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lol. our life.
Posted on May 22, 2012 via Morning Glory with 9,846 notes
Source: shall-this-url-be-mine
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“Inside these sealed glass balls live shrimp, algae, and bacteria, all swimming around in filtered seawater. Put it somewhere with some light, and this little ecosystem will chug along happily for years, no feeding or cleaning necessary, totally oblivious to the fact that the rest of the world exists outside.”
The one me and some friends got for Nicholas broke this weekend :( He’d had it since this past October, and actually two of the shrimp had already died inside. I don’t think it had the right amount of sunlight… so sad.
(via poisonhoney)
Posted on April 7, 2012 via vespers with 34,083 notes
Source: gardenofverses
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Fabric to Power Your Cell Phone
“Power Felt” generates electricity from heat. Wrap your cell phone in Power Felt, and it feeds off your body heat to recharge while it’s in your pocket.
Posted on March 27, 2012 via Doggy Style with 2 notes
Source: canisfamiliaris
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It’s a VanGogh-esque world (NASA’s rapresentation of oceanic surface currents - here’s the video)
(via nutopiancitizen)
Posted on March 25, 2012 via piccole risposte senza domanda with 671 notes
Source: Flickr / gsfc
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Vegan Baked Biscoff Donuts
Posted on March 19, 2012 via Finding Vegan with 57 notes
Source: findvegan
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A man should look for what is, and not for what he thinks should be.
Posted on March 14, 2012 via Scinerds with 159 notes
Source: scinerds
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Damn, another attempt to see the muppets movie foiled. Blargh. Maybe it will show up on netflix soon? :)
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Vegan Valentine’s Day RecipesHe loves chocolate cupcakes, but I do enjoy surprising my love with new tasty treats :) Also, Nicholas says I’m not supposed to get him anything on Valentine’s Day?
This seems silly to me. If it’s a day to celebrate our love, shouldn’t we both be doing things to show our love (possibly including a present?)
What do you crazy kids think?
Posted on January 29, 2012 via Vegan Experience with 42 notes
Source: blogs.babble.com
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Nikki Graziano is a math and photography student at Rochester Institute of Technology. She overlays graphs and their corresponding equations onto her carefully composed photos, but she doesn’t go out looking for a subject that fits a specific function. Instead, she finds an image she likes, then tweaks the values of the function until the graph it describes aligns with the photograph. Photograph first, math second:
“I wanted to create something that could communicate how awesome math is, to everyone,” she says.
(via expose-the-light)
Posted on January 29, 2012 via Quarks to Quasars with 18,641 notes
Source: expose-the-light




