
Kinda badass. Designer Mia Schmallenbach has designed a set of knives based on the Fibonacci sequence.
The Fibonacci sequence, you’ll no doubt remember from school, starts with 0, 1 and continues by adding the previous two numbers together: 0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8 and so on. It can then be used to make shapes. Plotting squares whose sides are the length of successive Fibonacci numbers and then drawing an arc through their opposite corners will give the Golden Spiral, a shaped found in nature: the nautilus shell, for example. By making this shape, along with others suggested by the sequence, Schmallenbach came up with the design
(via Wired via SA)
It’s on. Get the Kindle Edition of Under Angels here!
Pete Durante is a war dog trainer and crossword puzzle enthusiast, stationed near the Los Angeles Harbor during World War II. After being recruited by an Allied cryptography unit that intercepts and deciphers Axis messages, Pete cracks a code that ends the war and saves millions of lives. This offends an egotistical intelligence official named Rip Greamer, whose dark agenda begins making Pete’s colleagues disappear. When Pete’s wife and baby become targets for Greamer, Pete follows his trusty dog into a purgatorial maze of tunnels beneath Los Angeles in order to crack one final puzzle that could save his family.
Under Angels is a ghost story based on fact mixed with urban legend, pulling readers through a labyrinth of storytelling that includes WWII history, UFOs, war dogs, cryptography, puzzles, Nazi symbolism, suicide, love, tragedy, and Greamer, who is either a covert government agent or something far worse.
Don’t have a Kindle? No problem! Check out how to:
— Read a Kindle book on your PC
— Read a Kindle book on your Mac
— Read a Kindle book on your iPad or iPhone
— Read a Kindle book on your BlackBerry
— Read a Kindle book on your Android
Larry Smith’s famous storytelling descriptors are used in this game to successfully name famous and not-so-famous people from today and throughout history. 6 Word Memoirs is definitely your game if you like to use your imagination and unravel word codes. This is a game that will keep you and your friends laughing for hours. Get it here!
The Fibonacci sequence, you’ll no doubt remember from school, starts with 0, 1 and continues by adding the previous two numbers together: 0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8 and so on. It can then be used to make shapes. Plotting squares whose sides are the length of successive Fibonacci numbers and then drawing an arc through their opposite corners will give the Golden Spiral, a shaped found in nature: the nautilus shell, for example. By making this shape, along with others suggested by the sequence, Schmallenbach came up with the design












