I'm Crow! | Adult | I mostly just reblog memes, Ace Attorney, and Fire Emblem (Awakening and Engage) at the moment | BSD sideblog: beans-beneath-moonlight | VnC sideblog: hoe-archiviste
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not having the courtesy to send rejection letters should count against your reputation as a company and i’m so serious about that
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they're making a new movie or something and everybody agrees it's going to be bad but for some reason we will have to keep talking about it and paying attention to it and writing a million thinkpieces about it and unpacking every aspect of it on youtube. yeah sorry it's the law
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to all the warriors who will feel pressured to shave their legs now that it’s warm enough to wear shorts… HOLD THE LINE!!!
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Two different types pet blogs
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been getting really into rockhounding lately and the subreddits are great

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thank uou for showing me your little white boy i do not like him can you put him away please
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Requested by anon
#I fucking love Minesweeper#I had an app for it on my old phone and I had like a 77% win rate#would have been higher but I kept accidentally clicking on bombs bc I was trying to mark them but it hadn't registered I clicked the button#the rest of the losses were usually the dreaded 2x2s with 2 bombs#then it just becomes a 50/50 guessing game
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The height difference between the two is adorable, especially when hugging each other
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"Scientists in Singapore have broken a long-standing limitation on the ability to generate electricity from flowing water, suggesting that another elemental force of nature could be leveraged for renewable electricity: rain.
With the simplest and smallest scale test setup, the team could power around 12 LED lightbulbs with simulated rain droplets flowing through a tube, but at scale, their method could generate meaningful amounts that could rival rooftop solar arrays.
Singapore experiences significant rainfall throughout the year, averaging 101 inches (2581 millimeters) of precipitation annually. The idea of generating electricity from such falling water is attractive, but the method has long been constrained by a principle called the Debye Length.
Nevertheless, the concept is possible because of a simple physical principle that charged entities on the surface of materials get nudged when they rub together—as true for water droplets as it is for a balloon rubbed against the hair on one’s head.
While this is true, the power values thus generated have been negligible, and electricity from flowing water has been limited to the driving of turbines in hydropower plants.
However, in a study published in the journal ACS Central Science, a team of physicists has found a way to break through the constraints of water’s Debye Length, and generate power from simulated rain.
“Water that falls through a vertical tube generates a substantial amount of electricity by using a specific pattern of water flow: plug flow,” says Siowling Soh, author of the study. “This plug flow pattern could allow rain energy to be harvested for generating clean and renewable electricity.”
The authors write in their study that in existing tests of the power production from water flows, pumps are always used to drive liquid through the small channels. But the pumps require so much energy to run that outputs are limited to miniscule amounts.
Instead, their setup to harness this plug flow pattern was scandalously simple. No moving parts or mechanisms of any kind were required. A simple plastic tube just 2 millimeters in diameter; a large plastic bottle; a small metallic needle. Water coming out of the bottle ran along the needle and bumped into the top section of the tube that had been cut in half, interrupting the water flow and allowing pockets of air to slide down the tube along with the water.
The air was the key to breaking through the limits set by the Debye Length, and key to the feasibility of electricity generation from water. Wires placed at the top of the tube and in the cup harvested the electricity.
The total generation rate of greater than 10% resulted in about 100 watts per square meter of tube. For context, a 100-watt solar panel can power an appliance as large as a blender or ceiling fan, charge a laptop, provide for several light bulbs, or even a Wi-Fi router.
Because the droplet speeds tested were much slower than rain, the researchers suggest that the real thing would provide even more than their tests, which were of course on a microscale."
-via Good News Network, April 30, 2025
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The full piece I did for @magical-menagerie-zine !! Please go check out the full zine!
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So i finally got to dual destinies.
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ATTENTION
If you see this you are OBLIGATED to reblog w/ the song currently stuck in your head :)
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Heads up the next major US protest will be this Thursday, May 1st, on May Day!
As before with the April 5th and 19th protests, this one will be all across the country, including both big cities and smaller local events, and you can read more about the specific goals of this protest and view the map here: https://maydaystrong.org (I believe this event also includes a lot of mass actions at universities, as professors and faculty protest the massive state and federal spending cuts this administration has been levying, for all you students out there!)
A mass spreadsheet with a link to many of the protest locations can be found here, and mobilize has links to many of these protests directly through their site as well if you'd prefer to browse there.
Remember to dress appropriately for the weather and stay hydrated no matter where you're at! Go out there and get in some good trouble!
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I'M NOT DEAD!! Just trying to relearn the joys of drawing for yourself but
IT'S MY BABY'S BIRTHDAAAAAAY!
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Working on a webber drawing, but I cannot miss his birthday!!! My special son i hope your day was AMAZING
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