DIY - How to Make your own Fish Tank Stand!

Did you just happen to buy a giant fish tank for your shark that you caught the other day? Well, if you want to put that fish tank by your bed, you will need to make a fish tank stand and here’s how to make one.
I don’t have any production pictures, but it should you show the general idea on how to assemble a very sturdy stand. It’s pretty simple to build, because it kind of squares itself.
I got the idea off of another member on here. It’s also the same design as my 120 and 220.
Sea Bream Fish Robot!

Check out this giant Sea Bream fish robot. It’s almost real you want to chop it up for some nice stew or sushi.
The fish weighs a whopping 15.4 pounds, but it has a unique propulsion system that lets it move its tail and silently scoot through the water like a real fish. The body is made of silicone and the scales were hand-painted on for realism. And damn did they do a good job.
Other cool robot fish:
Jellyfish Mood Lamp Aquarium!

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Here’s a cool Mood Lamp Aquarium that can hold real jelly fishes. (This one comes with fake ones though)
I like the fact that you can actually get these sting-beasts in your bedroom without costing you an arm and a leg.
Watch these beautiful and realistic Jellyfish glide around this lamp, as it sets the scene perfectly in your home, or at work. The tank holds three jellyfish, which swim around the tank in the gentle current. At the top of the tank are siz bright coloured LED’s which set the mood! You can set the unit to ether cycle colours, or pause on the colour of your choice!
DIY - How to Build an Automatic Fish Feeder!

Here’s a really cool DIY on how to build an automatic fish feeder. This would be great to have around if you happen to be gone for a few weeks without having to worry about feeding your fish.
This is the fastest and cheapest way to build an Automatic Fish Feeder.
It automatically turns the light on, feeds your fish and turns the light off.
It can run for months by itself.
USB Fish Handheld Mouse needs no Mouse Surface!

If you are one of those lazy bloggers with a 60″ LCD TV hooked up to your PC in your bedroom and you blog on your bed, you will definitely need to get one of these Fish Handheld Mouses that can be used without a mouse surface.
The Fish is a revolutionary new hand held mouse that will change the way we use computers.
Features:
With no complicated set up or software, The Fish simply plugs into any available USB port and is ready to use. Being hand held, surfing the Internet, playing games, designing or editing becomes a pain free pleasure. Without the need for a flat surface, The Fish is ideal for use with a laptop computer on trains or planes, where room is restricted. The Fish is also the perfect computer controller for business presentations.
Top Design - Infinity Aquarium

The Infinity Aquarium provides an eye-soothing experience for your fish and yourself with its visually appealing aquarium that’s also a materpiece work of an art in itself.
May we suggest you get one? Just don’t try to fit large fish like Sharks.
Robofish will play with Sharks for you and collect data!
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Here’s a robot fish fromUniversity of Washington that might just change the way environmental scientists collect data from the sea.
Over the past five years Kristi Morgansen, a University of Washington assistant professor of aeronautics and astronautics, has built three Robofish that communicate with one another underwater. Recently at the International Federation of Automatic Control’s Workshop on Navigation, Guidance and Control of Underwater Vehicles she presented results showing that the robots had successfully completed their first major test. The robots were programmed to either all swim in one direction or all swim in different directions, basic tasks that can provide the building blocks for coordinated group movement.
Cuttlefish learns in the Embryo!

Lol, this is cool, I guess Cuttlefish is the only living organism that can learn inside the egg…
Before they have even hatched, cuttlefish embryos can peer out of their eggs and spot potential prey. It is the first time any animal has been shown to learn visual images before they are born.
Ludovic Dickel and his colleagues at the University of Caen Basse-Normandy, France, made the discovery by placing crabs alongside cuttlefish eggs in a series of laboratory tanks. Those embryos exposed to crabs preferred them as prey later in life, the scientists report in the journal Animal Behaviour.
The young embryos must be able to see through their translucent egg case, the scientists believe, and learn which animals are worth hunting even before they have hatched. “This is the first time there is evidence of visual learning by embryos,” said Dr Dickel.

