in human years, right? Not according to experts. The general consensus is that dogs mature faster than humans, reaching the equivalent of 21 years in only two, and then aging slows down to more like four human years per year. "Dog Whisperer" Cesar Millan’s site recommends this way to calculate your dog’s human-age equivalent: Subtract two from the age, multiply that by four and add 21.
 
10. George Washington had wooden teeth

Our first president starting losing his teeth in his 20s, but contrary to popular belief, his dentures were not made of wood. Although built-in toothpicks would have been handy, Washington had four sets of dentures that were made from gold, hippopotamus ivory, lead, and human and animal teeth (horse and donkey teeth were common components in the day). Also of note: The dentures had bolts to hold them together and springs to help them open, all the better to eat one of his favorite treats, Mary Washington's seriously delicious gingerbread.

Five of the biggest hacking attacks


The hacking attack on three South Korean broadcasters and at least two banks could be one of the largest operations of its kind. Here are some of the most significant security breaches of recent years.

 South Korean authorities have suggested that North Korea was behind the attacks, which crippled computer networks at three broadcasters and two banks. That wouldn't be the first time a state has been implicated in a hacking operation but it might not be the biggest hacking attack. Here are five major attacks from recent years.
1. Operation Shady RAT
Last year security firm McAfee revealed details of Operation Shady RAT (RAT is an acronym for Remote Access Tool), a hacking campaign that took place over several years. The networks of 72 organisations across the world were targeted in the campaign which began in mid-2006, or perhaps earlier, and continued until at least 2010. Targets included the United States government, the UN, 12 US defence contractors and several technology firms.
McAfee said it believed that a "state actor" was behind the attacks and that it was impossible to say how much data was stolen. Though McAfee declined to say which country was behind the attacks, most experts believe China to be the most likely perpetrator.
2. TJX
The precise details of large-scale financial hacks are often kept private but there are several attacks that are contenders for the title of 'most expensive hack'. One is the 2007 attack on American firm TJX, which was mounted from an insecure WiFi network in one of the company's TJ Maxx shops. More than 45 million people had their credit card details stolen and some experts said the actual figure was likely to be closer to 94 million.
3. Heartland Payment Systems
This New Jersey payment processing firm lost data on tens of millions of credit cards in an attack in 2009. Around 175,000 businesses were affected by the theft, which was led by hacker Alberto Gonzalez, who was also implicated in the TJX attack.
4. Epsilon
The world's largest email marketing firm, Epsilon, confirmed in 2011 that it had been the target of hackers. Only names and email addresses were stolen from the firm, which handles more than 40 billion emails every year more than 2,000 brands worldwide including Marks and Spencer. The scale of the theft was unprecedented.
5. Sony PlayStation Network

In 2011, hackers gained access to Sony's PlayStation Network, putting at risk credit card data for more than 70 million people. The gaming service was closed for weeks and customers were eventually compensated with free games and subscriptions. Though the culprits were never caught, it is now believed that no data was stolen and the attack was intended to simply embarrass Sony.  

Hijacked PCs defrauding advertisers


Fake clicks generated by the Chameleon botnet are earning fraudsters $6million per month, a London-based investigator has claimed.  

 The newly discovered ‘Chameleon botnet’ has hijacked 120,000 American PCs and is generating billions of fake clicks on adverts, Spider.io claimed.
In some cases, Chameleon accounts for two-thirds of a website’s traffic, generating huge incomes for owners who get on average 69 cents each time an advert on their site is clicked on.
Spider.io has tracked Chameleon since December and said the hijacked PCs, all running Internet Explorer 9 and Windows 7, generated up to 9bn ‘impressions’ every month across more than 200 sites. Sophisticated software impersonated cursor movements and mouse clicks so that fraud detection software was fooled.
Dr Douglas de Jager, Spider.io’s chief executive, said in his report that “It is difficult to imagine why one would run this type of botnet across a cluster of 202 sites other than to commit display advertising fraud.”
The investigation does not reveal which sites were part of the fraud, and Dr De Jager said it was by no means unique. 

Wednesday, 13 March 2013

The world's top porn search terms revealed


Britons are patriotic in their pornography preferences, according to online search data.

The top search term for British-based users of pornography websites was "British", followed by "Indian" and "MILF" - an acronym referring to pornography featuring older women.
Britain wasn't the only country where those searching for pornography sought out material featuring people of their own nationality. Other countries where the top search was for women or men of the same nationality include Denmark, the Netherlands, Italy, France, Sweden and Germany.
The top search terms in other countries were more unusual. Ukrainian porn fans were most likely to search for "Raincoat (gay)", while in Romania the top term was "Mom and son".
The most popular term in Syria was "Aunt". In Iran, the sixth most popular search term was "Hotel businessman (gay)".
In the US as a whole the most searched-for term was "MILF", followed by "Teen" and "College". However, there were significant differences between certain states.

Is this the world's smallest book?


Japanese book of flowers called Shiki no Kusabana, with pages only 0.75 millimetres, is hoping for title of the world's smallest printed book.

Japan has created what it is claiming is the smallest ever printed book, with pages measuring 0.75 millimetres (0.03 inches) which are impossible to read with the naked eye.
The 22-page micro-book, entitled Shiki no Kusabana (flowers of seasons), contains names and monochrome illustrations of Japanese flowers such as the cherry and the plum. Toppan Printing, who have been making micro books since 1964, said letters just 0.01 mm wide were created using the same technology as money printers use to prevent forgery.
The book is on display at Toppan's Printing Museum in Tokyo, and is on sale, together with a magnifying glass and a larger copy, for 29,400 yen (£205).
Toppan said it would be applying to Guinness World Records to claim the title of world's smallest book, presently held by a 0.9 mm 30-page Russian volume called Chameleon, created by Siberian craftsman Anatoly Konenko in 1996.