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part 2; just rachel. das my baby
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of course THE BEST lis cc by: @ivka-sims 🥹❤️🩹
#sims 4 cas#sims 4 cc#the sims 4#rachel amber#life is strange remastered#life is strange#life is strange sims#sims 4 screenshots#the sims cc#rachel amber supremacy
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Playing through life is strange before the storm again and every time chloe and rachel talk about running away or their future together it feels like being stabbed in the heart. They never even had a chance and it's fucking devastating. They both finally had something good to hold onto and it's about to be ripped away from them and they dont even know it. They don't know to cherish it before it's gone because for them it's a new beginning but for us it's the beginning of the end
#sorry for being dramatic over amberprice#it will happen again#but that whole game has an undercurrent of dread because we know whats coming#that last scene with rachels phone and the calls from chloe fucking killed me#life is strange#life is strange before the storm#life is strange spoilers#life is strange before the storm spoilers#lis spoilers#lis bts spoilers#chloe price#rachel amber#amberprice#amberprice supremacy
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For the character ranking: Tina, Santana, Rachel, Quinn, Mercedes!
ohh thanks! <3 they're ofc all amazing but:
5. quinn - i like her, but i definitely prefer the others (i prefer them to almost everyone tho lol so that's not really saying something). my opinion on quinn changes all the time, everytime i make a glee tier list she's in a different place lol. rn i'd say i like her a lot.
4. tina - i hate putting tina this low bc she's one of my fav characters but i slightly prefer the others. i LOVE my girl tina tho <3 she's amazing, especially in season 4 (s4 tina stans unite!!) and i'm totally in love with her.
3. mercedes - i love mercedes sm. she's amazing, gorgeous, entertaining, funny (amber's comedic acting deserves more love!) and so damn talented. rn i'd rank her at #5 in my character ranking, but often she's also a bit higher.
2. santana - icon <33 i started watching glee in 2010 and since then she's been one of my fav fictional characters in general. she's easily one of the most hilarious and entertaining glee characters, it's so much fun to watch her on screen. her development was ofc amazing and i love that she helped so many people. naya was truly incredible <3
rachel - my baby!! i love her sm. she just hits all the right spots for me. i love this insane, dramatic, extra, passionate, ambitious, unique, hilarious girl. she owns my heart!
anyways, glee girls supremacy!
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Vox Sentences: Quantum leap forward
Vox Sentences: Quantum leap forward
Ravi Bhat, a University of Toronto researcher, explains his work on quantum computing, in 2010. | Mike Slaughter/Toronto Star via Getty Images
Google says it’s achieved “quantum supremacy” with a prototype computer; Gantz takes a shot at building an Israeli government.
Vox Sentences is your daily digest for what’s happening in the world. Sign up for the Vox Sentences newsletter, delivered straight to your inbox Monday through Friday, or view the Vox Sentences archive for past editions.
Google’s big milestone in quantum computing
Google claims their experimental quantum processor computed a problem that would have taken any other supercomputer thousands of years. [AP News / Rachel Lerman and Matt O’Brien]
A newly released paper revealed that Google’s 54-qubit computer was able to complete a task in 200 seconds that Google estimated would take over 10,000 years on non-quantum models. [Newsweek / Aristos Georgiou]
Ordinary computers rely on lots of small calculations, each processing “bits” of information that simply hold a 1 or a 0. In physical terms, a system of gates provides a path for electricity to flow and move data around. [New York Times / Cade Metz]
Quantum computers make use of “qubits,” with extremely cold materials that allow manipulation under the classical physics-bending rules of quantum mechanics. Qubits can essentially simultaneously hold a 1 and a 0, so a quantum computer can combine smaller calculations rather than generating them first. [NYT / Cade Metz]
This breakthrough of “quantum supremacy,” or the ability of a quantum computer to outstrip a regular computer in speed of computing, is the first of its kind to work in practice, according to Google. [Washington Post / Sarah Kaplan]
Quantum machine-building competitor IBM disputed Google’s “quantum supremacy” claims. The company argues its Summit supercomputer, the one Google’s experimental quantum computer compared itself to, could perform the task in two and a half days with adjustments. [The Verge / Jon Porter]
With quantum computing prototypes within reach, there are possibilities for medical advancements and concerns about the danger to encryption security. [NYT / David Yaffe-Bellany]
Israel’s third try at a government
Israel’s Blue and White party leader Benny Gantz accepted the task of forming a government in the Knesset Wednesday as Israeli President Reuven Rivlin called for compromise. Gantz promised to form a more secular unity government with his right-wing rivals — but it’s not clear if that’s possible. [Jerusalem Post / Gil Hoffman]
Israeli parties win seats in the Knesset based on their vote share in the national elections and, if there is no outright 61-seat majority, the president grants the leader of the party with the best chance to form a coalition the first attempt to do so. [Vox / Zack Beauchamp]
Rivlin granted Gantz 28 days to fashion a government following the failure of the Likud party’s embattled leader Benjamin Netanyahu to form a coalition. Likud won one less seat in the September election but has ruled on and off since 1977. [BBC]
Gantz has a tough task ahead convincing Likud and/or other parties to join him. But former Knesset member Einat Wilf was hopeful: “At every point he tended to be underestimated. ... Despite the numbers supposedly not adding up, Gantz has a better chance than people think he does because people tend to come together under his leadership.” [The Media Line / Tara Kavaler]
Miscellaneous
With a vaping-related health crisis unfolding, legalizing marijuana might help solve a lack of regulation. [Vox / Julia Belluz]
Some sexual assault survivors seek healing through self-defense training. [TIME / Gitit Ginat]
Former Defense Secretary Jim Mattis’s new book tells us what has long been clear: Trump’s own advisers worry about the commander in chief’s decisions. [Politico / Bryan Bender]
How the language of politics has degraded under Trump: [Washington Post / Ashley Parker and Philip Rucker]
Joe Biden and Donald Trump have both used the term “lynching” to describe different instances of impeachment. Biden says he’s sorry and that Trump’s invocation of the term was worse. [Newsweek / James Walker]
Verbatim
“She has been both a visionary and a strategic leader in securing equality, fairness, and the rule of law not only in the realm of theory, but in social institutions and the lives of individuals.” [2019 Berggruen Prize committee chairman Kwame Anthony Appiah on why Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg won the award]
Watch this: What happens when we die?
By looking into the dreams of terminal individuals, we might just find an answer to the age-old question. [YouTube / Alex Clark]
Help us with an upcoming episode of Glad You Asked about loneliness: Record an audio clip on your phone (1 minute or less) about a time you felt lonely, then email the clip to [email protected] with your name and age. Your story might be featured in our video.
Read more
Amber Guyger’s lawyers have taken the first step toward appealing her murder conviction
Trump’s latest Syria announcement is the clearest articulation of his foreign policy doctrine
The Houston Astros’ self-created domestic violence controversy, explained
How to stop looking at your phone
Trump’s latest explanation for withholding Ukraine aid is as nonsensical as his previous ones
from Vox - All https://ift.tt/31KjdJU from Blogger https://ift.tt/2NbSQas via IFTTT
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Vox Sentences: Quantum leap forward
Ravi Bhat, a University of Toronto researcher, explains his work on quantum computing, in 2010. | Mike Slaughter/Toronto Star via Getty Images
Google says it’s achieved “quantum supremacy” with a prototype computer; Gantz takes a shot at building an Israeli government.
Vox Sentences is your daily digest for what’s happening in the world. Sign up for the Vox Sentences newsletter, delivered straight to your inbox Monday through Friday, or view the Vox Sentences archive for past editions.
Google’s big milestone in quantum computing
Google claims their experimental quantum processor computed a problem that would have taken any other supercomputer thousands of years. [AP News / Rachel Lerman and Matt O’Brien]
A newly released paper revealed that Google’s 54-qubit computer was able to complete a task in 200 seconds that Google estimated would take over 10,000 years on non-quantum models. [Newsweek / Aristos Georgiou]
Ordinary computers rely on lots of small calculations, each processing “bits” of information that simply hold a 1 or a 0. In physical terms, a system of gates provides a path for electricity to flow and move data around. [New York Times / Cade Metz]
Quantum computers make use of “qubits,” with extremely cold materials that allow manipulation under the classical physics-bending rules of quantum mechanics. Qubits can essentially simultaneously hold a 1 and a 0, so a quantum computer can combine smaller calculations rather than generating them first. [NYT / Cade Metz]
This breakthrough of “quantum supremacy,” or the ability of a quantum computer to outstrip a regular computer in speed of computing, is the first of its kind to work in practice, according to Google. [Washington Post / Sarah Kaplan]
Quantum machine-building competitor IBM disputed Google’s “quantum supremacy” claims. The company argues its Summit supercomputer, the one Google’s experimental quantum computer compared itself to, could perform the task in two and a half days with adjustments. [The Verge / Jon Porter]
With quantum computing prototypes within reach, there are possibilities for medical advancements and concerns about the danger to encryption security. [NYT / David Yaffe-Bellany]
Israel’s third try at a government
Israel’s Blue and White party leader Benny Gantz accepted the task of forming a government in the Knesset Wednesday as Israeli President Reuven Rivlin called for compromise. Gantz promised to form a more secular unity government with his right-wing rivals — but it’s not clear if that’s possible. [Jerusalem Post / Gil Hoffman]
Israeli parties win seats in the Knesset based on their vote share in the national elections and, if there is no outright 61-seat majority, the president grants the leader of the party with the best chance to form a coalition the first attempt to do so. [Vox / Zack Beauchamp]
Rivlin granted Gantz 28 days to fashion a government following the failure of the Likud party’s embattled leader Benjamin Netanyahu to form a coalition. Likud won one less seat in the September election but has ruled on and off since 1977. [BBC]
Gantz has a tough task ahead convincing Likud and/or other parties to join him. But former Knesset member Einat Wilf was hopeful: “At every point he tended to be underestimated. ... Despite the numbers supposedly not adding up, Gantz has a better chance than people think he does because people tend to come together under his leadership.” [The Media Line / Tara Kavaler]
Miscellaneous
With a vaping-related health crisis unfolding, legalizing marijuana might help solve a lack of regulation. [Vox / Julia Belluz]
Some sexual assault survivors seek healing through self-defense training. [TIME / Gitit Ginat]
Former Defense Secretary Jim Mattis’s new book tells us what has long been clear: Trump’s own advisers worry about the commander in chief’s decisions. [Politico / Bryan Bender]
How the language of politics has degraded under Trump: [Washington Post / Ashley Parker and Philip Rucker]
Joe Biden and Donald Trump have both used the term “lynching” to describe different instances of impeachment. Biden says he’s sorry and that Trump’s invocation of the term was worse. [Newsweek / James Walker]
Verbatim
“She has been both a visionary and a strategic leader in securing equality, fairness, and the rule of law not only in the realm of theory, but in social institutions and the lives of individuals.” [2019 Berggruen Prize committee chairman Kwame Anthony Appiah on why Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg won the award]
Watch this: What happens when we die?
By looking into the dreams of terminal individuals, we might just find an answer to the age-old question. [YouTube / Alex Clark]
Help us with an upcoming episode of Glad You Asked about loneliness: Record an audio clip on your phone (1 minute or less) about a time you felt lonely, then email the clip to [email protected] with your name and age. Your story might be featured in our video.
Read more
Amber Guyger’s lawyers have taken the first step toward appealing her murder conviction
Trump’s latest Syria announcement is the clearest articulation of his foreign policy doctrine
The Houston Astros’ self-created domestic violence controversy, explained
How to stop looking at your phone
Trump’s latest explanation for withholding Ukraine aid is as nonsensical as his previous ones
from Vox - All https://ift.tt/31KjdJU
0 notes
Link
Ravi Bhat, a University of Toronto researcher, explains his work on quantum computing, in 2010. | Mike Slaughter/Toronto Star via Getty Images
Google says it’s achieved “quantum supremacy” with a prototype computer; Gantz takes a shot at building an Israeli government.
Vox Sentences is your daily digest for what’s happening in the world. Sign up for the Vox Sentences newsletter, delivered straight to your inbox Monday through Friday, or view the Vox Sentences archive for past editions.
Google’s big milestone in quantum computing
Google claims their experimental quantum processor computed a problem that would have taken any other supercomputer thousands of years. [AP News / Rachel Lerman and Matt O’Brien]
A newly released paper revealed that Google’s 54-qubit computer was able to complete a task in 200 seconds that Google estimated would take over 10,000 years on non-quantum models. [Newsweek / Aristos Georgiou]
Ordinary computers rely on lots of small calculations, each processing “bits” of information that simply hold a 1 or a 0. In physical terms, a system of gates provides a path for electricity to flow and move data around. [New York Times / Cade Metz]
Quantum computers make use of “qubits,” with extremely cold materials that allow manipulation under the classical physics-bending rules of quantum mechanics. Qubits can essentially simultaneously hold a 1 and a 0, so a quantum computer can combine smaller calculations rather than generating them first. [NYT / Cade Metz]
This breakthrough of “quantum supremacy,” or the ability of a quantum computer to outstrip a regular computer in speed of computing, is the first of its kind to work in practice, according to Google. [Washington Post / Sarah Kaplan]
Quantum machine-building competitor IBM disputed Google’s “quantum supremacy” claims. The company argues its Summit supercomputer, the one Google’s experimental quantum computer compared itself to, could perform the task in two and a half days with adjustments. [The Verge / Jon Porter]
With quantum computing prototypes within reach, there are possibilities for medical advancements and concerns about the danger to encryption security. [NYT / David Yaffe-Bellany]
Israel’s third try at a government
Israel’s Blue and White party leader Benny Gantz accepted the task of forming a government in the Knesset Wednesday as Israeli President Reuven Rivlin called for compromise. Gantz promised to form a more secular unity government with his right-wing rivals — but it’s not clear if that’s possible. [Jerusalem Post / Gil Hoffman]
Israeli parties win seats in the Knesset based on their vote share in the national elections and, if there is no outright 61-seat majority, the president grants the leader of the party with the best chance to form a coalition the first attempt to do so. [Vox / Zack Beauchamp]
Rivlin granted Gantz 28 days to fashion a government following the failure of the Likud party’s embattled leader Benjamin Netanyahu to form a coalition. Likud won one less seat in the September election but has ruled on and off since 1977. [BBC]
Gantz has a tough task ahead convincing Likud and/or other parties to join him. But former Knesset member Einat Wilf was hopeful: “At every point he tended to be underestimated. ... Despite the numbers supposedly not adding up, Gantz has a better chance than people think he does because people tend to come together under his leadership.” [The Media Line / Tara Kavaler]
Miscellaneous
With a vaping-related health crisis unfolding, legalizing marijuana might help solve a lack of regulation. [Vox / Julia Belluz]
Some sexual assault survivors seek healing through self-defense training. [TIME / Gitit Ginat]
Former Defense Secretary Jim Mattis’s new book tells us what has long been clear: Trump’s own advisers worry about the commander in chief’s decisions. [Politico / Bryan Bender]
How the language of politics has degraded under Trump: [Washington Post / Ashley Parker and Philip Rucker]
Joe Biden and Donald Trump have both used the term “lynching” to describe different instances of impeachment. Biden says he’s sorry and that Trump’s invocation of the term was worse. [Newsweek / James Walker]
Verbatim
“She has been both a visionary and a strategic leader in securing equality, fairness, and the rule of law not only in the realm of theory, but in social institutions and the lives of individuals.” [2019 Berggruen Prize committee chairman Kwame Anthony Appiah on why Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg won the award]
Watch this: What happens when we die?
By looking into the dreams of terminal individuals, we might just find an answer to the age-old question. [YouTube / Alex Clark]
Help us with an upcoming episode of Glad You Asked about loneliness: Record an audio clip on your phone (1 minute or less) about a time you felt lonely, then email the clip to [email protected] with your name and age. Your story might be featured in our video.
Read more
Amber Guyger’s lawyers have taken the first step toward appealing her murder conviction
Trump’s latest Syria announcement is the clearest articulation of his foreign policy doctrine
The Houston Astros’ self-created domestic violence controversy, explained
How to stop looking at your phone
Trump’s latest explanation for withholding Ukraine aid is as nonsensical as his previous ones
from Vox - All https://ift.tt/31KjdJU
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