Posted by
michael
on from the now-you-see-it dept.
An anonymous reader writes "The BBC are reporting James Dyson's new garden feature, a waterfall with water flowing uphill. Apparently, he wanted to recreate an Escher drawing."
Antiwater (two part antihydrogen and one part antioxygen) is repelled by the force of gravity.
Re:Simple... it's antiwater
by
nomadic
·
· Score: 5, Funny
If you drink anti-water, do you become thirsty?
Re:Simple... it's antiwater
by
thoughtstream
·
· Score: 5, Funny
Close, but no cigar. The clue is in the article, where it's explained that a "thin later of water" is used.
In other words, he's using anti-time! By covering the ramps with a thin coating of later (rather than the usual layers of earlier that surround most objects) the water actually flows backwards in time. This, of course, causes its normal downhill motion under gravity to occur retrotemporally, giving the fluid the appearance of syntemporal uphill motion.
Contratemporal epitaxy, eh? I tell you, that Dyson's a genius!
Antiwater (two part antihydrogen and one part antioxygen) is repelled by the force of gravity.
Perhaps some sort of spinoff of Marcel Duchamp's 1917 work of "art".
Those crazy dadaists!
Escher makes my brain hurt. It's so obvious something is wrong, but it's impossible to focus on it. Argh, this makes me want to gouge out my eyes.
Indeed. It reminds me of a few companies I've worked for.
Dude, you just helped me coin a new term:
Escher-esque Management.
Let's push it onto a few blogs and see if it doesn't end up in Wired next month.