twisting box
Goddamnit allergies. At least I'm off soda now... Shit should be advertised.
PSA: if you happen to have any kind of allergies such as tree pollen allergies (any oral allergy for that matter), stay away from drinking Coca-Cola Life.
I drank one yesterday because the coke people were doing a promotion and were giving them away and I became violently ill, seriously like vomiting for hours and chills and horrible feeling of death.
Coca-cola Life has Stevia and a quick google search mentions that if you’ve a ragweed allergy, hay fever, you can have an allergic reaction to Stevia.
And underneath my mask of words there lies a truth to be untold.
Heroes of Order and Chaos loading screen - by Yuan Cui
“Artwork I designed and directed for the new HOC update, collaborated with 3D artist Liu Yang 刘洋 and Zhang Bao Lin 张宝林”
I'm one of those memories up on your old shelf, waiting to be cleaned off. You dust the shelf so willingly, to remove all of your past. You come to me and move right by, I fall off with one simple blast. You forget that I exist, and perhaps that we ever met. I've fallen towards the pit, no escape but the drop. Perhaps you'll see me fall, or perhaps you will not. Even if you do see me it will be but a glimpse before into the bag I'll go. To be given away to the lords of time, to be lost in my own little hell. And time will move and you'll never remember what you threw out on that warm Spring day.
I’m going to use this line one day. I swear.
New Quasi-Particle Found:
Mysterious Quantum ‘Dropletons’ Form Inside Semiconductors Shot With Lasers
by Adam Mann
By shooting a semiconductor with ultra-fast laser pulses, scientists have discovered a new quasiparticle that behaves like a drop of liquid. They describe it as a quantum droplet, and named it “dropleton.”
These things were not predicted under any theory and surprised scientists when they appeared unexpectedly in extremely low temperature semiconductor experiments. They have properties unlike anything seen before.
“At first we scratched our heads,” said physicist Steven Cundiff of the University of Colorado and National Institute of Standards and Technology in Boulder, one of the authors of a paper appearing today in Nature. “But then we came up with this idea that what we were seeing was this new thing we’re calling a quantum droplet.”
Now before you start asking questions like, “What?” and “Huh?” we probably need to break things down a little here…
(read more: Wired Science)
image: Baxley/JILA
Source