[go: up one dir, main page]

  

sarroora:

bogleech:

peachesanmemes:

kristina100000:

me when i meet the person who created webp files

image
image

It was google by the way, they thought it would be such a good file type it would replace the need for all other image files, that’s why anything they own or partner with tries to force it on us though no art programs can even work with it.

THANK YOU FOR THIS!

(via thegirlnoonetexts)

#gif  

exaltioras:

after a thorough medical assessment, the doctors have described me as ‘a lot. just like a lot to deal with’

(via fantasticwatersupply)

everythingfox:

Weird boy

(via)

(via everythingfox)

hapalopus:

minipliny:

image

Seen today on walk peace and love on planet earth

image

(via writingfeedsthedarkestones)

dragongirl-brev:

wtf-scientific-papers:

Submitter comment: I’d like to submit this ’[s]tudy of defensive behavior of a venomous snake as a new approach to understand snakebite’ not for it’s topic (worth studying!) but for it’s insane methodology, which… well, I’ll just let the researcher speak for himself:

image

[Q: Why did you decide to do this experiment?

A: Snake behavior has been generally neglected as a field of research, especially in Brazil. And most studies don’t examine what factors make them want to bite. If you study malaria, you can research the parasite that causes the disease—but if you don’t study the mosquito that carries it, you will never solve the problem. Up until now, the popular wisdom was that the jararaca would only attack if you touched it or stepped on it. But that was not what we found.

Q: Why did you need to be the victim?

A: The best way to do this research is to put snakes and a human together. In this case, the human was me. We put the snakes inside a ring on the floor of our lab until they got used to it, then I stepped in wearing special protective boots. I stepped close to the snake and also lightly on top of it. I didn’t put my whole weight on my foot, so I did not hurt the snakes. I tested 116 animals and stepped 30 times on every animal, totaling 40,480 steps.]

From the recent (aptly named) interview: Researcher steps on deadly vipers 40,000 times to better predict snakebites

image

(via pflpizza)

steampunkforever:

I would still use my turn signals in the Mad Max Wasteland. They’d call me “Signal” because I’d hit my blinker before ramming the enemy hot rods into the side of a desert ravine. I’d use my turn signal every time. They would respect me for this.

(via tinyyellowflowers-blog)

#comics  

I was not kidding about the sound of his new toy, btw.

It was lower on battery than he thought here. I was not entirely sorry. 😏

Doesn’t last for much flight time between charges at that size, at any rate.

umbreonsrings:

“You mean you’re just leaving me in the friendzone??”


HELL YEAH I AM🗣️🗣️🙏🔥 WE’RE FRIENDS IN THE ZONE🙏🙏‼️‼️

(via writingfeedsthedarkestones)