Incense sticks - yes - that's the perfect thing to use!
If I happen to be bored witless - I'm going to buy myself a pack and try.
Maybe it is your flashplayer/browser - it's a vimeo video, seems that works differently than youtube. I also have to click it several times, before it starts, because I have a security feature running, which protects me from malware coming in that way, per flash-player.
It used to be so strict, that it didn't work at all, after I caught myself some nasty by watching semi-legal streams of darts-tournaments, which some betting sites provide. Meanwhile it's a bit more loose again because it nerved me, but don't ask me what it all means, I'm not the cryptographer in our household...:D
And now for something amazing again: the Leidenfrost Effect, where water dropped on an extremely hot surface is capable of floating instead of immediately evaporating. While studying the bizarre effect, physicists at the University of Bath realized that not only does the water float, but under the right conditions and temperatures it can actually climb upward. The playful experiments lead to the creation of an astonishing superheated maze:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zzKgnNGqxMw
Plus an incredible game of evolutionary cat and mouse:
http://www.thisiscolossal.com/wp-con...09/super-1.gif
No, these aren't light vomiting fish, though even if that’s exactly what it looks like. What you’re seeing is the defence mechanism of a tiny crustacean called an ostracod, a shrimp-like organism about 1mm in size that some fish accidentally eat while hunting for plankton. When eaten by a translucent cardinalfish, the ostracod immediately releases a bioluminescent chemical in an attempt to illuminate the fish from the inside, making it immediately identifiable to predators. Not wanting to be eaten, the cardinalfish immediately spits out the ostracod, resulting in little underwater fish fireworks.