WA tourism department released this for traveling World Cup fans
trying on a metaphor
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

Origami Around
Three Goblin Art
will byers stan first human second
One Nice Bug Per Day
Xuebing Du

Andulka
Keni
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
Show & Tell
art blog(derogatory)
NASA

shark vs the universe
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
Cosimo Galluzzi

★
Claire Keane
Peter Solarz
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@rosetintedkaleidoscope
WA tourism department released this for traveling World Cup fans
first 5 faceless emojis are how your summers gonna go
Magnus Archives fan I see
THIS IS SO FUNNY I'M SORRY
miss bates makes me feel so called out. irl i too speak just like - i drop sentences partway through, i never thought it was a problem until reading this - until listening, really. i've read emma many times but it's only now on audiobook that i notice. audio makes you notice so many things - emma seems so much more awful, so confident and decisive in her - oh, what's it called? her whole demeanor. and when you hear her talk to poor harriet! it's so - i just talked like that on a customer call at work, said a sentence that sounded so miss bates when i said it out loud. and she's the comic relief character!
The Banquet, René Magritte
3+4 is basically the most classic way to make 7
(vía Elegant Bronzeback - Dendrelaphis formosus — HongKongSnakeID.com)
The Art of Reading - Jordi Sàbat
Catalan , b. 1960 -
Acrylic on canvas , 30 x 30 cm.
i kinda love this response. just try reading my comment in a nicer voice and you'll feel better
Its friends. The fountain of youth is going outdoors to hangout and seeing your friends every day. You atrophy fast and prematurely age when you have no friends.
but people who have less cognitive decline will also be better at having friends, right? maybe this goes the other way
We were covering T.S. Eliot in class once and my professor quoted “This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper” then said “What does a whimper sound like? Can anyone give me a whimper?” and I whimpered. I was the only person in the class who fucking whimpered.
I LOVE that because it's Calvinball he just GOES WITH IT 😂😂😂
This is my FAVORITE ARC with Rosalyn, and I think it’s the last one Watterson did, which makes it a perfect ending. Because after all the nightmare scenarios, Rosalyn FINALLY FIGURES IT OUT! She learns how to get along with Calvin, manage his energy in a way he enjoys, and lay down rules he will obey, all by readily adopting his silly random game. It’s so wholesome and great and the only time Calvin is HAPPY to have Rosalyn babysit him, and you bet they must have played this every time thereafter that she came to babysit
I love that when his parents come home she’s like “yeah everything was great, Calvin did his homework, we played a game, and he went to bed” and the dad is like “It’s a little late for jokes, Rosalyn.”
Energy in the United States
When people discuss "energy," they're often thinking about electricity, but most of the energy consumption in the US is from fuel burned for heat or transportation, not to generate electricity.
This chart is from 2023; it's a little outdated, but it's still reasonably accurate in 2026. It's published by the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory; it shows the flow from generation of energy to consumption (or waste). It estimates the total energy production from not just power plants but stoves, cars, trucks, jets, industrial boilers, etc, and aims to encompass everything in the US. Note that the units are in quadrillion BTUs; BTUs are a unit of heat, and direct electricity production has a conversion factor applied here.
The four bottom categories are greenhouse gas generators.
A couple things that are notable to me:
Transportation is the biggest sector for consumption. Within that sector, personal vehicles account for more than half of energy use. Note that "light trucks" includes SUVs - this is a "personal vehicle" category. Shipping-type trucks are next, followed by airplanes. As a fraction of total energy, individual people's cars make up 15% of energy use in the nation.
Similarly, the industrial sector's energy is almost entirely fuel- and heat-based. The most recent manufacturing energy study is from 2022, when the consumption was around 20 quadrillion BTU vs the current 26 quadrillion BTU. About 35% of the energy use in that sector is turning fossil fuels into feedstocks for plastics, other chemicals, and/or fertilizer; much of the rest is process heat.
it's crazy to me how much of the energy use is paper products!
Another note is on residential energy consumption. It's a pretty small sector and it's about half electricity, half direct heat. I often hear electricity production in the press described in terms of "number of homes powered", usually assuming the ~1 kilowatt of electricity being used on average by the average home, but that doesn't capture the actual energy use across the nation (which is about 2x higher). It also isn't necessarily a great mental benchmark for overall energy impact, because electricity for homes is only about 5% of total energy consumption in the US.
The other big note is on the "rejected energy" vs "energy services" on the right. Most of the energy released when fossil fuels are burned is wasted as unused heat! This is especially true for cars, for which only around 12-30% of the energy actually goes towards moving the car (and only ~4-20% of that goes towards moving the passengers). It's also true, though, for things like gas stoves, water heaters, and thermal power plants - much of the energy is just waste heat.
All together, there's significant potential to reduce emissions in the US by addressing residential/commercial/industrial heating (whether by improving efficiency with heat pumps, electrifying, or improved equipment) and electrifying transportation.
One other note: datacenters. They don't show up in any of these categories as notable because on a nationwide energy scale, they're not as significant as cars or residential heating or paper (yet). (For completeness, they fall under the Commercial sector by this accounting method). Estimates of power consumption I've found include ~30 GW for 2025, which would be ~262 TWh, or approx 280 TWh in 2025. That's about 0.89 quadrillion BTUs, coincidentally the same amount as the solar contributions to the energy mix in 2023, and less than 1% of total energy use in the US. The best I can say is that it's both a little and a lot - a small fraction of a very very large number.
I include this note partially because I see a decent amount of attention going towards datacenters' energy consumption these days and I would like to say "yes, and": yes, and it is urgent to electrify transportation (where a direct 1:1 substitution of an electric car for a gas car results in ~6x less total energy use). yes, and it is urgent to build dense housing that facilitates public transit and reduces transportation energy use as well as heating/cooling energy use. yes, and there may be programs in your state to help you install heat pumps or electric water heaters that can make your home use much less energy. yes, and there's a huge amount of energy going to heat and cool offices and malls and factories and even a small improvement to insulation or small decrease in usage across a large number of buildings is meaningful. yes, and even if no new datacenters were built from today onward, there's still a huge amount of power in the US that could be replaced with nuclear, geothermal, hydro, wind, and solar. yes, and please advocate in your area for clean power generation.
really fond of humans just from an appearance standpoint. the long legs. the manes of hair that can come in practically any colour and texture. those crazy high-contrast eyes with the white scleras and colourful irises. the fingers being so much longer than the toes. there's a lot to love. solid 10/10 animal species
BAFFLINGLY SPOT ON COMPARISON.
Opal and glass gold-mounted pendant by René Lalique, c. 1900.
some of my favorite words that my two-year-old says:
moop (milk)
poop (poke) (also poop)
bvoo (blue)
you (while pointing at himself)
OHHHH yeah!
ummmmm no.
ado (I do) (as in, "you don't want ice cream?" "ado!")
shoom (strawberry)
let's add hiyu (hello) and biyu (...bello?)
i think what happened here is just hi:hello::bye:bello. very logical really
he's moved on to much clearer pronunciation, but there are still a few really cute ones:
aminals
manonnaise
skippyjojonjones (previously known as skippyjones (actually written as skippyjonjones))