HAVE I EVER MENTIONED….
That I have the hands down most gorgeous, amazing, best girlfriend any guy could ever even think about dreaming of? Well not I am, because she is the literal best! I love her so much, I mean, I don’t know of any kind of way to explain it other than just shouting it. She makes me the happiest when I am down, she jokes around and kids with me and lets me know that things are always going to be alright. She makes offers me so much in life and asks for nothing in return and I only hope that I can do the same for her. She is beyond amazing, and I thought I would just tell you all.
Photo reblogged from This Belongs in a Museum with 5,341 notes
In honour of International Museum Day, I will take a Lufthansa flight to Germany and visit a museum there, then get on another flight to Paris, or maybe I should just buy a train ticket around continental Europe and visit all the museums…yeah, in my dreams.
Anyway, HAPPY Museum Day! Here’s a kid’s drawing of what an art “musseme” looks like. That’s a big door. Lots of windows too. Has that kid ever heard of conservation?
Source: thisbelongsinamuseum
Photo reblogged from Mémoire Photographique by Pernette Le Flour with 9,996 notes
Vatican Staircases - V
Vatican City State, April 2012
Source: pernette
Photo reblogged from A Momentary Flow with 1,767 notes
Berkley’s Floating Sensor Network project launched 100 floating robots equipped with GPS-enabled smartphones down the Sacramento River on May 9. The launch was designed to test a new generation of water monitoring technologies. The 12 inch robots, called Drifters, are designed to provide real-time, high-resolution data of hard-to-map waterways. One of many possible uses is locating breeches in levee systems quickly enough to allow repair, before erosion destroys the levee. Other uses include identifying contaminants. Andrew Tinka, lead graduate student on the project notes: “If something spills in the water, if there’s a contaminant, you need to know where it is now, you need to know where it’s going, you need to know where it will be later on. The Floating Sensor Network project can help by tracking water flow at a level of detail not currently possible.” (via robots.net - Berkley Sends 100 Robots Down River)
Source: robots.net
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