Protip:
To make your day more dramatic, post a random news story with the title, “It begins.“
Hello y'all I'm posting on my friends phone since their hotspot isn't working and my Kindle is slow because I'm camping and it's really cold
My hands are really cold btw
w h a t
you can only have 4 istation tabs open at once before you get this error: https://app.istation.com/error/too-many-tabs
also other weird things:
https://app.istation.com/audio/dialogue/results/how_do_you_feel_you_did.mp3
https://app.istation.com/assets/i18n/isip/en.json
https://idsrv.istation.com/.well-known/openid-configuration/jwks
Same, but for Python.
might steal oren’s idea for the javascript evaluator but for rust instead, but i’d have to do some mega sandboxing
Our Moon doesn't really look like this. Earth's Moon, Luna, doesn't naturally show this rich texture, and its colors are more subtle. But this digital creation is based on reality. The featured image is a composite of multiple images and enhanced to bring up real surface features. The enhancements, for example, show more clearly craters that illustrate the tremendous bombardment our Moon has been through during its 4.6-billion-year history. The dark areas, called maria, have fewer craters and were once seas of molten lava. Additionally, the image colors, although based on the moon's real composition, are changed and exaggerated. Here, a blue hue indicates a region that is iron rich, while orange indicates a slight excess of aluminum. Although the Moon has shown the same side to the Earth for billions of years, modern technology is allowing humanity to learn much more about it -- and how it affects the Earth.
If anyone wants to do funny unblocking on chromebooks --> https://sh1mmer.me
edit: if you want, it requires downloading several gigabytes and having a flash drive
breaking bad reference in my homework???
edit: I spelled Albuquerque wrong lol
Pretty!
The scene may look like a fantasy, but it's really Iceland. The rock arch is named Gatklettur and located on the island's northwest coast. Some of the larger rocks in the foreground span a meter across. The fog over the rocks is really moving waves averaged over long exposures. The featured image is a composite of several foreground and background shots taken with the same camera and from the same location on the same night last November. The location was picked for its picturesque foreground, but the timing was planned for its colorful background: aurora. The spiral aurora, far behind the arch, was one of the brightest seen in the astrophotographer's life. The coiled pattern was fleeting, though, as auroral patterns waved and danced for hours during the cold night. Far in the background were the unchanging stars, with Earth's rotation causing them to appear to slowly circle the sky's northernmost point near Polaris. Your Sky Surprise: What picture did APOD feature on your birthday? (post 1995)