1 week ago 30,032 notes

jtotheizzoe:

Please Reload Webpage In 31.69 Years To See Results

Big universes. Big numbers. How do we make sense of billions? Our brains just aren’t wired to do it, although we’ve seen some pretty amazing ways that we measure stuff on those largest scales.

A weatherman in Belgium has set up the Billion Second Clock. It will count up to 1,000,000,000 in seconds. Which will take 31.69 years. That’s a big number.

You can send a message to the future, too! I said “I hope you’re all being nice to each other. Have we put a guy on Mars yet?

( Let’s count to one billion seconds, unfortunate use of Comic Sans at the link)

1 week ago 288 notes

someghostsarewomen:

Interview with the Vampire (1994)

Costume design by Sandy Powell


the costumes in this film are so beautiful

(via effyeahcostumes)

1 week ago 33 notes

wtf @ slovakias eurovision entry

I dont know what to say

1 week ago
1 week ago 5,633 notes
24th
May
847 notes
Reblog

(via funny-pictures-uk)

1 week ago 847 notes

jtotheizzoe:

A Self-Portrait of Opportunity

I want you to stop and think about something. This is a picture of another planet. Where this robot is. Right now.

As we sit here on Earth in this or any moment, we each have in our heads a flurry of worries and questions and ideas. And most of them pertain to our own lives. That’s okay, it’s human nature. We are each the center of our own universe.

I often think about this in crowded places, like while in traffic, as the place I’m going is far more important than the place all of these other people are going. I’m convinced that they feel the same way. And so we sit.

But that means that there are seven billion mental universes walking around on this planet. We are staring into them through little digital windows that we carry in our hands, and certain that this decision is the most important decision. Everything that is happening is happening to us.

Yet for the past eight years, there has been a dusty, six-wheeled rover crawling around the surface of Mars, completely alone. Incidentally, that rover has exceeded its expected mission of 90 days by thirty-two times over. That’s admirable, and I can’t help but personify the little guy. Like a sort of scrappy, diligent explorer, quietly working hard for the benefit of someone else. “No complaints, boss!” Like Johnny 5 meets Wall-E.

And so we get images like this, reminding us that every day we can look beyond our personal universe. What a thought! Look at how much is out there. Think of what else we could see! Let’s go.

1 week ago 7,155 notes

myedol:

Slate Sculpture by Stephen Kettle

rah.

(via myedol)

1 week ago 3,981 notes

I love how sunshine is such a rarity in England that we blog our glee when it occurs.

1 week ago

blua:

Climbing the Ladder

1 week ago 6,544 notes