Top Vídeos
Watch this cartoon movie and solve funny puzzles at the same time!
Perfect for children who like Cut the Rope universe and toons!
Find hidden objects during the cartoon and share your findings in comments!
Get Cut the Rope: Magic game for iOS, Android & Amazon: http://zep.tl/ctrmagicfb
Visit Cut the Rope official site: http://www.cuttherope.net
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/cuttherope
Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/Cut_The_Rope
And on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/cuttheropeofficial
#FindTheHiddenObject #OmNom #CutTheRope
Find out how one of the most popular mobile games of all time -- Cut the Rope -- was brought to the web in HTML5. Watch the creators of the game explain how they collaborated with Pixel Lab to bring Om Nom to life on the web!
PLAY CUT THE ROPE ONLINE
* Online http://cuttherope.ie
GET CUT THE ROPE ON MOBILE
* iPhone or iPod touch http://bit.ly/ssCaX4
* iPad http://bit.ly/tbRV2A
* Android http://bit.ly/vRmRM8
CONNECT WITH OM NOM
* Facebook: http://facebook.com/cuttherope
* Twitter: http://twitter.com/cut_the_rope
* Website: http://cuttherope.net
* Pinterest: http://pinterest.com/cuttherope
* Instagram: http://instagram.com/cuttheropeofficial
This video is aimed more at our youngest audience. Learning colors has never been more fun!
Get the brand new Cut the Rope: Magic game for iOS, Android & Amazon: http://zep.tl/ctrmagicfb
Visit Cut the Rope official site: http://www.cuttherope.net
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/cuttherope
Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/Cut_The_Rope
And on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/cuttheropeofficial
#LearningColors #OmNom #CutTheRope
Om Nom along with his best friend Om Nelle are now entering the magical world of learning where every day they learn something new about shapes, colors, numbers and more! Come along kids and join your ever favorite #OmNom in this new and exclusive #cartoon collection of #LearningWithOmNom!
Don’t forget to subscribe: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCvMF...
To watch more of our videos click on the following links:
Learn Colors with Om Nom Face Painting:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qjTt7...
Learn Colors with Soccer Balls Xylophone:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ax-EA...
Learn Numbers and Colors with Underwater Sea Animals:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pe-sz...
Om Nom Arts and Crafts:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x4Lb3...
Om Nom Stories - Halloween Special | Learn Colors and Shapes with MAD SCIENTIST | Cartoons for Kids
To watch more of our videos click:
Learn Colors with Om Nom Face Painting:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qjTt76T9rho
The Om Nom Finger Family:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8wec32EvGbE
Learn Colors with Soccer Balls Xylophone:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ax-EAAxk2hw
Learn Numbers and Colors with Underwater Sea Animals:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pe-szJ0unTg
Om Nom Arts and Crafts:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x4Lb3g9E1hg
Om Nom and his Surprise Eggs Toys:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dph3BWR0stk
#OmNomStories #LearningVideos #Kids
Om Nom along with his best friend Om Nelle are now entering the magical world of learning where every day they learn something new about shapes, colors, numbers and more! Come along kids and join your ever favorite #OmNom in this new and exclusive #cartoon collection of #LearningWithOmNom!
Don’t forget to subscribe: https://www.youtube.com/channe....l/UCvMF0dbLxjQVg9xCx
To watch more of our videos click on the following links:
Learn Colors with Om Nom Face Painting:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qjTt76T9rho
The Om Nom Finger Family:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8wec32EvGbE
Learn Colors with Soccer Balls Xylophone:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ax-EAAxk2hw
Learn Numbers and Colors with Underwater Sea Animals:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pe-szJ0unTg
Om Nom Arts and Crafts:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x4Lb3g9E1hg
Astronauts are allowed to bring special “crew preference” items when they go up in space. NASA astronaut Don Pettit chose candy corn for his five and a half month stint aboard the International Space Station. But these candy corn were more than a snack, Pettit used them for experimentation.
Footage courtesy of Don Pettit. Music courtesy of Bardo Music/South Hill Project. Produced by Flora Lichtman
It's a potato on toothpicks! No, it's a hopping noodle! A fuzzy rodent T-rex! Any way you look at them, jerboas are about as cute as they come. These adorable critters bounce about on long, springy legs - appendages that just might help us better understand and perhaps manipulate the growth of human bones.
Please Support Our Video Productions: http://www.patreon.com/scifri
With their probing paws and destructive behavior, the raccoon has gained a reputation as a garbage bandit, capable of finding a meal in any urban landscape. Yet despite their proximity to our homes and their evident resourcefulness, very few researchers have truly tested the problem-solving abilities of the “trash panda.” As part of a multi-year study exploring the cognition of raccoons, researchers at the University of Wyoming’s Animal Cognition Lab are pushing the limits of the species’ learning by providing both captivity and street-dwelling specimens with a variety of tests.
Produced by Luke Groskin
Music by Audio Network
Additional Footage ands Stills by Lauren Stanton, Rachel Fanelli, Wyoming Raccoon Project,
University of Wyoming Animal Behavior and Cognition Lab, Pond5, Lawrence W. Cole,
Yu-Yuan Chen (CC BY 2.0.),Brian Crockford (CC BY 2.0.), Youtube User Iv D. A. (CC BY 2.0.),
Youtube User Kings of the Road (CC BY 2.0.), Benjamin Ballerstein (CC BY 2.0.),
David Edgar Stahl (CC BY 2.0.), SMM Exhibits (CC BY 3.0),
Jelbert SA, Taylor AH, Cheke LG, Clayton NS, Gray RD (CC. BY 2.0)
Special Thanks to Lauren Stanton, Sarah Benson-Amram, Volcano, Hudson, Paprika, and Tarragon.
In his home in rural Montana, photographer and biologist Tim Wheeler (http://timwheelerphotography.com ) has lined the walls of his living room with shelf after shelf of lichen specimens. He has gathered these samples from his journeys and he meticulous curates his collection, finding only the most photogenic or unique specimens to profile. Using stacked macro photography, his portraits of lichen transform these dull and ubiquitous organisms into marvels of evolution and vibrant landscapes. With the aid of professional lichenologists, Tim Wheeler hopes to highlight in exquisite detail the amazing diversity of colors and forms that lichens possess
Produced by Luke Groskin
Music by Audio Network
Still Images by Timothy Wheeler
http://www.patreon.com/scifri - Please Help Support Our Video Productions!
Neuroscientist Gregory Berns wanted to know what his his dog was thinking. But unlike many behaviorists who conduct elaborate experiments to get clues about the inner life of canines, Dr. Berns decided to take a more direct route. He trained dogs to go into an MRI scanners in order to figure out what they’re thinking.
Produced by Chelsea Fiske and Brandon Swanson
Music by Audio Network
Additional Images Provided by Greg Berns, The Pavlovian
Laboratory of the Henry Phipps Psychiatric Clinic,
Javier DeFelipe, Frontiers Media SA, NASA, and Pond5
Special Thanks to Ryann Meisenhelder, Jennie Wainer
and Shannon Kulnis
http://www.sciencefriday.com
Produced by Luke Groskin. Wine and location provided by Corkbuzz. Music by Audio Network
Additional photos and footage provided by Finger Lakes Wine Program/James Monahan, Shutterstock, Patricia Lynch, Tom Mack, Christina Sookdhis, Bodegas Delea a Marca, and Gironde Tourism
From smoky to citrusy to peppery, the unique flavor profiles of wines are scrutinized and celebrated perhaps more than any other beverage. In the first episode of our wine science series, Dr. Gavin Sacks of Cornell University's Viticulture and Enology Program, details the chemical composition of wine and explains why you detect the faintest aromas of oak, flowers, or green pepper in your glass.
http://www.sciencefriday.com
Fireflies communicate with a "language of light" that scientists still don't completely understand. James Lloyd and Marc Branham of the University of Florida, Gainesville, discuss unique flash patterns and times for some of the 2,000 types of fireflies that light up the summer nights.
Produced by Emily V. Driscoll
Filmed by
Sakuma Fumio
Rei Ohara
Stavros Basis
Narrated by Ira Flatow
Additional Stills by
Joyce Gross
Bruce Marlin
Shutterstock
YikrazuulMusic by Audio Network
Special Thanks
Marc Branham
"Brilliant Darkness" movie funded by the Zoological Lighting Institute.
James Karl Fischer
Luke Groskin
Misa Kimura
James Lloyd
The Zoological Lighting Institute (http://www.zoolighting.org/)
*** We're now on Patreon! http://www.patreon.com/scifri - Please Help Support Our Video Productions! ***
Some say that beauty's only skin-deep. But one veterinary surgeon and his team look beneath the surface...literally. Scott Echols says that we don't actually know very much about the anatomy of animals because haven't had a way to properly visualize it. But now, with the help of a new imaging technology called BriteVu, researchers have access to a trove of data on animal anatomy.
After an animal has been euthanized, researchers inject a compound into its blood vessels that allows them to take a CT scan and create multiple 3-D images, which allow researchers to analyze the intricate anatomy that lies below the skin. They can see every blood vessel in the body, from capillaries to the arteries, and everything in between.
Produced by Luke Groskin
Filmed by Dusty Hulet
Music by Audio Network.com
CT Scans and Video provided by Scarlet Imaging, Anatomage, University of Utah,
and the staff & owners of Parrish Creek Veterinary Clinic, Centerville, Utah
Sketches by Ludwig Bojanus, Johannes Sobotta, Herbert Spencer Jennings,
V. Ghetie, Frank E Beddard
Special Thanks to Shane Richins and Robert Groskin.
http://www.sciencefriday.com
Step Inside A Mad Scientist's Lab
The movie prop shop Jadis, in Santa Monica, California, is packed with ancient, long-forgotten technology: an Edison dictaphone, a typewriter-like counting machine and quack medical devices like the 'Hemodimagnometer.' But you might recognize some of these oddities--they've appeared in movies like The Mystery Men, The X-Files, and The Prestige.
Parke Meek, an industrial designer who worked with the likes of Frank Lloyd Wright and Charles and Ray Eames, opened Jadis as an antiques shop in 1976, with his partner Susan Lieberman. Later, Meek began to design props for the movie industry, like huge control panels dotted with switches and illuminated dials, sourcing his materials at swap meets and government auctions. "He'd say, 'Got anything heavy, expensive and useless for me today?'" Lieberman says.
Meek passed away in 2010 at the age of 86. But Lieberman still keeps the shop open for passersby on weekends--admission costs one dollar. She and Parke's nephew Thomas Meek gave Science Friday a tour of this cabinet of curiosities, recalling Parke's life and describing the perfect ingredients for a Hollywood mad scientist's lab.
Special thanks to: Susan Lieberman, Thomas Meek, Jadis
Audio: Christopher Intagliata
Video editing: Leese Katsnelson
Photography: Christopher Intagliata
Photos of Parke Meek: Lori Lieberman
From the Science Friday Archives!
With global threats like ocean warming and acidification, it's a tough time to be a coral. Marine scientists John Bruno and Elizabeth Selig, of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, analyzed over 8000 coral surveys from all over the world to see if local management through Marine Protected Areas had any positive effect on coral.
Agave plants, probably best known as the source of tequila, were important as a food crop long before the invention of margaritas. Wendy Hodgson, botanist at the Desert Botanical Garden in Phoenix, says the plants were cultivated as far back as 800 AD in some parts of the Southwest. Trek through the Arizona desert to see where agaves were cultivated centuries ago and what remains of the ancient gardens.
Originally published on ScienceFriday.com May 14, 2009
The Greater sage-grouse makes its living in sagebrush habitats across the western U.S. and Canada. Every year from late February to May, male sage-grouse perform a striking dance routine each morning at dawn. Jason Robinson, upland game coordinator for the Utah Division of Wildlife Resources, breaks down the dance and describes challenges the birds face in Utah.
The Greater sage-grouse makes its living in sagebrush habitats across the western U.S. and Canada. Every year from late February to May, male sage-grouse perform a striking dance routine each morning at dawn. Jason Robinson, upland game coordinator for the Utah Division of Wildlife Resources, breaks down the dance and describes challenges the birds face.
http://www.sciencefriday.com
Imagine standing on another planet and looking up at the stars. What would the sky look like? In a perfect merger of art and science, artist Helena Kauppila uses astronomical data to paint her vision of other worlds.
Producer & Editor: Kathryn Free
Science Advisor: Emily Rice, The American Museum of Natural History
Special Thanks: Helena Kauppila
Music: Possibilities by Helen Jane Long &Starshift by Paul Mottram
Kepler footage courtesy of NASA