Ten years ago, Scientific American put together a list of their favorite apocalyptic plots from fiction and film. The grouped them by category, like astronomical catastrophes, war, geophysical disasters, machine-driven takeovers, and, of course, pandemics. Of course, this is far from a comprehensive list of the greatest tales of the end times. — Read the rest
Tuesday, 29 September 2020
Popular Posts
- 
Looking for something to illustrate a post about crunch-time in game development, I ran into this video depicting many forms of footwear (...
 - 
Reddit user u/Dinaeh has been posting updates of their project to recreate the world from Zelda Breath of the Wild in Minecraft . They ar...
 - 
It's IT development for the 21st century. DevOps basically takes a holistic approach to product development, bringing together progra...
 - 
The story varies depending on the source—momma being killed by a trap, run over by a car, lawnmowered, etc—but in all cases the result is t...
 - 
YouTube just unveiled a plan to combat phony conspiracy videos intended to manipulate or defraud viewers. (more…)
 - 
This rugged watch band acts as a case to protect my Apple Watch as I fall all over myself. Hiking, fishing, falling down -- these are a fe...
 - 
Anything can happen on Halloween! How has this film been forgotten? Someone had a good time with the Video Toaster!
 - 
Police in Guthrie, Oklahoma arrested Stephen Jennings and Rachael Rivera after pulling them over due to an expired license tag. Turns out, t...
 - 
In this video by Dr. Fakenstein , the face of Nick Offernan (in character as cantankerous libertarian Ron Swanson) is deepfaked onto that o...
 - 
Darla Shine is a former Fox News producer and the wife of Bill Shine, the White House deputy chief of staff of communications. This morning,...
 
Powered by Blogger.


