Top lad, sussed we live on a genorator, still not useing - TopicsExpress



          

Top lad, sussed we live on a genorator, still not useing :( Nikola Tesla may be known today as one of historys greatest inventors, but the intrepid scientists eccentricities have become as legendary as his trailblazing discoveries in the field of electricity. Tomorrow (July 10) marks the 158th anniversary of Teslas birth, and to celebrate the occasion, Live Science is looking back at Teslas legacy, the cult of personality that has developed around the inventor in the years after his death, and the decades-old debate about who should be crowned the greatest inventor of all time: Nikola Tesla or Thomas Edison. Though Tesla holds 112 lifetime U.S. patents, and is most famous for helping to develop the modern alternating current (AC) system of electric power, the inventor died penniless and in relative obscurity on Jan. 7, 1943, at age 86 Teslas outsized and quirky personality, along with some of his more far-out ideas — such as his experiments to develop a particle gun, or death ray — earned him a reputation that fell somewhere between creative genius and mad scientist. But while some regard him as the true father of electricity, others have come to remember Tesla more for his peculiarities than his accomplishments. Here are some of the strangest facts about Tesla: -Tesla rarely slept, and claimed he never dozed for longer than two hours. The inventor also said he once worked for 84 hours straight without any rest, according to John ONeil, author of the book Prodigal Genius: The Life of Nikola Tesla (Cosimo Inc., 2006). -Later in his life, Tesla frequented parks in New York City, often rescuing injured pigeons and nursing them back to health. A special PBS report on Teslas life and legacy claimed that when the inventor took up residence at the Hotel New Yorker, he had the hotel chef prepare a special mix of seed for his pigeons, which he hoped to sell commercially. -Tesla was a vegetarian, but eventually limited himself to a peculiar diet of only milk, honey, bread and vegetable juices, according to Marc Seifer, author of Wizard: The Life and Times of Nikola Tesla, (Citadel Press, 1996). Later in life, he was consumed by an extreme aversion to germs, and would only eat food that had been boiled, reported PBS. -Tesla allegedly had a photographic memory, and could memorize entire books, according to Margaret Cheney, author of Tesla: Man Out of Time (Simon and Schuster, 2001). -According to Seifers book Wizard: The Life and Times of Nikola Tesla, the inventor claimed that repeatedly squishing his toes helped to stimulate his brain cells. In fact, Tesla reportedly performed his toe exercises nightly, 100 times for each foot. -Tesla spent decades as a New York City resident, and to commemorate his connection to the Big Apple, the intersection of 40th Street and Sixth Avenue in Manhattan is named Nikola Tesla Corner. A plaque honoring Tesla can also be found on the façade of the New Yorker Hotel, where the inventor died. -Tesla died in Room 3327 of the New Yorker Hotel on Jan. 7, 1943. A death mask was commissioned after a medical examiner inspected the body. The mask is on display in the Nikola Tesla museum in Belgrade, Serbia.
Posted on: Wed, 09 Jul 2014 21:16:38 +0000

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