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Showing posts with label Science & Technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Science & Technology. Show all posts

Thursday, 8 May 2014

Multiple Whatsapp Account

Run Multiple Whatsapp Account on Android Device


Whatsapp as you all know one of the world’s most famous internet chatting messenger, through this you can send message to your friend sitting anywhere and any part of the world without paying a single penny, but as we all know the every coin has two sides this chatting messenger also has one disadvantage that you cannot run multiple whatsapp account on android device. This drawback is present in whatsapp because whatsapp uses unique  IMEI address as username and your mobile number as password and as we all know that every device can only have one IMEI address thus no two whatsapp accounts can be operated using single device.

Run Multiple Whatsapp Account on Android Device Run Multiple Whatsapp Account on Android Device
But now you can overcome this limitation by just following tutorial on how to run multiple whatsapp account on android device using Titanium Backup Root

Run Multiple Whatsapp Account on Android Device

This can be made possible using Titanium Backup Root android app

About Titanium Backup Root

Titanium Backup is an android app which provides you with lots of features like backup, restore, freeze your apps, data and Market links. You can move any app (or app data) to/from the SD card. You can browse any app’s data. But besides this one of its most power feature is that you can create two different user profiles for running two different WhatsApp account. These user profiles will have their own own system settings, apps and data.


* But only drawback of this app is that you cannot use it on your android device without rooting it. So firstly your device should be rooted before proceeding further tutorial.

How to Use Titanium Backup Root to Run Multiple Whatsapp Account

Step 1. Open the Titanium Backup Root app and click on switch profile option so that you can create two profile to run two different whatsapp accounts.
switch profile Titanium Backup Root Run Multiple Whatsapp Account on Android Device
Step 2. Now create a New data profile will appear simple click on it and enter the name of your first user profile. The First user profile will act as Administrator having all controls and this account will contain all the apps and data that you are having now. You will also having WhatsApp on this profile if you are using it on your device earlier.

create user profile android Run Multiple Whatsapp Account on Android DeviceStep 3. Now after creation of the first user profile again click on switch profile and then create second user profile with some other name

Step 4. Two profile will be created, Now click on Switch profile button and select the second profile name that will contain your Another WhatsApp account. If it is not pre installed then download it from Google Android store

Step 5. Click on the Backup/restore tab above and browse for the whatsapp application for the list

backup restore titanium backup Run Multiple Whatsapp Account on Android DeviceStep 6. Click on it and click on the Special Features tab and browse for the Disable multi profile for this app option from the list, you firstly need to disable this option and then again enable it.

whatsapp multple profile Run Multiple Whatsapp Account on Android Device
Step 7. Now as you are working in Second profile you need to register again your second mobile number

  • Now, register WhatsApp for your second SIM in this profile.
That’s it you are done you have successfully activated  multiple WhatsApp account on your Android

Wednesday, 7 May 2014

Computer Pranks

The 10 Most Ridiculously Awesome Geeky Computer Pranks

image
Everybody loves a good prank… unless you are the one on the receiving end of the fun. It’s time to hone your pranking skills, not just to make sure you are the best, but so you can avoid being pranked by others.
Yeah, sure, we could go with the old standards, like a blue screen of death screensaver or something like that, but it’s time to use our geek skills and come up with something better. We’ll cover some of the old favorites too, but maybe with a twist. Note: Many of these pranks require being able to access somebody’s computer physically, and many others require them to leave their PC logged in and unattended. You’ll have to plan accordingly.
Make the Space Key Write the Word SPACE
image
Here’s a clever prank for you: Make the victim’s computer actually type the word “SPACE” every time they hit the space bar. They’ll be lost trying to figure out what on earth is going on, and it couldn’t be simpler.
Just create a new AutoHotkey script and drop in the following two lines of code—the first one is to hide the tray icon, and the second sets up the hotkey for replacing the text.
#NoTrayIcon
*Space::Send,SPACE
You’ll probably want to right-click on the script and compile it to an executable before putting it on their computer. I’m not providing a download for this! Just stick it somewhere on their PC, launch it, and watch the fun!
What’s really entertaining is that while I was testing this out, I accidentally pranked myself—my AHK scripts are stored in Dropbox and synced across all my PCs, and I’d forgotten about it on my desktop. Whoops!

Pretend to Install Linux on a Windows User’s PC with a Live CD

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This one can’t be simpler—just find somebody at work who turns their PC off at night, come in before them, and boot off a Linux Live CD. Then leave an official-looking memo on their desk saying they’ve been upgraded to Linux, and watch them struggle to figure out what on earth they are doing. You’ll probably want to get rid of the Install icon, of course.

Create a Shutdown Shortcut that Looks like a Folder

image
This one is really simple to do—just create a shortcut to shutdown.exe on the desktop, and then change the icon to a regular folder, so when they double-click the folder to see what it might contain, they get a nice system shutdown notice instead. You can change the shutdown time to really far in the future so they won’t lose any work, but mostly so they get the full benefit of your nerd skills.
shutdown -s -t 1925000 -c “System error: overloaded porn folder”
If they are using XP, the effect is nice and dramatic, and you can even have some fun with the shutdown time… on Windows 7 you won’t be able to show off your geek skills quite as well, but they’ll still see something that will confuse them.
image
Note: on Windows 7 or Vista you’d also need to disable UAC or else they’ll see a prompt.

Switch the Keyboard Layout To DVORAK

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If you really want to screw with somebody without installing anything, just enable the Dvorak alternate keyboard layout that even most geeks aren’t familiar with. When they type, everything will go haywire.
Head into Control Panel –> Region and Language –> Keyboards –> Change keyboards, then click the Add button and pick the Dvorak layout (or any other random layout you want). Once you’ve done that, use the drop-down above to set the default.
image
You’ll probably want to flip over to the Language Bar tab and set that to hidden as well, so they won’t be able to figure it out easily.

Plug a Wireless USB Mouse / Keyboard Into Their PC

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This usually works out better if the other person has a desktop PC, because you can hide the wireless mouse or keyboard receiver behind their PC, and then every so often type an extra letter, or move the mouse slightly. If you do it right, you can have some fun with this one for a long time. The great thing is that this should work for almost anybody, including people that keep their computer locked all the time.
If they do have a laptop and a wireless mouse, you can simply replace their wireless mouse with an identical-looking one, since it won’t work for their PC. They’ll assume their mouse batteries are dead, and you can move the mouse pointer around the screen with their mouse. The prank won’t last as long, but it will be every bit as fun.
Obviously the picture, courtesy of ehavir, shows a wired keyboard—but it’ll work much better with a wireless setup.

Stick a Message Into their System Clock

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We’ve covered this before, but you can easily stick custom text into the clock that sits in the taskbar—and most people won’t have a clue how to switch it back. Just head into Control Panel –> Region and Language –> Additional Settings –> Time, and change the AM or PM symbols to whatever you want. Or you can read how to do it for Windows 7 or Vista.

Reverse Their Trackpad or Mouse Wheel Scrolling

reversescroll2
You can really throw somebody for a loop if you use a simple AutoHotkey script to flip their trackpad to scroll in the opposite direction. They’ll be completely confused! If they happen to have a laptop with a Synaptics touchpad, you can actually tweak this setting right in the Control Panel –> Mouse dialog, but otherwise, check out our article covering the script method, that should work anywhere.

Add Common Typos or Funny Words to MS Word’s Dictionary or AutoComplete

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There’s any number of possibilities for this one, and the sky is really the limit—the idea is that you put something custom into the AutoCorrect so whatever they type gets replaced with something else.
You can go subtle with it, and just replace a properly typed word with a typo instead, or you can get in their face with something more fun—like making anytime they type their name end up replacing it with “<Name> is a jerk”. Loads of fun.
image
For Word 2007 or 2010, head to the Office button –> Options –> Proofing –> AutoCorrect Options. For previous versions… I have no idea. If you want this to be system-wide, you can use AutoHotkey instead.

Setup Task Scheduler Jobs to Launch Random Apps (or a Web Page)

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Even a serious geek is going to be pretty lost on how to troubleshoot a new tab repeatedly opening to a certain page every couple of minutes, if you bury that inside the task scheduler. Just go in and create a new task, run through the wizard and pick the browser executable, plug the site name into the arguments box, and then set the schedule to repeat the task every 5 minutes.
image

Set the Mouse Pointer to Look Always Busy (to Make Their PC Look Like It’s Hanging)

image
Nice and simple, but oh so fun! Just head into Control Panel –> Mouse –> Pointers and change the Normal pointer to the busy one. They’ll think their computer is hanging all the time, but it’s really not. For extra fun, you could make the mouse pointers gigantic.

Activate High Contrast Mode (with a Single Hotkey!)

image
There’s a built-in accessibility option that can be very confusing to somebody who doesn’t know how to turn it off, and it requires only pressing one shortcut key sequence:
Shift + Alt + Printscreen
That’s it. Once you press that key combo, their desktop will get flipped to the high contrast mode—you can press it again to go back to normal. The great thing is that even if their computer is locked, you can enable high contrast with the icon on the lower left corner. On Mac OS X, you can press Ctrl+Opt+Cmd+8 to invert the screen’s colors.

The Old-School Favorite: Move the Desktop Icons, Take a Screenshot, Set as the Wallpaper

image
Most geeks have done this at some point in their career, because it’s both simple and irritating, especially for somebody who isn’t expecting it. The basic principle works one of a couple of ways:
  1. Take a screenshot of the desktop with the icons where they are, set it as the wallpaper, and then hide the desktop icons.
  2. Move the desktop icons around, or create bogus icons, take a screenshot, and then set it as the wallpaper. This way some icons work, and some don’t.
  3. Take the screenshot of the desktop, and then hide the taskbar below the bottom of the screen before setting the wallpaper (this only works on XP). Even better: flip the image upside down before doing it.
The result looks something like the image above, assuming you followed the second idea and created a folder on the desktop that they’d be sure to notice right away. They’ll keep clicking, but nothing will happen.
Bonus? Combine this with the shutdown shortcut so when they do figure it out and try and open the folder… it’ll give them the shutdown prank too!

Alright, so that was actually twelve pranks. Prank wisely.

Sunday, 20 April 2014

Keeping Time: Why 60 Minutes?



Reasons:-

How did we come to divide the hour into 60 minutes and the minute into 60 seconds? These smaller divisions of time have been in practical use for only about 400 years, but they were vital to the advent of modern science.
For millennia, ancient civilizations looked to the sky to measure the big units of time. There's the year, which is the time it takes Earth to complete one orbit around the sun; the month, which is approximately how long it takes the moon to orbit our planet; the week, which is approximately the time between the four phases of the moon; and the day, which is the duration of one rotation of the Earth's on its axis.
Dividing the day was not so straightforward, though hours and minutes have their origins in traditions tracing back thousands of years.

Number Systems

The use of 60 began with the Sumerians who used different number systems. While you and I write numbers using base 10, or “decimal” this civilization used base 12 ("duodecimal") and base 60 ("sexigesimal"). It is not known exactly why they chose these systems, but there are a few theories:
  • Many ancient cultures used the three segments of each finger to count to 12 on one hand, writes Georges Ifrah in his book, “The Universal History of Numbers” (Wiley, 2000; translated by David Bello). It is hypothesized 60 arose from using five fingers of one hand with the twelve segments of the other.
  • Fewer fractions have repeating decimals (1/3 = 0.333…) when written in sexagesimal. This is particularly important because the Sumerians had no notion of repeating-digit fractions. In “An Introduction to the History of Algebra” (American Mathematical Society, 2009), author Jacques Sesiano describes a tablet that reads, “I don’t know the inverse of 7/6.”
  • Twelve was an important number to the Sumerians, and later to the Egyptians. For example, it was the number of lunar cycles in a year and the number of constellations of the Zodiac. Day and night were each divided into 12 periods, and the 24-hour day was born.

Angles and ancient astronomy

In the 24th century B.C., the Sumerians were conquered by the Akkadians, who then fell to the Amorites, who rose to power and built the nation-state of Babylon, which peaked in the 18th century B.C. The Babylonians invented the degree and defined a circle as having 360 degrees. There are a couple of theories as to why they chose 360:
  • The Babylonians understood a year as having close to 360 days; hence the sun "moves" along the ecliptic approximately 1 degree per day.
  • The radius of a circle maps onto a circumscribed hexagon of six equilateral triangles, and thus a sixth of a circle forms a natural angle measure. In the numerals inherited from the Sumerians, a number’s sexagesimal value was inferred from context, so six was “spelled” the same way as 360.
Babylonian astronomers began cataloging stars in the 14th century B.C. Astronomy flourished as they developed a deep understanding of sun and moon cycles, and even predicted eclipses. Babylonian star catalogs served as the basis of astronomy for more than a thousand years despite the boom and bust of the Middle Assyrian Empire, the Neo-Assyrian Empire, the Neo-Babylonian Empire and the Achaemenid Empire.

Off to Greece and Rome

The conquests of Alexander the Great between 335 and 324 B.C. helped spread Babylonian astronomy to Greece and India. Though the Greeks had their own numerals in base 10, Babylonian star catalogs created such a strong association between astronomy and the sexigesimal system that Greek (and later Roman) scholars kept using it. This association soon bled into navigation and trigonometry.
Following the discovery by Eratosthenes of Cyrene that the Earth is round, in the first century B.C., Hipparchus of Nicaea adapted degrees to quantify lines of longitude and latitude. Two centuries later in the Roman Empire, Ptolemy of Alexandria subdivided degree coordinates into 60ths (minutes) and 60ths of 60ths (seconds). This convention of “degrees, minutes and seconds” is still used today to plot locations on Earth as well as the positions of stars.

To Arabia, Iberia and Greater Europe

Much of this knowledge was lost to Europe for several centuries after the fall of Rome in the fifth century A.D. The Islamic-Arabian empires inherited many Roman (and later Indian) ideas starting with the Rashidun Caliphate in the seventh century. Muslims scholars, after expanding on this knowledge greatly, reintroduced it to Europe in the eighth century through the Iberian Peninsula, which was then part of the Umayyad Caliphate.
The 10th-century Caliphate of Córdoba became very influential in transferring knowledge to medieval Christian scholars. Such works included many lost writings by Greek and Roman scholars, the invention of algebra by ninth-century Persian scholar Al-Khwārizmī, the Indian invention of numerals 0-9, and the invention of a symbol for zeroby seventh-century Indian scholar Brahmagupta.
Medieval astronomers were first to apply sexigesimal values to time. The 11th-century Persian scholar Al-Bīrūnī tabulated times of new moons on specific dates in hours, 60ths (minutes), 60ths of 60ths (seconds), 60ths of 60ths of 60ths (thirds), and 60ths of 60ths of 60ths of 60ths (fourths). Full moons were tabulated using these same divisions by Christian scholar Roger Bacon in the 13th century.

Minute hands

Minutes and seconds, however, were not used for everyday timekeeping for several centuries. Mechanical clocks first appeared in Europe during the late 14th century, but with only one hand, following the design of sundials and water clocks. Minutes and seconds were but hypothetical quantities of time. According to David S. Landes, in “Revolution in Time” (Belknap, 1983), astronomers of the 16th century began physically realizing minutes and seconds with the construction of improved clocks with minute and second hands in order to improve measurements of the sky. While sextants and quadrants (no telescopes yet) had long been used to quantify the heavens, due to the movements of the sky their accuracy was limited to how well a user knew the time.
Tycho Brahe was one such pioneer of using minutes and seconds, and was able to make measurements of unprecedented accuracy. Many of his measurements required him to know the time to within 8 seconds. In 1609, Johannes Kepler published his laws of planetary motion based on Brahe’s data. Seventy years later, Isaac Newton used these laws to develop his theory of gravitation; showing that terrestrial and celestial motions were governed by the same mathematical laws.

Sumerian legacy

Today, 5,000 years after the Sumerians first began using 60, we divide our days by hours, minutes and seconds. In recent years, we have changed how the units are measured. No longer derived by dividing astronomical events into smaller parts, the second is now defined on the atomic level. Specifically, a second is the duration of 9,192,631,770 energy transitions of the cesium atom.

Friday, 18 April 2014

13 Sci-Fi Gadgets

13 Sci-Fi Gadgets You Won’t Believe Already Exist


About Apple

Here Are Some Of The Crazy Things Apple Fanboys Believe That Aren't Actually True




Steve Jobs' reality distortion field gave birth to a completely new subspecies in the human race — the Apple Fanboy. 
This is a curious animal that tends to disregard technical wisdom and listen exclusively to what Apple and its marketing components have to say.
They adore the devices Apple releases, but who wouldn't? Apple has some of the best phones, tablets and PCs on the market. But they are not universally the best.
Your typical Apple fanboy won't believe that.

You ain't seen nothing yet.
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Thursday, 17 April 2014

The Amazing Facts

      Very Rare Amazing Facts





A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z (A to Z)


  • Abbreviation
  • Academy Awards
  • Advertisement
  • Aerobics class
  • After-dinner speech
  • Aircraft carrier
  • Airplane
  • Airplane - commercial
  • Airplane flight
  • Airplane flight - commercial

  • Album title
  • Alphabet
  • American State
  • Animal
  • Apartment building
  • Applause
  • Apple peel
  • Arch
  • Arm hair
  • At bat

  • Balancing on one foot
  • Balloon chain
  • Balloon flight
  • Banana split
  • Banzai skydive
  • Barn
  • Baseball bat
  • Baseball game
  • Baseball game - MLB
  • Baseball game - pro
  • Baseball playoff game
  • Baseball throw
  • Basketball dribbling
  • Basketball shot
  • Basketball spin
  • Battleship
  • Beach
  • Beard
  • Beard - female
  • Bible verse
  • Bicycle
  • Bicycle race
  • Bigfoot footprint

  • Bill
  • Birdie streak
  • Blackout
  • Board
  • Boardwalk
  • Body piercing session
  • Book
  • Book title
  • Border
  • Boxing match
  • Bra
  • Bra chain
  • Breath hold
  • Bridge
  • Bubble
  • Building
  • Bungee jump
  • Buried alive
  • Burning fire
  • Burning light bulb
  • Burrito
  • Bus
  • Butterfly migration

  • Cabbage
  • Cactus
  • Cake
  • Calculator word
  • Canal
  • Candle
  • Candy counter
  • Canoe
  • Canyon
  • Car
  • Card throw
  • Cat
  • Cave
  • CD
  • Cell phone throw
  • Champagne cork flight
  • Cherry pit spit
  • Chess game
  • Chicken flight
  • Chocolate bar
  • Cigar
  • Clam
  • Cliffs

  • Coin
  • Coin spin
  • Color
  • Coma
  • Comet tail
  • Commute
  • Concert
  • Conga line
  • Contra line
  • Contract - TV/radio
  • Conveyor belt
  • Corn maze
  • Country
  • Covered bridge
  • Cow
  • Crab
  • Crayon
  • Crawl
  • Cricket marathon
  • Cricket match
  • Crocodile
  • Cross
  • Cross-country ski trail

  • Day
  • Dance
  • Dance party
  • Definition
  • Desert
  • Diary
  • Dinosaur
  • Disclaimer
  • Discus throw
  • Distance from Earth
  • Dive

  • Dog
  • Dog tongue
  • Dog sled race
  • Domain name
  • Domino toppling
  • Dragon
  • Drawbridge
  • Driver
  • Drought
  • Drowning survived
  • Duesenberg

  • Ear hair
  • Earth from Sun
  • Earthquake
  • eBay auction
  • eBay item sold
  • Eclipse
  • Egg drop
  • Elevator fall survived
  • Elevator - time trapped

  • Engagement
  • Erupting volcano
  • Escalator
  • Escalator ride
  • Experiment
  • Eyeballs
  • Eyebrows
  • Eyelash

  • Fall down stairs
  • Fall survived
  • Family tree
  • Feathers
  • Feet
  • Fence
  • Fingernails
  • Firecracker display
  • Fish
  • Fish name
  • Fjord

  • Flag - American
  • Flower
  • Foot race
  • Foot sniffing career
  • Forest
  • Formula 1 win streak
  • Free dive
  • Free fall
  • Free fall - indoor
  • Free throw streak
  • Full-body burn

  • Garage sale
  • Geyser
  • Glacier
  • Goat horns
  • Gold chain
  • Goldfish
  • Golf cart
  • Golf course

  • Golf drive
  • Golf hole
  • Golf - 2 round distance
  • Gondola
  • Grape catch
  • Great white shark
  • Group hug
  • Gum wrapper chain

  • Hair
  • Half-life
  • Hammer throw
  • Hammock
  • Hands
  • Hangover
  • Harry Potter book
  • Heat wave
  • Heavyweight champ reign
  • Hedge maze
  • Hiccup fit
  • Highway
  • Hockey game
  • Hokey Pokey

  • Hole
  • Hole-in-one
  • Hollywood marriage
  • Home run
  • Hot dog
  • House of cards
  • Hug
  • Hula Hooping
  • Human bone
  • Human cannonball
  • Human chain
  • Human rainbow
  • Hummer

  • Ice bath
  • Ice berg
  • Inhabited city
  • Insect
  • Insect life span
  • Interstate

  • Iron man streak - MLB
  • Iron man streak - NBA
  • Iron man streak - NFL
  • Iron man streak - NHL
  • Island

  • Javelin throw
  • Jellyfish
  • Jeopardy win streak
  • Jigsaw puzzle

  • Job title
  • Joke telling marathon
  • Juggle

  • Kayak drop
  • Ketchup bottle
  • Kiss

  • Kite
  • Kite flight

  • Ladder
  • Lake
  • Lake name
  • Last name
  • Lasting AA battery
  • Lasting gum
  • Laughter
  • Lawn mower ride
  • Leaf
  • Lecture
  • Leg hair

  • Lego structure
  • Legs
  • Life
  • Life expectancy
  • Life span
  • Lightning bolt
  • Line of latitude
  • Line of pizzas
  • Lizard
  • Lockout in sports
  • Long jump

  • Magazine cover
  • Maggot bath
  • Mail run
  • Mall
  • Manned space flight
  • Marriage
  • Midget toss
  • Migration
  • Migration - mammal
  • Mile
  • Milk squirt
  • Millipede
  • Miniseries - TV
  • MLB drought
  • MLB hitless streak
  • MLB hitting streak
  • MLB inning

  • MLB losing streak
  • MLB no hitter
  • MLB player
  • MLB strikeout streak
  • MLB win streak
  • Model train
  • Month
  • Monopoly game
  • Moon walk
  • Motorcycle
  • Motorcycle jump
  • Mountain
  • Mountain range
  • Moustache
  • Movie
  • Movie title
  • MP3

  • Nail
  • Name
  • Name of an animal
  • Name of a country
  • Name of a State
  • NASCAR race
  • NASCAR race track
  • National anthem
  • NBA Championship drought
  • NBA contract
  • NBA game
  • NBA losing streak
  • NBA win streak
  • Neck
  • Netball marathon
  • NFL field goal

  • NFL game
  • NFL losing streak
  • NFL punt
  • NFL win streak
  • NHL career
  • NHL contract
  • NHL losing streak
  • NHL overtime games
  • NHL playoffs made streak
  • NHL shootout
  • NHL shutout streak
  • NHL win streak
  • Nose
  • Novel
  • NYSE trading suspension

  • Oasis
  • Obelisk
  • Olympic swimming event
  • Olympic torch relay

  • Orbit - planet
  • Origami creation
  • Opera
  • Operation

  • Paddleboat journey
  • Paddlewheeler
  • Painting
  • Painting title
  • Palindrome
  • Paper airplane flight
  • Paper chain
  • Paperclip chain
  • Paragliding flight
  • Parasite
  • Pencil
  • Person
  • PGA cuts made streak
  • PGA sudden-death playoff
  • PGA win streak
  • Pi
  • Pi memorized
  • Pier
  • Pink Floyd song
  • Pink Floyd song title

  • Pizza
  • Pizza delivery
  • Play
  • Place name
  • Playing slots
  • Poem
  • Pogo stick distance
  • Pogo stick jump
  • Poker game
  • Pole sitting record
  • Pole vault
  • Pool toy
  • Popsicle
  • Postcard
  • Prayer
  • Prime number
  • Prison sentence
  • Published newspaper
  • Putt

  • Quidditch match

  • Rabbit ears
  • Race track
  • Rafting trip
  • Railroad
  • Rain streak
  • Rally
  • Reef
  • Reigning Pope
  • Remote control
  • River
  • River - Europe
  • River - U.S.
  • Road
  • Road train
  • Rock
  • Rocket
  • Roller coaster
  • Roller coaster - wooden
  • Roller coaster ride

  • Roller coaster tunnel
  • Roman ring hang
  • Roots
  • Rosebush
  • Route 66 stretch
  • Running beauty pageant
  • Running Broadway show
  • Running cartoon
  • Running chat show
  • Running comic strip
  • Running film series
  • Running horse race
  • Running radio show
  • Running reality show
  • Running rock fan club
  • Running TV commercial
  • Runway
  • Run-on sentence

  • Salami
  • Sausage
  • Scarf
  • Scuba dive
  • Seaweed
  • Sermon
  • Serving choirboy
  • Serving police chief
  • Serving U.S. President
  • Ship
  • Shot put
  • Skateboard
  • Skateboard jump
  • Skating rink
  • Ski jump
  • Ski run
  • Skiing marathon
  • Skis
  • Slide rule
  • Slinky
  • Snake
  • Snake - venomous
  • Sneezing fit
  • Snowmobile jump
  • Song
  • Song - Beatles
  • Song title
  • Song title - Beatles
  • Space shuttle flight
  • Space walk
  • Spaghetti strand

  • Spanish word
  • Spider
  • Squid
  • Staircase
  • Stained glass window
  • Stalagmite
  • Standing motionless
  • Standing on one foot
  • Stanley Cup drought
  • Stanley Cup win streak
  • Static cycle ride
  • Statue
  • Stilts
  • Stolen base streak
  • Stone skip
  • Straw
  • Street
  • Street name
  • Strike
  • Structure - standing
  • Subway
  • Sugar cube tower
  • Sunflower
  • Super Bowl drought
  • Surfboard
  • Surviving headless chicken
  • Sushi roll
  • Suspension - NBA
  • Swim
  • Swimming pool
  • Swing bridge

  • Tattoo session
  • Tax code
  • Taxi ride
  • Team name
  • Telephone call
  • Telescope
  • Tennis match
  • Test drive
  • The Longest Time lyrics
  • Thermometer
  • Throw
  • Tiddlywinking
  • Time between children
  • Toenails
  • Tongue
  • Top spin
  • Tornado

  • Totem pole
  • Touchdown - NFL
  • Tour de France
  • Tour de France stage
  • Tour de France win streak
  • Traffic jam
  • Train
  • Tramway
  • Tree
  • Tree sit
  • Triathlon
  • Triple jump
  • Tunnel
  • Tunnel - railway
  • Tunnel - road
  • TV

  • UFC fight
  • Under water
  • Urinal

  • URL
  • US Presidential term

  • Wait on a hospital gurney
  • Walk
  • Walk - backwards
  • Wall
  • War
  • Watching TV
  • Water ski jump
  • Water ski jump - barefoot
  • Water skiing marathon
  • Waterfall
  • Waterslide
  • Wave surfed
  • Wedding dress
  • Wedding dress train
  • Well
  • Whale

  • Wheelchair journey
  • Windmill blade
  • Window
  • Windsurfing journey
  • Wingspan - airplane
  • Wingspan - bird
  • Without a heartbeat
  • Without sleep
  • Without water
  • Woman
  • Word
  • Words trivia
  • Working career
  • World Series game
  • World Series win streak
  • Wrestling match

  • Xylophone

  • Yard
  • Year

  • Yo-yo spin
  • YouTube video

  • Zip line
  • Zorb ball roll

  • Zucchini