“Did You Know?”: 30 Interesting Facts About The World You Probably Didn’t Learn At School
Did you know that sloths can hold their breath longer than dolphins can, or that it would take more than 1,200,000 mosquitoes to completely drain the blood of an average human? Well, now you do!
In today’s technological age, we can access the world’s knowledge without having to leave the house. Having a working computer and the internet is enough to explore the depths of information flowing at the speed of light. All the new ideas, perspectives, and insights are at our fingertips. The only thing you have to do is want to learn something new. And if you do, “Einstein Fact” is here to help!
With more than 110 thousand followers on Instagram, “Einstein Fact” makes sure that our brains are fed with some fresh information about the world we live in. From random facts you didn’t even know you needed to really useful material, there’s tons of knowledge to impress others! Scroll down to add an extra wrinkle to your brain!
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Learning doesn’t stop at school or university. The key to remaining relevant, in sync with the latest trends, and able to adapt to the ever-changing world is to have an insatiable appetite for learning. We here at Bored Panda always want to learn something new, so we reached out to Nate Kornell, Ph. D., a professor of cognitive psychology at Williams College, to ask some questions about learning and memory. Scroll down to read the whole interview!
Nowadays, there’s an overabundance of information, easily accessible to anyone with an internet connection. It’s simply impossible to get a grip on all of the ‘flies on the web’. Even after filtering the information, it might be hard to remember all the interesting facts over the long term. Speaking about flies and memory, Nate Kornell shared that memories are kind of like flies in a web. “Sometimes flies escape, so it helps to connect them to the webbing as many times as you can. Similarly, you can make a new memory stick by thinking about how it connects to other things you know. (A great deal of research has demonstrated this finding.) It also helps to close your eyes and quiz yourself on what you learned, and to return to it after a significant interval of time.”
Radium stickers is just another name for the glow in the dark stickers. Like the stars that everyone used to have all over their bedroom ceiling and walls in the 90's that needed to absorb light and then they'd glow all night :)
In the old theatre days, we had radium tape for blocking. Good stuff. Didn't need to absorb light to work. Stuff used today needs a basic light source to work and fades after a while. The use of Radium is illegal now. When I was a kid, we had it in our watch hands and I always wondered why it left a black spot on my skin.
In my theatre we use them to mark stairs on set so people don't trip up them or fall down, and know exactly where they are.
Load More Replies...I want to know how he just ambles up to random cows without getting trampled. Every single time I've been around cows they charge me. I can pet any strange dog and even coyotes... but cows? Nope. Nope. Nope.
Indian cows. Loose on the streets and used to being surrounded by people and vehicles.
Load More Replies...Reindeer herders in Finland do similar thing but they use reflective paint instead of radium strips.
Maybe you should realize they aren't talking about actual radiation. Glow in the dark stickers on the cow's horn prevents them from getting hit by a car at night.
Load More Replies...er... radium?? or do you mean glowing? surely that would give them cancer?
Radium strips is the name of the product, no actual radium in them so it's the whole "hamburger" thing again.
Load More Replies...There are so many feral cows in the American southwest that there has to be a culling. They destroy the ecosystem and are threats to humans.
"glow in the dark" stickers glow so faintly and go dark so fast as to be totally useless for this purpose. I have a collection up in my house. Hopeless. The original complaints about radium were because workers were inadvertently eating the stuff - giving them mouth cancers. So long as you don't eat radium, or touch it directly, it's pretty darn safe, like tritium key lights. Bring back real radium for night lights and anti-freeze for plumbing, I say. This would be reflective tape - quite different.
Current self-lighting technology uses Tritium, much safer and easier to deal with. It's heavily regulated though (it's a precursor chemical for some nuclear applications) so it's mostly used in very small applications and specialized products such as safety signage, gauges and watches for military use etc. While preferred for its long half-life, Radium is a mild gamma emitter and requires thick insulation to be relatively safe, plus its high beta emission degrades the fluorescent matrix. Tritium has basically no gamma emission and very little beta, making it easily containable and less aggressive on the fluorescent pigments.
Load More Replies...In a world where vast amounts of information are available at our fingertips, you might be wondering if it is important to focus on improving our memory and learning techniques. According to Nate Kornell, remembering facts is less necessary now that we can just ask our devices. “But at a deeper level, it's never been more important. Creativity and innovation often take the form of noticing connections between different ideas, and you can't do that unless you have stored a lot of ideas in your memory. Personal growth and work productivity are all about developing and learning. I believe that successful people are often the ones who continue to learn and grow when others have reached a plateau.”
We asked Nate Kornell if there are certain types of information that are easier to remember than others. “There's a legend that Bill Russell, the great Boston Celtics basketball player, could remember an almost limitless number of specific plays from specific games that had happened many years earlier. This kind of memory is possible because he was such a basketball expert. Russell understood the game so well that to him, every play was vivid and unique and distinctive. In general: The more you know about X, the easier it is to encode new information about X. We're also highly attuned to human stories, and so they are far easier to remember than facts or statistics,” the professor answered.
Learning allows us to acquire knowledge, make decisions, and adapt to our environments. However, not everyone learns and remembers information in the same way. Nate Kornell shared that memory abilities peak when a person is in their 20s. “The subsequent decline tends to be slight and imperceptible for a long time. There are also individual differences in memory ability; interestingly, though, having a powerful memory is not always helpful in life. Anecdotally, at least, people with truly exceptional memories have not found it to be much of an advantage in work or social situations (Alexander Luria wrote a case study about one such case in The Mind of a Mnemonist).”
someone needs to help that channel with their grammar. Sentences seem to be missing information in some cases.
Agreed. It's not an issue if individual people make mistakes but if you're a monetized channel that takes time to fact check you really should take time to grammar check too.
Load More Replies...BP needs to lean what the word 'facts' mean, some of these were not facts
I don't think they give a f**k tbh....it's not like any of these topics are moderated at all by visible 'mods' and most of the content is straight up nicked from other sites like reddit. The only 'moderation' they do to weed out spam posters for instance relies on enough people downvoting them to get an uncontestable ban which also captures and bans just those whose comments aren' t liked too. As far as I'm aware there is a near to zero chance of anyone in power on BP actually noticing feedback and responding to it. It's a bit of a shitshow... yet we're all still here. Maybe we shouldn't be :)
Load More Replies...Last week I discovered that when my dad was working on the restoration of a mansion for The National Trust, he used to talk with Sting from The Police and showed him the oak panelling he’d done. Sting owned the neighbouring estate. My dad worked there for months and Sting was a regular visitor who also asked my dad to do some work at his home. This was back in the late 90s and only finding this out last week has sent me a tad crazy. Sorry - just had to share cos there’s no one else to tell.
My brother-in-law once installed a snooker table for one of the Bee Gees. I'd love to say he asked for a reference and they spoke very highly...but that bit's not true :( .
Load More Replies...I stopped reading after #7. I can't stand the colors and every picture starting with "Did you know". It's annoying
Some of these facts were quite fun and quirky. I understand that these facts were likely not written by a native speaker, however, why didn’t BoredPanda at least correct some the grammar on a lot of these posts?
It's just fun to read something I had never heard of before. Fact or not!
I wish people would stop complaining about grammar. We are all aware that not everyone has the same language skills, due to being new to the language, or lack of education. Can't we just give people a break? Does it really matter that much?
When your actual gig is to communicate with a language, it doesn't seem like much to ask that you learn to use the primary tool of the gig, which in this case is English. In my experience, many ESL speakers can at least write English more correctly than some native English speakers because they've been exposed more to "correct" English as opposed to vernacular
Load More Replies...someone needs to help that channel with their grammar. Sentences seem to be missing information in some cases.
Agreed. It's not an issue if individual people make mistakes but if you're a monetized channel that takes time to fact check you really should take time to grammar check too.
Load More Replies...BP needs to lean what the word 'facts' mean, some of these were not facts
I don't think they give a f**k tbh....it's not like any of these topics are moderated at all by visible 'mods' and most of the content is straight up nicked from other sites like reddit. The only 'moderation' they do to weed out spam posters for instance relies on enough people downvoting them to get an uncontestable ban which also captures and bans just those whose comments aren' t liked too. As far as I'm aware there is a near to zero chance of anyone in power on BP actually noticing feedback and responding to it. It's a bit of a shitshow... yet we're all still here. Maybe we shouldn't be :)
Load More Replies...Last week I discovered that when my dad was working on the restoration of a mansion for The National Trust, he used to talk with Sting from The Police and showed him the oak panelling he’d done. Sting owned the neighbouring estate. My dad worked there for months and Sting was a regular visitor who also asked my dad to do some work at his home. This was back in the late 90s and only finding this out last week has sent me a tad crazy. Sorry - just had to share cos there’s no one else to tell.
My brother-in-law once installed a snooker table for one of the Bee Gees. I'd love to say he asked for a reference and they spoke very highly...but that bit's not true :( .
Load More Replies...I stopped reading after #7. I can't stand the colors and every picture starting with "Did you know". It's annoying
Some of these facts were quite fun and quirky. I understand that these facts were likely not written by a native speaker, however, why didn’t BoredPanda at least correct some the grammar on a lot of these posts?
It's just fun to read something I had never heard of before. Fact or not!
I wish people would stop complaining about grammar. We are all aware that not everyone has the same language skills, due to being new to the language, or lack of education. Can't we just give people a break? Does it really matter that much?
When your actual gig is to communicate with a language, it doesn't seem like much to ask that you learn to use the primary tool of the gig, which in this case is English. In my experience, many ESL speakers can at least write English more correctly than some native English speakers because they've been exposed more to "correct" English as opposed to vernacular
Load More Replies...