reblog/like if you agree, if enough people do it maybe NY headquarters will see it and get off their lazy asses and write the ALL OF TWO lines it takes to do hover-text.
Life can be best described as a series of pictures taken by the eyes reproduced by the brain and subjected to analysis by the consciousness. To you, I offer this instance - Now imagine breaking down an infinitesimal amount more. That's how intrinsically powerful your brain is.
but rail jab.
…
I don’t get this.
edit*
plop, just, cab …
oh wait I just did it linearly, I get it now -_-
actually I had to do it 4 times cuz the first linear time was “epic lovely tuba”
(Source: swaymelikethesea)
It takes around 8 minutes and 11 seconds for light to reach the Earth from the Sun.
this doesn’t account for the initial electron density near the sun, the number of collisions for initial travel are high right doesn’t that mean the speed it can achieve near the beginning is slower?
Just a thought.
edit*
maybe it’s neglibigle
Merry Christmas!
(HOLY FUCK -alex)
reblog/like if you agree, if enough people do it maybe NY headquarters will see it and get off their lazy asses and write the ALL OF TWO lines it takes to do hover-text.
Words cannot describe how hard my day at work was today.
Even worse, words cannot console my co-worker/friend.
Killer Banana Hoax of the Day: Sales of curved yellow fruit have dropped significantly in Mozambique following the circulation of a rumor that bananas were infecting people with necrotising fasciitis — a skin-eating disease.
“From the work conducted by the Ministries of Agriculture, Health and Trade and Industry, it was concluded that there is no record of entry of any infected banana in the country,” said the country’s health minister in a statement.
The rumor, which spread virally via email and text, specifically warned consumers to avoid bananas from the neighbouring South African province of KwaZulu-Natal. The decline in bananas sales surprised the government, as Mozambique doesn’t import bananas from South Africa.
The agriculture ministry in South Africa was forced to release a similar statement countering claims made by the hoax email — particularly the part about burning skin surrounding a suspected area of infection.
This recent hoax appears to be a direct descendant of a similar urban legend that came to be known as “The Great Internet Banana Scare of 2000.”
[afp.]