Science

How Tide Predicting Machines Saved D-Day

How do you land 140,000 allied troops on an 8km stretch of beach under heavy German bombardment? Very carefully. And to ensure the deployment of forces without stranding landing craft while juking Rommel out of his shoes, the Allies employed these machines to predict the height of the tides.


October 1, 2011
Geek Out

How To Bulletproof Yourself On A WWI Battlefield

Body armour fell sharply out of favour in Europe during the 18th century but made a strong resurgence in WWI after folks realised how much getting shot hurt. These are some of the more… eccentric… examples of rudimentary blast shields and flak vests as compiled by our friends at Oobject.com.


June 24, 2011
News

Store Your Grenade In A Sewing Machine For Safekeeping

If you’re a shell-shocked World War I veteran with a few spare grenades lying around, you may start to hide them in some crazy places like a sewing machine.