Watch Two Furbies Get Dissected by a Water Jet

Back in the ’90s, the Furby was the hottest toy of the Christmas season. Well, now there’s a new edition with modern tech inside. It is more lifelike with creepy new digital eyeballs for instance. But nothing can prepare you for seeing what this thing looks like while it is being cut in half by a powerful water jet.

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Fun fact: The 2016 edition’s colorful eyes have 150 different animations. That must be why when they cut this thing, it at first looks like tears streaming from it’s eyes, then black blood-like goo oozes from its beak and it is all just wrong. The horror show begins around the 2:45 mark.

So sad and disgusting. I can’t watch anymore.

Researchers to bore through 3km of Antarctic ice, seek organisms isolated for 100K years

UK researchers to bore through 3km of Antarctic ice with hot water jet, seek life

UK researchers are ready to see if life can exist in one of the harshest environments on the planet: Lake Ellsworth in the Antarctic, 3 km (2 miles) below a glacier. They'll try to drill through the ice by December 12th using a high pressure sterile water jet heated to 90 degrees Celsius (194 Fahrenheit) and sterilize the patch of lake with intense ultraviolet light before attempting to retrieve a sample. If any organisms can be found, they'll have evolved in isolation for at least 100,000 years, according to team, and probably even much longer. That could help scientists understand more about how life evolves on this planet, and possibly elsewhere -- like iced-over oceans on Europa, Jupiter's moon, or other harsh planetary environments. It'll be the deepest borehole ever made with hot water, and the team will have a mere 24 hours to sterilize the lake entry and collect samples before it refreezes. When asked which part of the tricky experiment worried him the most, lead scientist Chris Hill replied, "everything." For a video tour of the drill site, head below the break.

Continue reading Researchers to bore through 3km of Antarctic ice, seek organisms isolated for 100K years

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Source: The Guardian