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100 Things We Didn't Know Last Year

gollum123 writes "The BBC news magazine is running a compilation of the interesting and sometimes downright unexpected facts that we did not know last year, but now know. some examples — There are 200 million blogs which are no longer being updated, say technology analysts. Urban birds have developed a short, fast 'rap style' of singing, different from their rural counterparts. The lion costume in the film 'Wizard of Oz' was made from real lions. Online shoppers will only wait an average of four seconds for an internet page to load before giving up. Just one cow gives off enough harmful methane gas in a single day to fill around 400 litre bottles. For every 10 successful attempts to climb Mount Everest there is one fatality. Hexakosioihexekontahexaphobiacs is the term for people who fear the number 666. The egg came first."

13 of 245 comments (clear)

  1. Duh by UbuntuDupe · · Score: 5, Funny

    Just one cow gives off enough harmful methane gas in a single day to fill around 400 litre bottles.

    That doesn't sound very surprising, given that a gas always fills its container, just like a liquid always takes its container's shape.

    Oh, and by the way, if, like me, you went straight to the bird one, you couldn't but snicker at the picture's caption: "There are an estimated 1.7million great tit pairs in the UK."

    1. Re:Duh by Sciros · · Score: 5, Funny

      There's another sentence in there that starts well: "The research focused on great tits in ten major European cities, including London, Paris, Amsterdam and Prague..."

      Reminds me of the vacation I took this past August.

      --
      I like basketball!!1!
    2. Re:Duh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny
      Just one cow gives off enough harmful methane gas in a single day to fill around 400 litre bottles.

      So how much unharmful methane does it give off? Do you know that you breathe out deadly carbon dioxide? That the earth is infested with deadly dihydrogen monoxide? That 40% of all sick days are taken monday and friday?

      Useless liberal fear mongering.

  2. Hexakosioihexekontahexaphobiacs by duguk · · Score: 5, Funny

    Though the 666 term of 'Hexakosioihexekontahexaphobiacs' is true, in 2005, "a fragment of papyrus was revealed, containing the earliest known version of that part of the Book of Revelation discussing the Number of the Beast. It gave the number as 616, suggesting that this may have been the original."

    FYI: Port 616 is officially registered to SCO System Administration Server.

    1. Re:Hexakosioihexekontahexaphobiacs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      aibohphobia (the fear of palindromes) didn't make the list.

  3. Re:The Egg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    BullShit! The Rooster came first.....

  4. Re:Sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    As we know,
    There are known knowns.
    There are things we know we know.
    We also know
    There are known unknowns.
    That is to say
    We know there are some things
    We do not know.
    But there are also unknown unknowns,
    The ones we don't know
    We don't know.

    Donald Rumsfeld, Feb. 12, 2002, Department of Defense news briefing

  5. Re:Not quite by sugarman · · Score: 5, Funny

    30. The brain is soft and gelatinous - its consistency is something between jelly and cooked pasta.

    You mean that we didn't know that years prior?

    Well, they didn't know how well it was cooked. It was previously thought to be al dente. They've now confirmed that it is closer to Kraft Dinner.

    --
    --sugarman--
  6. 1.5p by Paradise+Pete · · Score: 5, Funny

    Flushing a toilet costs 1.5p, but the cost of requiring flushing is, of course, only 1p.

  7. Eveyone seems to be missing the point by Tim+C · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This isn't "100 things no-one knew last year", it's "100 things we didn't know last year". The "we" doesn't refer to the human race, it refers at the very most to "the average person in the street", and quite possibly only to the person(s) who pick the things that go in the articles.

    This isn't meant to be a list of 100 new discoveries, so can everyone stop commenting on it as though it is?

  8. Hexakosioihexekontahexaphobiacs translation by SystematicPsycho · · Score: 5, Informative

    Hexakosioihexekontahexaphobiacs -

    translated in Greek -

    Hexakosio - 600
    hexekonta - 60, but I don't know if this is a spelling mistake, should be hexenta.
    hexa - 6
    phobia - fear of

    --
    Analytic & algebraic topology of locally Euclidean meterization of infinitely differentiable Riemmanian manifold
  9. Re:Not quite by StikyPad · · Score: 5, Interesting

    6. The late Alan "Fluff" Freeman had trained as an opera singer.
    Because it was a non-story? Or did people really care?
    7. The lion costume in the film Wizard of Oz was made from real lions.
    I'm assuming they knew this when they made it.
    9. Fathers tend to determine the height of their child, mothers their weight.
    Maybe scientists didn't know this, but tall men have probably known it for a while.
    11. An infestation of head lice is called pediculosis.
    An infestation of inaccurate headlines is called ridiculosis.
    15. Donald Rumsfeld was both the youngest and the oldest defence secretary in US history.
    I'm guessing someone figured that out three years ago when he surpassed George Marshall as the oldest.
    17. Coco Chanel started the trend for sun tans in 1923 when she got accidentally burnt on a cruise.
    Does that even warrant a comment?
    20. Sex workers in Roman times charged the equivalent price of eight glasses of red wine.
    Even assuming "things we forgot" counts as things we didn't know, that brothel was discovered in 1862.
    24. One third of all the cod fished in the world is consumed in the UK.
    Only 1/3?
    28. More than 90% of plane crashes have survivors.
    If you count the crashes that don't involve falling out of the sky. Anyway, the story appeared on CNN in 2005, and the report is from 2000.
    32. Barbie's full name is Barbie Millicent Roberts.
    This is from 2003..
    35. There were no numbers in the very first UK phone directory, only names and addresses. Operators would connect callers.
    Someone just finally got around to opening the very first UK phone directory?
    37. Pavements are tested using an 80 square metre artificial pavement at a research centre
    You mean they test materials now?
    41. Some Royal Mail stamps, which of course carry the Queen's image, are printed in Holland.
    Insert prior evidence here.
    42. Helen Mirren was born Ilyena Lydia Mironov
    2004.
    48. Allotment plots come in the standard measure of 10 poles
    2001
    49. When filming summer scenes in winter, actors suck on ice cubes
    1978
    50. There are 60 Acacia Avenues in the UK.
    Didn't know, or didn't care to know?

    I'll let someone else do the last 50.

  10. Re:Sure by JayBlalock · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Um... I don't know about anyone else, but I got it completely.

    *I* find it funny\ironic\interesting because, when Rummy was just rooting around trying to find a way to dodge a reporter's question, he accidentally made a profoundly poetic, even zen, philosophical statement. When properly spaced out like parent did, I truly believe that could stand alongside the great insights of the great writers of the world. In terms of form, composition, and truth, it is nearly perfect.

    Which means just about the LAST place you'd expect it to come from is the mouth of the man whose job otherwise was to blow up as much of the known world as he could.

    And that's what makes it funny.

    And just for the record, the A.C. parent posted no commentary. Just the moment of zen. And others modded it as funny (and insightful!). Why did you automatically assume he was ridiculing it?

    --
    Bush: He's Liberal in all the wrong ways.