Nyx. She/They.

14th January 2026

Post reblogged from How Lucky Indeed with 55,364 notes

ineffectualdemon:

mediocrefantasy:

sizhens-deactivated20250415:

rui-cifer:

la-reine-du-disco:

yasmin1000000:

thememedaddy:

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“So basically my couch has electricity and I use it to charge my battery powered doorbell”

“Okay that makes sense”

Now explain it to a Japanese samurai from the year 1218

“do you know how waterwheels grind up grain in a water mill using the force of running water? We found a way to create a huge source of force that runs all the time and can transfer its force over long distance. I can tell you in more detail, but that’s the basics. Now that is a chime that has a mechanism that one can press instead of having to open the door to let you know that you are waiting to be let in. It requires the transferred force to make the mechanism work and that wire is how we transfer the force to the chime.”

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i love these sort of posts because they feel like a vision of a kinder and more thoughtful world that I wish more than anything was the mainstream instead of the exception

Dara O'Brien has a bit in one of his standup shows about being transported in time and explaining modern technology

And what I love about it is the bit isn’t “haha people from the past don’t understand modern technology” it’s “haha we don’t really understand technology or how to explain it”


And Dara isn’t uneducated about this stuff He has a degree in science

But a lot of us wouldn’t be able to explain

14th January 2026

Post reblogged from How Lucky Indeed with 55,364 notes

ineffectualdemon:

mediocrefantasy:

sizhens-deactivated20250415:

rui-cifer:

la-reine-du-disco:

yasmin1000000:

thememedaddy:

image

“So basically my couch has electricity and I use it to charge my battery powered doorbell”

“Okay that makes sense”

Now explain it to a Japanese samurai from the year 1218

“do you know how waterwheels grind up grain in a water mill using the force of running water? We found a way to create a huge source of force that runs all the time and can transfer its force over long distance. I can tell you in more detail, but that’s the basics. Now that is a chime that has a mechanism that one can press instead of having to open the door to let you know that you are waiting to be let in. It requires the transferred force to make the mechanism work and that wire is how we transfer the force to the chime.”

image

i love these sort of posts because they feel like a vision of a kinder and more thoughtful world that I wish more than anything was the mainstream instead of the exception

Dara O'Brien has a bit in one of his standup shows about being transported in time and explaining modern technology

And what I love about it is the bit isn’t “haha people from the past don’t understand modern technology” it’s “haha we don’t really understand technology or how to explain it”


And Dara isn’t uneducated about this stuff He has a degree in science

But a lot of us wouldn’t be able to explain

14th January 2026

Photo reblogged from It All Makes Sense in Context with 141,897 notes

14th January 2026

Post reblogged from big fucking crab!!!!! with 88,685 notes

tim-official:

the-orc:

tim-official:

ORC FACTS

the green color is not chlorophyll. they cannot usually photosynthesize. but sometimes they can

my cousin lorbish can photosynthesize

ORC FACTS

lorbish can photosynthesize

14th January 2026

Post reblogged from big fucking crab!!!!! with 1,097 notes

aggiepython:

screenshot of reddit post in r/thomastheplankengine by u/SheZowRaisedByWolves "Had a dream where I went to a rich person’s house and he had a big ass chandelier composed of solid gold limos. He then showed me a compilation of all the times it fell and crushed a butler to death"ALT
3d render of a huge fancily decorated room with a massive chandelier made of dozens of gold limousines hanging vertically from the ceiling. there are 2 people who are tiny in comparison, 1 wearing a suit and grinning and showing the other, who looks suspicious, something on his phone.ALT

recreated this redditor’s dream using blender and krita. limo 3d model from here. if its structural integrity looks suspect just pretend it’s intentional.

14th January 2026

Video reblogged from we don't need a map to get this show on the road with 110,841 notes

fox-bright:

mikkeneko:

ur-cute-so-i:

grammarmancer:

Turned on TikTok today and got a video from Spiders Georg. Amazing.

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Regret that I didn’t think of publishing this one in time for Spiders Georg birthday 😔

Not gonna lie, tempted by a T-shirt.

14th January 2026

Post reblogged from It All Makes Sense in Context with 26,378 notes

byjove:

I think maybe the most ironic part of the white supremacist “Muslims are taking over Europe, save European culture and its people!” rhetoric is that they’ve been saying it for the past 1,300 years. No exaggeration. This is something they’ve been fearmongering about since the 8th century.

14th January 2026

Post reblogged from ghost with 5,166 notes

dhaaruni:

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14th January 2026

Post reblogged from St John Starling with 7,820 notes

furryprovocateur:

they should allow you to report posts for being gauche or passé

14th January 2026

Post reblogged from big fucking crab!!!!! with 35,043 notes

tactfulsaboteur:

isuggestkillingyourself:

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14th January 2026

Post reblogged from it's not even a real sport with 24,393 notes

stellewriites:

preserving-tiktok:

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Source: tiktok.com

14th January 2026

Post reblogged from It All Makes Sense in Context with 91,262 notes

dr-dendritic-trees:

classicslesbianopinions:

thefibrarchaeologist:

mounmantaka:

biggest-gaudiest-poltergeist:

shrewreadings:

blackcatphysics:

krakenartificer:

shadytail:

We also figured out—the hard way—that the ancients probably cut each layer of linen to the proper shape before gluing them together. For our first linothorax, we glued together 15 layers of linen to form a one centimeter-thick slab, and then tried to cut out the required shape. Large shears were defeated; bolt cutters failed. The only way we were ultimately able to cut the laminated linen slab was with an electric saw equipped with a blade for cutting metal. At least this confirmed our suspicion that linen armor would have been extremely tough. We also found out that linen stiffened with rabbit glue strikes dogs as in irresistibly tasty rabbit-flavored chew toy, and that our Labrador retriever should not be left alone with our research project.

I love this in every way possible. What is it from? Where can I read more?

The pitfalls of experimental archaeology and puppies.

link to source:

“Unraveling the Linothorax Mystery, or how Linen Armor Came to Dominate our Lives.”

https://jhupress.wordpress.com/2013/04/24/unraveling-the-linothorax-mystery-or-how-linen-armor-came-to-dominate-our-lives/

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holy shit read the article. it’s short but wild

We found that even more of a threat than rain was one’s own sweat on a hot day. So, yes, it does need waterproofing, both inside and out. We did a number of experiments along those lines, and found that rubbing a block of beeswax over all sides of the armor provided nice waterproofing. It also makes the armor smell nice! When you wear it for a couple hours, your own body heat softens the glue a bit and makes it conform to your body shape, so it is much more comfortable to wear than rigid types of armor. Our reconstructions weighed about 10 pounds–about one third the weight of bronze armor that would provide the same degree of protection.

Honey i gotta go to war… not to smell my bee armor or hang with the boys or anything no.. uhh we need to uh do war things?

#i’ve definitely read this before and i’ve probably reblogged it before but like.#no one in this thread is mentioning that they actually shot someone with an actual arrow in this armor.#they were like ‘we’ve got to test this in practice’ and instead of getting a mannequin or something they had an actual person wear it.

They what?

from the article:

While all of this mayhem (both scientifically controlled and free-form) convinced us that our linothorax was ancient-battlefield-ready, we still felt compelled to try a real-life scenario, so Scott donned the armor and Greg shot him. And while we had confidence in our armor, our relief was still considerable when the arrowhead stuck and lodged in the armor’s outer layers, a safe distance away from flesh.

a good life-size mannequin is expensive but i guarantee it would’ve cost way less than they were spending on all that linen.

Academics are just like that.

14th January 2026

Post reblogged from It All Makes Sense in Context with 156,828 notes

thriceandonce:

marlinspirkhall:

jackofacetrades:

ospreyonthemoon:

ospreyonthemoon:

cannibalcaprine-deactivated2024:

ninjakittenarmy:

cannibalcaprine-deactivated2024:

nwmo:

NEW FISH JUST DROPPED

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I KNOW that playing God is morally wrong, but holy HELL, it looks fun.

Why is it playing God? We aren’t violating any natural laws. God set the parameters of the universe to allow these things. There’s nothing wrong with it, there’s no hubris in learning more about how to manipulate the universe around us.

We made a whole-ass fish.

The reason this was accidental BTW is because they used paddlefish eggs as a negative control group for a breeding experiment on sturgeons because the scientists, quite naturally, assumed that they were SO unrelated it would be genetically impossible for them to mate. Like. I cannot stress enough to you how these creatures last related ancestors were

140 MILLION YEARS BACK.

If you don’t know how far that is, that’s basically the start of the cretaceous. Let me simplify that for you even further. Chimpanzees and humans seperated, what, 5 or 6 million years ago?

This is basically like if humans could hybridise with THESE THINGS.

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This is the sort of thing that should be impossible. They used those eggs to be ABSOLUTELY 100% SURE NOTHING WOULD HAPPEN.

And then THEY GOT FISH OUT OF IT.

Like. You can quite clearly understand why they didn’t think anything would happen. WE ARE MORE RELATED TO BLUE WHALES THAN THESE THINGS.

THE AMERICAN PADDLEFISH AND THE STURGEON ARE SO COMPLETELY UNRELATED THAT THIS IS NOT PLAYING GOD. IF ANYTHING THIS IS AN ACT OF GOD.

THE SCIENTISTS HAD NO BLAME IN THIS BECAUSE NOTHING LIKE THIS HAD EVER HAPPENED BEFORE

It sort of goes against the rules of genetics a bit.

Oh i forgot to add

THESE THINGS, FOR HYBRIDS, HAD A REALLY HIGH SURVIVAL RATING. LIKE 70% OF THEM SURVIVED.

To put that into perspective, getting a blue whale and a squirrel and trying to hybridise them is more sensible, and that wouldn’t produce anything but getting you banned from science. Most animals that aren’t plants can barely hybridise two degrees away from each other.

BUT THESE TWO ENTIRELY UNRELATED FISH create PERFECTLY HEALTHY HYBRIDS.

the scientists literally had to do the tests AGAIN just to be like “okay this is real right. This is actually like, not a fluke, this works right” and it worked again. They just Can!

So for those who don’t know what the original fishes look like, this is an American Paddlefish:

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And this is a Russian Sturgeon:

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So honestly, saying the hybrid is “weird looking” is a bit fort de café when you see its parents. I think the sturddlefish looks cute.

“these creatures last related ancestors were 140 million years back”

(glances at fish)

Yeah that’s exactly what I thought you’d look like, you Mesozoic fuck

#Holding a red squirrel in my left hand and a blue whale in my right desperately hoping to make a purple squale (via @dykepuffs)

14th January 2026

Post reblogged from we don't need a map to get this show on the road with 59,601 notes

bone-free-as-the-wind:

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All hail Volcano Snail

14th January 2026

Post reblogged from St John Starling with 198 notes

stjohnstarling:

You’re all just jealous of my vast underground tunnel system.