Cual ha sido la cosa más romántica y loca que han hecho por ti?Y siempre cuento la historia del loco que subió a mi ventana por una escalera a media noche

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Cual ha sido la cosa más romántica y loca que han hecho por ti?Y siempre cuento la historia del loco que subió a mi ventana por una escalera a media noche
Palais Garnier Grand Foyer
Palazzo Reale, Napoli by Stefano Nardone
Stockholm
What do bacterial communities and your brain have in common? The way they communicate!
Scientists at UC San Diego recently discovered that bacteria communities use electronic signals and ion channels to communicate–a lot like the electrical signals of neurons in the brain.
This means that, when bacteria form a community, like the biofilm, it can adapt to survive attacks from chemicals and antibiotics. Biofilms can range in presentation–from the tartar buildup on your teeth, to the more threatening forms that cause pneumonia and meningitis. Knowing how they communicate can help scientists discover more effective treatments for diseases caused by these bacteria.
This gives scientists a new way of thinking about bacteria as well as a new way of thinking about the brain. Gürol Süel, who served as the head of the research project, elaborates: “Our discovery suggests that neurological disorders that are triggered by metabolic stress may have ancient bacterial origins, and could thus provide a new perspective on how to treat such conditions.”
It sounds like these scientists have more exciting discoveries ahead of them!
Read more about the discovery here.
The Golden-Eagle Hunters of Mongolia
Members of Mongolia’s traditional nomadic clans domesticate golden eagles to hunt foxes and other animals. Many of the men talk about loving the eagles like their own children. The photographer Palani Mohan documents the bond between man and bird in the Altai mountains.
Find more photographs on newyorker.com.
Photographs by Palani Mohan / Courtesy Merrell Publishers
West Bengal, India, 1983.
Photo by Steve McCurry
#London #rain (at Oxford Circus)
Stilts house on Braies Lake in Südtirol, Italy.
Contributed by Luca Varenna.
Everyday life in Ukraine, in 1942. (source)
Cabin in Ustaoset, Norway.
Photo by Kristian Pletten.
We all lie to ourselves, we tell ourselves more lies than we ever do to other people.
Philip K. Dick (via headlesssamurai)
Mallow blooms in the Atacama region of Chile on October 21, 2015. (Mario Ruiz/EPA)
Mont Saint Michel Castle | France Miranda Castle | Belgium Hohenwerfen Castle | Austria
Harlem in the 1970s: Jack Garofalo