The sun accounts for more than 99.99% of the mass of the solar system
The dog that played specks girlfriend in Pee Wees big adventure is also the same dog that played precious in silence of the lambs.
The guy who played Cowboy Curtis on PeeWees playhouse also played Morpheus in the Matrix.
This feels like one of those fun facts that theatres would have on screen with cheesy background music if you showed up to a movie too early
Wombats shit is cubic.
Television is one of the few words combined by one greek part and one latin part.
A sperm whale penis is 14 feet long.
Physiologically, rats can’t vomit. (Not to brag or anything, but I also know somebody who claims they saw it happen once)
Fun fact 1: Polish people are honoraribly black after they fought alongside the Haitians against the French (they switched sides as the only reason they were there was because France sent them there)
Fun fact 2: Alaska was almost purchased by Lichtenstein
Fun fact 3: Singapore was given independence against their own wishes
Fun fact 4: Abraham Lincoln read some of the works of Karl Marx as he wrote for his favorite newspaper
Nipples can’t operate heavy machinery.
Not with that attitude
when the great pyramids were being built, there were still mammoths and sabertooth tigers walking the earth.
and Cleopatra lived closer to the moon landings than to the building of the pyramids
I knew about the relict popularion of mammoths that was still around. Wasn’t aware of the tigers. Can you please tell me more?
I can’t 100% give you facts. I just go off of the rough estimate of fossil records for both mammoth and sabertooth tigers roughly and this is just a random thing I like to tell people when I was younger to kind of blow their mind.
It’s f’in neato. I’ll be looking into it.
Another really good random “did you know” When the battle of Little Bighorn, a.k.a. custard‘s last stand happened the Brooklyn Bridge was just being completed in New York, and there were Native Americans who fought in the battle who were still alive to see Neil Armstrong step on the Moon so in the span of one lifetime we went from custard‘s last stand to one giant leap for all mankind.
If presented with an old 1970-2000 era landline phone, I can call someone by rapidly hanging up in the pattern of their phone number.
In case anyone is wondering, this is how old phones with rotary dials worked: you wound the dial to the digit you needed and the built-in mechanism would automatically wind it back; as it did it would momentarily disconnect the line as it passed each digit generating pulses that the exchange would count. If you still live somewhere where landline phones exist odds are this still works because the exchange maintains backwards compatibility with pulse dialling.
Up until about twenty years ago virtually every supermarket had a phone by the checkouts with a single pre-programmed button for a local taxi company; we used this trick all the time to call home, our mates, etc.
You’re welcome to dial into my Modem on which Doom is listening for a connection at 40c3 :3
Used to do this in payphones as a kid. The numpads were disabled when no coins were inserted, effectively disabling tone dialing. But pulse dialing still worked.
I am pretty sure I could do it sans phone and only the handle, by rapidly pulling the plug out of the socket and putting it back in.
Never thought to try it when I had the chance.
Often the rj-12 handset cabling would not plug directly into the rj-11 jacks. If they did, I’d be surprised to learn they’d work on the wire as-is.
Yeah, you’d have to change the plug.
One of the people that worked in Turkish translation of the “alice in wonderland” for Zambak magazine has the cool birthday “January 1st, 1969.”
Damn that’s useless! Also, nice!
The PC I had as a teenager had teal trim.
The “brat” in “bratwurst” doesn’t come from “braten”, which means to fry. It actually comes from the old German word “brät”, which means finely chopped meat.
That’s so brät
The English horn is neither English nor a horn.
Snakes have two penises. Or at least pythons do.
For all our differences we still have so much in common.











