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Search Result for: blend Cool
Here's a cool video of a blender munching away at a photo camera. It's really cool and impressive! Enjoy!
I found another 'Will it blend?' video that I haven't posted yet, and thought I should share it with you. This time the infamous power blender shreds to dust some toilet components. Cool!
The latest video from the 'Will it blend?' series features the same kick-ass blender turning the new and popular Apple iPhone into dust. Literally. Enjoy!
One of the best Will it Blend movies so far in my opinion. It features a Red Bull can, a mouse, a PC board, and lots of other stuff. Pretty cool that blender, guess they have a giant motor under the table
From the famous "Will it blend" series, here comes the latest video clip: Light Sticks. Will it blend?
From the "Will it blend series" here comes this video of magnets in a blender. This one's a little bit different from the other "Will it blend" videos because you can't actually see the neodymium magnets blend till they're dust. They just show you the result. Let me have my doubts about this one!
Well it seams that the guy with the 1000W blender decided it would be cool to see how a blended IPod looks like. The question as usual is: Will it blend?. Enjoy.
Technology and Health News
A highly resistant and self lubricating material has been discovered, thanks to the formation of an oxide surface that captures the water vapor
Hard as diamond and slippery as a sheet of ice. The secret of the extraordinary characteristics of Bam, a special alloy-ceramics produced by blending a mix of boron, aluminum and magnesium (AlMgB14) with titanium boride (TiB2), was unveiled by researchers of Ames Laboratory, in Iowa (Usa ), who had accidentally discovered it a decade ago.
In 1999, researchers tried to obtain a substance capable of generating electricity if overheated, when, unexpectedly, found in the hands a league owned by the exceptional and seemingly inexplicable. The Bam is tough, despite possessing a complex structure, asymmetrical and not compact. Moreover, says Alan Russel of Iowa University, it is inherently slippery. One characteristic that, according to researchers, could be due to the formation on the surface of boron oxide, which can attract water molecules present in the air.
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