fresh bytes
Subscribe Now

Julia Child’s recipe for shark repellent

juliaprimary.png

It was 1943, World War II was raging, and a 31-year-old Child (then McWilliams) was working for the Emergency Rescue Equipment Special Projects department of the Office of Strategic Services, the predecessor to the CIA. Combat increasingly took place on water, and the organization hoped to not just prevent shark attacks, but also bites from barracudas and piranhas. The ERE department—including Child—was tasked with whipping up a concoction that could do just that.

According to documents recently released by the CIA, the organization had been looking for a solution since July 1942—just a month after the OSS was created—and tested over 100 substances in their search, including common poisons as well as “extracts from decayed shark meat, organic acids, and several copper salts, including copper sulphate, and copper acetate.”

Copper acetate proved to be the most promising; tests on bait showed that it was “60 percent effective in deterring shark bites,” according to the CIA. It was mixed with black dye into a disk-shaped “cake” that could be affixed to the body in a number of ways and would smell like a dead shark when released in the water, lasting 6 to 7 hours.
via Mental Floss

Continue reading 

Leave a Reply

featured blogs
Apr 19, 2024
In today's rapidly evolving digital landscape, staying at the cutting edge is crucial to success. For MaxLinear, bridging the gap between firmware and hardware development has been pivotal. All of the company's products solve critical communication and high-frequency analysis...
Apr 18, 2024
Are you ready for a revolution in robotic technology (as opposed to a robotic revolution, of course)?...
Apr 18, 2024
See how Cisco accelerates library characterization and chip design with our cloud EDA tools, scaling access to SoC validation solutions and compute services.The post Cisco Accelerates Project Schedule by 66% Using Synopsys Cloud appeared first on Chip Design....

featured video

MaxLinear Integrates Analog & Digital Design in One Chip with Cadence 3D Solvers

Sponsored by Cadence Design Systems

MaxLinear has the unique capability of integrating analog and digital design on the same chip. Because of this, the team developed some interesting technology in the communication space. In the optical infrastructure domain, they created the first fully integrated 5nm CMOS PAM4 DSP. All their products solve critical communication and high-frequency analysis challenges.

Learn more about how MaxLinear is using Cadence’s Clarity 3D Solver and EMX Planar 3D Solver in their design process.

featured chalk talk

Introduction to the i.MX 93 Applications Processor Family
Robust security, insured product longevity, and low power consumption are critical design considerations of edge computing applications. In this episode of Chalk Talk, Amelia Dalton chats with Srikanth Jagannathan from NXP about the benefits of the i.MX 93 application processor family from NXP can bring to your next edge computing application. They investigate the details of the edgelock secure enclave, the energy flex architecture and arm Cortex-A55 core of this solution, and how they can help you launch your next edge computing design.
Oct 23, 2023
23,598 views