This is a video of a baggage carousel at Singapore’s Changi Airport that can identify when a piece of luggage is passing and makes incoming bags wait their turn to drop onto the conveyor to prevent potential pile-ups. Clever. Granted I didn’t know baggage pile-ups were an issue, but I
This is a video of Imgur user tragopandemonium showing off her absolutely genius lava lamp costume (pictorial of the entire build HERE). At first I thought it was an actual lava lamp. Granted my eyes are garbage and I probably shouldn’t be driving right now, but still. Hey real quick
This is a video of an Emperor Palpatine toy Force lightning the shit out of Luke Skywalker via a Tesla Coil performing The Imperial March. You know the internet really gets boners for stuff like this. Me? I only get boners for one thing, and one thing only. “Footlong chili
This is a video of a man who came up with a rather ingenious way of hiding his work tools in his pickup truck — with rear side panels that lift hydraulically to reveal storage compartments. Pretty clever. Of course now that I know about it I’m going to be
Because who doesn’t want to make some fleshy bread sandwiches, these are the cleverly packaged low-carb buns spotted by cosplayer Manna Chu at WuPaoChun Bakery in Kaohsiung City, Taiwan. Sure, rock-hard abs are cool and all, but I prefer my bread like my own stomach: soft and rolly. Also, I
Remember the video of those Oreo Thins packages that looked like a Better Homes & Gardens cookbook, Green Giant Riced Veggies, Hanes t-shirts, and a Ford owner’s manual? Well it turns out they’re real limited edition packages the company is releasing in collaboration with those brands, so you too can
Because nobody better lay a finger on my, uh, cookies, this is a short video posted by Oreo’s official TikTok showing a very clever way to hide your snacks in plain sight — by covering them with an outer wrapper that looks like something else. It appears Oreo professionally printed
This is a video from explainer of things Tom Scott taking a tour of and discussing the last aerial ropeway in England, one built in the 1920’s that’s operated by Claughton Brickworks in Lancashire. The ropeway is about 1.5-miles long, hauls 300-tons of shale every day, and does it all