dozydawn




debating if it would be funnier to have a bumper sticker saying "my other ride is a [exact make and model of the car the sticker is on]" or "my other ride is a [equally shitty but different car]"
2008 Honda Civic with the bumper sticker "My other ride is a 2007 Honda Civic"
It's funny that they still have the 'no smoking allowed' lights and warnings on every plane you fly on, as if there's a single flight you CAN smoke on any human has been on since the turn of the millenium at latest.
the funniest part is that they're lights, and the other lights turn off and on depending on circumstances, leading to the strange implication that there's some hypithy situation where the pilot is supposed to go "eh, why not?"
turning off the no smoking lights as soon as it becomes clear we're not avoiding that mountain
[IDs: 1: a roly poly, sometimes called a pill bug, on a miniature hammock hung between two small plant stems. 2: a tag that reads "#oh my god its him its. the chill pill" End IDs]
really like the number 49 recently. it's one less than 50 which is obviously a super clean and even number it makes 49 look meager by comparison . and it's 7 squared which I don't normally like 7 it's overused but it still has to be acknowledged as somewhat of an odd indivisible number it has some under dog quality to it. and then it tries its hardest and becomes square but it comes just shy of 50 . being beautiful and round and even but. 50 isn't a square. it's the sum of 2 squares and also half of a square but . even though it may seem like a failure, 49 has achieved something that 50 only dreams of
in 2023 there was a conductor on the mbta who would shoutout animes after leaving kenmore outbound
what % of the universe is peanuts...
I couldn't stop thinking about this. It's something we can estimate.
According to Wikipedia, about 54.3 million tonnes of peanuts are produced worldwide. This only takes into account commercial production, but it's a number we can use.
The mass of the observable universe is about 1.5×10⁵³ kg (also according to Wikipedia). This doesn't take into account whatever lies beyond (if anything), but, again, it's a number we can use.
Converting tonnes to kilograms gets us 54 000 000 000 kgs or 5.4×10¹⁰ kg of peanuts. Then we can input that into WolframAlpha and get the answer!
5.4×10⁻⁴³%
(0.0000000000000000000000000000000000000000054%)
ur welcome