Colorado

Denver Sights

There's plenty of public art in Denver, including a <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/maisonbisson/153444184/">blue bear</a> and this <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/maisonbisson/153444003/">horse in a red chair</a> (<a href="http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=en&q=Denver,+CO&om=1&ll=39.743082,-104.994879&spn=0.004562,0.014623">here</a> and <a href="http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=en&q=Denver,+CO&om=1&ll=39.73781,-104.988291&spn=0.004562,0.014623">here</a>, respectively). Tourists can also <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/maisonbisson/153443732/" title="Molly Brown's house on Flickr - Photo Sharing!">sneak a peak</a> inside <a href="http://mollybrown.org/" title="The Molly Brown House Museum">the Unsinkable Molly Brown's house</a> on <a href="http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=en&q=Denver,+CO&om=1&ll=39.737472,-104.980824&spn=0.004562,0.014623">Pennsylvania St</a>. » about 100 words

Denver Nights

<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/maisonbisson/153439791/" title="Photo Sharing">El Chapultepec</a> is a little jazz club on <a href="http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=en&q=1962+Market+St,+Denver,+CO&om=1&ll=39.753228,-104.993334&spn=0.018245,0.058494" title="1962 Market St, Denver, CO - Google Maps">Market St</a> in LoDo, and one of a number of finds in Denver. » about 100 words

Whiskey Blanket

I just bought Whiskey Blanket‘s It’s Warmer Down Here (2004) on the basis of a few tracks they offered on MySpace. It’s hip hop, socially critical hip hop (crit hop?), set atop a well constructed downtempo trip hop music bed (yeah, I’ll cut it with the hops already). It immediately brought to mind MC 900 […] » about 200 words

Fun With (Explosive) Balloons

Okay, so this is certainly in the “don’t try this at home, kids” category, but we can all laugh and point at other’s stupidity. Denver‘s ABC channel 7 reported last month on a foolish fellow who inflated balloons with acetalyne, the highly flamable and explosive gas used in welding, and drove off to a superbowl […] » about 200 words

Tesla’s History In Colorado Springs, Colorado

Nikola Tesla arrived in Colorado Springs on May 17, 1899. He was met at the train by patent lawyer Leonard Curtis, and was taken by horse and carriage to the Alta Vista Hotel, where he would reside while in Colorado. Tesla was greeted at the hotel by a group of reporters, one of whom asked him why he chose Colorado for his operation. Tesla replied, “I might as well tell you the truth, I have come here to carry on a series of exhaustive experiments in regard to wireless telegraphy — I come here for work.” The reporter asked if he was going to “flash [his] message from Pike’s Peak to Long’s Peak or another mountain of Colorado?” The question appeared to irritate Tesla who tersely replied, “No, I am here to work. It is not pleasure. I am very busy and life is short and there is a great deal to be done.”

Text taken from this history of Nikola Tesla. We should all know more about Tesla.