The Time Machine (2002)
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The Time Machine (2002)
A few weeks ago I watched some video essays on YouTube about how the 2020s have similarities to medieval times and also ones predicting that the 2030s will be a new renaissance. I know it's just a bunch of videos, but it made me feel ?hopeful? The world might be in a very weird place right now, but everything passes sooner or later.
There are some things you don’t come back from. Three lives. One secret that binds them. And a trail of bodies leading straight to the heart of it all. This is not a love story. It’s a story about wanting to be loved. Even if it destroys everything.
Convincing you to read a book by the character’s aesthetic 😌
The 1920s had a huge plague outbreak, and 2020 has had a global pandemic
The 1930's had the dust bowl, the great depression, and ww2. In short, I'm really not excited about the 2030's...
Airbus has plans to bring a zero-emissions commercial airliner to the market within the decade by using green hydrogen as the means to the end. The fuel would be produced using wind and solar power. The new model would use hydrogen fuel cells or a hybrid-electric engine to drive the...
mfw I realize I will be 2 years away from being 30 by the end of this decade
One Of These Four Missions Will Be Selected As NASA's Next Flagship For Astrophysics
“Choosing which of these missions to build and fly will, in many ways, inform our plans for the next 30 years (or more) of astronomy. NASA is the pre-eminent space agency in the world. This is where science, research, development, discovery, and innovation all come together. The spinoff technologies alone justify the investment, but that's not why we do it. We are here to discover the Universe. We are here to learn all that we can about the cosmos and our place within it. We are here to find out what the Universe looks like and how it came to be the way it is today.
People will always argue over budgets — the penny-pinchers are always happy to propose something that's faster, cheaper, and worse — but the reality is this: the budget for NASA Astrophysics as a whole is just $1.35 billion per year: less than 0.1% of the federal discretionary budget and less than 0.03% of the total federal budget. And still, for that tiny amount, NASA has steadily built a flagship program that's the envy of the free world.”
Every 10 years, NASA performs a decadal survey, where it outlines its highest mission priorities for the next 10 years. The 2020 decadal is happening imminently, and once the recommendations are submitted to the National Resource Council at the National Academies of Science, the four flagship finalists will be ranked. This will determine NASA astrophysics’ direction for the 2030s.
James Webb is the flagship for the 2010s; WFIRST is it for the 2020s. What will we choose for the 2030s? It will be one of these four finalists! Dream big, everyone.