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    S M T W T F S
         
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    Syndication

  • Bridges

     

    Spanning the Globe   


    Common types of bridges include beam bridges, arch bridges, suspension bridges, cantilever bridges, truss bridges, and cable-stayed bridges.

    The Inca civilization   


    The Inca civilization in South America made use of rope bridges in the Andes Mountains before the Europeans colonized in the 1500’s. These rope bridges spanned canyons and gorges, allowing easy access to otherwise difficult to reach areas. While they were strong and reliable, repairing the bridges was a dangerous job that often ended in death.


    The Oldest Standing Bridge   


    The Zhaozhou Bridge is the oldest standing bridge in China and the world’s oldest stone segmental arch bridge. Built in 605 AD, it is still standing strong today, over 1400 years later.

    The Industrial Revolution   


    During the Industrial Revolution of the 19th century wrought iron was introduced into the design of large bridges. Wrought iron was later replaced by steel because it has a higher tensile strength.





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    What Do You Know, Joe?

    In 1779, the world's first iron bridge, spanning the Severn River, was completed at what location?

    A. Maryland
    B. England
    C. Ontario
    D. Minnesota

    Last Posts Answer: A. One Sixth

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    Direct download: 201_Mostly_Trivial_201_Bridges_trivia.mp3
    Category:podcasts -- posted at: 6:01 PM

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    While the London Bridge may be awesome and the Golden Gate even more so, here’s one that beats them both to a pulp in coolness. 

    This is a seriously cool bridge, located in Leeuwarden, Netherlands (where else?) You’ve got to love how the roadway has a cutout for the arm to drop into.. awesomely clever!

    One thing I’d like to know is, since there are so many Dutchmen in northwest Iowa, why we don’t have a bridge like this near Sioux Falls. Granted, they’re mostly a generation or two removed from the Old Country, and we don’t have much for canals or boat traffic… But still, what’s the hold up?

    Johnee Bee from Mostly Trivial Podcast, iPhone app and Android App found this info here:

    http://www.newlaunches.com

    http://gadgetopia.com/post/6702

    Category:general -- posted at: 1:22 PM

    Cat History

     

    the domestic kitty through the ages   


    Cat history, it is generally believed, can be traced back to the Miacis, a weasel like creature that inhabited the earth some 40 or so million years ago. Not just cat history, but the history of all land dwelling carnivores can be traced back to the Miacis, and that includes dogs!


    The Egyptians loved their felines   


    The Ancient Egyptians had developed a method of storing grain and other food supplies. Naturally these stores attracted rats and mice. It was not long before cats were tempted by the abundance of the rodent population.

    Cats were mummified after death and buried in sanctified plots, often with their supplies of mummified mice for the afterlife! One such plot alone has been found to contain the remains of 300,000 cats, and has proved an invaluable resource for studying the history of the cat.





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    What Do You Know, Joe?

    The remarkable night vision of cats is legend. They can see with only with what percent the amount of light that humans need?

    A. one-sixth
    B. one-fifth
    C. one-fourth
    D. one-third
     

    Last Posts Answer: D. "mark of the beast"

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    Direct download: 200_Mostly_Trivial_200_Feline_Facts_trivia.mp3
    Category:general -- posted at: 7:19 PM

    What is a UPC barcode? 

    And how does it work?   


    Universal Product Codes (also known as GTIN-12) appear as lines (bars) of varying widths representing the series of numbers commonly shown below the bars. Barcode scanners, as you will know them from your favorite retailers, read the bars and convert them back to the 12-digit UPC number that they represent. This number is then looked up within the retailer's inventory system to find the corresponding product name and price that you provided them with when you signed your agreement for them to carry your product. In short, the UPC is a 12-digit unique code for your product represented by scannable bars.


    Camera based scanners   


    Camera based scanners are also very interesting and merit a closer exam. The technology is very fresh, and they are not very popular at this point, but they allow the average person to scan his or her own bar codes. Most favorite on newer smart phones, these scanners actually dissect a picture of a barcode and use software to decode the meaning of the code itself. For the 1st the right time, almost anyone can decode favorite bar code types such as ISBM and UPC wherever they are and can promptly determine information on mostly any product.





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    What Do You Know, Joe?

    BARCODES have been the subject of satanic conspiracy theories. In her book The New Money System 666, published in 1982, author Mary Stewart Relfe claimed that barcodes secretly encode the number 666, which is the biblical for?

    A. "lark of the feast"
    B. "bark of the yeast"
    C. "dark of the least"
    D. "mark of the beast"
     

    Last Posts Answer: D. $700,000,000:

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    This ALL helps my exposure to new listeners. It seems we still get more and more! If you have a Podcast as well, do one for Mostly Trivial!  This is groovy, go to Go Daddy.com and use our promo codes to help support Mostly Trivial.

    Direct download: 199_Mostly_Trivial_199_Barcode_trivia.mp3
    Category:podcasts -- posted at: 4:06 PM

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    This is Kinda Cool!
    from the Icelandic duo, Dead Skeletons [Nonni Dead & Henrik Björnsson],
    the ‘Kingdom Of God’ [lifted animation by Walt Disney, ‘The Skeleton Dance’]

    <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KNpY9Lc515s>


    for more music and info:
    <http://www.myspace.com/416756938>

    Posted by: Robot Boy

    Mostly Trivial

    Host: Johnee Bee

    Category:general -- posted at: 4:20 PM

    Colonel Sanders

     

    KFC   


    (Born Sept. 9, 1890, near Henryville, Ind., U.S.—died Dec. 16, 1980, Shelbyville, Ky.) American business executive, a dapper self-styled Southern gentleman whose white hair, white goatee, white double-breasted suits, and black string ties became a trademark in countries worldwide for Kentucky Fried Chicken.


    Sanders, who quit school in seventh grade, held a variety of jobs before opening (1929) Sanders' Cafe in the rear of a service station in Corbin, Ky. The cafe, which offered family-style dinners, soon gained a large clientele; and in 1935 Sanders received his honorary colonel's title from the governor of Kentucky


    He perfected his recipe for “finger lickin' good chicken” in 1939 by using a secret blend of 11 spices and a pressure cooker to seal in flavour and moisture. After selling his restaurant, Sanders took to the road armed with his recipe but signed up only five restaurants in two years. By 1964, however, there were more than 600 franchises in the United States and Canada, and Sanders was making $300,000 a year.




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    What Do You Know, Joe?

    In 1971 KFC, which boasted 3,500 franchises was acquired by Heublein Corporation. what was the profit that year in business?

    A. 
    $ 700,000
    B. 
    $ 7,000,000
    C. 
    $ 70,000,000
    D. $ 700,000,000
     

    Last Posts Answer: C. The Windshield Wiper. Prior to the manufacture of Henry Ford's Model A, Mary Anderson was granted her first patent for a window cleaning device in November of 1903.

    Johnee Bee from Mostly Trivial asks you, yes YOU, to leave a Review in iTunes or anywhere else that you get this show. Add yourself to my Frappr Map as well. Dont forget to vote for my show at Podcast Alley. 

    This ALL helps my exposure to new listeners. It seems we still get more and more! If you have a Podcast as well, do one for Mostly Trivial!  This is groovy, go to Go Daddy.com and use our promo codes to help support Mostly Trivial.

    Direct download: Mostly_Trivial_198_Colonel_Sanders_KFC_trivia.mp3
    Category:podcasts -- posted at: 3:53 PM

    from internet archive, it’s Francis Ford Coppola’s ‘Dementia 13’

    a little Halloween fun, um horror, to creep you out 
    . . . in a b-movie kinda way

    <http://www.archive.org/details/Dementia_13.avi>



    for more info on the flick,
    <http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0056983>

    Thanks to my pal Keith for this one.

     

    From Johnee Bee, your host on Mostly Trivial.

    Category:general -- posted at: 3:52 PM

    Women Inventors

    A Class Act !  

     


    Historians have given us a picture of women inventors in the 19th century as a group that faced and often overcame significant hurdles to achieve their goals. Their one common bond is an innate curiosity that spurs them on to find something new, something better. Today, only about 10% of all patents are awarded to women.


    Much of the history of contemporary women inventors remains to be written, hopefully, as we learn more about these creative women, their stories will inspire future generations of Women Inventors.

    All before the 1900's these women invented...

    Life raft: Maria Beaseley 1882

    Fire escape: Anna Connelly 1887

    Rolling pin: Catherine Deiner 1891

    Ironing board: Sarah Boone 1892

    Car heater: Margaret Wilcox 1893

    Suspenders: Laura Cooney 1896

    Medical syringe: Letitia Geer 1899


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    What Do You Know, Joe?

    Mary Anderson invented what?

    A. The Refrigerator
    B. The Potato Peeler
    C. The Windshield Wiper
    D. The Self Cleaning House
     

    Last Posts Answer: D. U. S. Postal Service: In 1971 the US Postal Service created the first overnight delivery between New York and Los Angeles, although they now have only 7% of the market.

    Johnee Bee from Mostly Trivial asks you, yes YOU, to leave a Review in iTunes or anywhere else that you get this show. Add yourself to my Frappr Map as well. Dont forget to vote for my show at Podcast Alley. 

    This ALL helps my exposure to new listeners. It seems we still get more and more! If you have a Podcast as well, do one for Mostly Trivial!  This is groovy, go to Go Daddy.com and use our promo codes to help support Mostly Trivial.

     

     

    Direct download: 197_Mostly_Trivial_197_Women_Inventors_trivia.mp3
    Category:podcasts -- posted at: 12:24 PM

    The Check is IN the Mail!

    I've heard THAT one before :-/   


    in Chicago, the famous Sears Tower itself is assigned one ZIP code (60606). Similarly, ZIP code 12345 is assigned to General Electric company's Schenectady office in New York.


    For failing to deliver 42,768 letters, a sentence of 384,912 years or 9 years per letter, was demanded at the prosecution of mailman Gabriel Mar Grandos, 22, at Palma de Mallorca, Spain on 11 March 1972. Source: Guinness World Records


    Making stamps is a function of the federal government, and as is the case with most governmental projects, a committee has been appointed to get the job done. The fourteen members of the Citizen’s Advisory Stamp Committee, representing expertise in American art, business, history, and technology, and sharing an interest in philately, are handpicked by the postmaster general to recommend subjects for commemorative stamps.




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    What Do You Know, Joe?

    Which organization created the first overnight air delivery service?

    A. Fed Ex
    B. DHL
    C. Airborn
    D. U. S. Postal Service
     

    Last Posts Answer: C. 33 million

    Johnee Bee from Mostly Trivial asks you, yes YOU, to leave a Review in iTunes or anywhere else that you get this show. Add yourself to my Frappr Map as well. Dont forget to vote for my show at Podcast Alley. 

    This ALL helps my exposure to new listeners. It seems we still get more and more! If you have a Podcast as well, do one for Mostly Trivial!  This is groovy, go to Go Daddy.com and use our promo codes to help support Mostly Trivial.

     

     

     

     

     

    Direct download: 196_Mostly_Trivial_196_Mail_trivia.mp3
    Category:podcasts -- posted at: 5:44 PM

     

    Mostly Trivial Fun Stuff:

     

    A paraprosdokian is a figure of speech in which the latter part 

    of a sentence or phrase is surprising or unexpected in a way that

    causes the reader or listener to reframe or reinterpret the first part. 

     

    It is frequently used for humorous or dramatic effect, sometimes 

    producing an anticlimax.

    For this reason, it is extremely popular among comedians and satirists.

     

    Examples:

    Behind every successful man is his woman. Behind the fall of a

    successful man is usually another woman.

     

     

    A clear conscience is usually the sign of a bad memory.

     

     

    I didn't say it was your fault, I said I was blaming you.

     

     

    I asked God for a bike, but I know God doesn’t work that way. 

    So I stole a bike and asked for forgiveness.

     

     

    To be sure of hitting the target, shoot first 

    and call whatever you hit the target.

     

    Category:general -- posted at: 1:55 PM