Alex sent me this on Facebook and I loooove it! By John Martz, it is a poster of almost every Star Trek character in pixel form. Little Locutus! Little Morn! Even little Spot!
click to embiggen
Alex sent me this on Facebook and I loooove it! By John Martz, it is a poster of almost every Star Trek character in pixel form. Little Locutus! Little Morn! Even little Spot!
click to embiggen
A team from a new NatGeo show launched a house, ‘Up’-style, with only weather balloons!
via Mighty Girl
by Juan Carlos Casado – click to embiggen
Via NASA:
In a clear sky from a dark location at the right time, a faint band of light is visible across the sky. This band is the disk of our spiral galaxy. Since we are inside this disk, the band appears to encircle the Earth. The above spectacular picture of the Milky Way arch, however, goes where the unaided eye cannot. The image is actually a deep digital fusion of nine photos that create a panorama fully 360 across. Taken recently in Teide National Park in Tenerife, Canary Islands, Spain, the image includes the Teide volcano, visible near the image center, behind a volcanic landscape that includes many large rocks. Far behind these Earthly structures are many sky wonders that are visible to the unaided eye, such as the band of the Milky Way, the bright waxing Moon inside the arch, and the Pleiades open star cluster.
See an annotated panorama here.
This is my current desktop wallpaper – I love looking at it and imagining who the pools belong to, and what all the little people swimming in them are doing. A mini-vacation in my imagination!
from The Satellite Collection by Jenny Odell
Google has a great animated logo in honor of the scientist – check it out! A single frame:
Everything is better set to the ‘Inception’ score.
via Tiffany
Slide the bar across the photo to see what these areas of Japan looked like before the earthquake and tidal wave, and what they look like now. Japan Before and After Tsunami