Bizzare Album Covers
If you've gotten tired of looking at the covers of albums you already own, you'll no doubt enjoy looking at some that you probably don't.
If you've gotten tired of looking at the covers of albums you already own, you'll no doubt enjoy looking at some that you probably don't.
Some things are too bizarre to stay in the dustbin of history. Gone and Forgotten is a page dedicated to character ideas and story lines that were too absurd, too dumb for. . . comic books. Here are profiles of heroes who never really made it into the mainstream, in a genre that can hadly be considered hostile to the absurd.
Researchers at UCLA have stumbled upon a discovery that might lead to huge advances in treating anxiety disorders.
Wired has just launched a brand new redesign using squeaky clean XHTML and CSS. This redesign is great news for supporters of web standards, as Wired is one of the first large commercial sites to commit to standards compliance. The new design uses a table-free layout and displays well on all manner of browsers (including PDAs and cell phones).
Ever wondered what the world looks like through the eyes of a bee? This site does more than tell, it shows a bee-guilingly new perspective.
A relief to some and a surprise to many, recent archeological find proves to be less human, more ape.
Have you ever wondered why there isn't one place to go the web for scores by American composers? Who hasn't? New Music Jukebox is this and more, an archive of info, recordings, and scores from 20th American composers from Samuel Barber up to the present day.
Beginning with the games for the Commodore 64 and extending up to the present day, this archive contains a huge store of theme music from thousands of even the most obscure games. A descent into geekdom for which this blogger will make no apology, this site is a tool for nostalgia, an archive of truly bizarre, incredibly strange music, and a dangerously addictive waste of time.
Interesting online and real exhibit sponsored by the National Library of Medicine and the National Institutes of Health, featuring centuries of drawings and studies of human anatomy from Galen to the present day.
Italians, at long last, are reassuming control of one of their national icons...and revealing much about themselves in the process.