alecshao:

Mark Mawson - Aqueous, 2012 - colored ink in water

(Source: gigazine.net)

(via Okami Amaterasu by ~Richi89)
This is just so much greater than the modernistic-futuristic glass & concrete architecture. Sure, all-glass buildings can be rather cool and I do like them, but THIS. It has got so much more flavour and depth to it than its bland and cold counterparts.

This is just so much greater than the modernistic-futuristic glass & concrete architecture. Sure, all-glass buildings can be rather cool and I do like them, but THIS. It has got so much more flavour and depth to it than its bland and cold counterparts.

(Source: panoramio.com)

I never knew Qrio existed until today. I’m 4 years too late. 7 years too late, if we are talking about its creation date in 2003, according to Wikipedia. This little thing is cute! Those round eyes makes it look permanently stunned. Just 3 years and Sony had such progress with the robot, if the video is anything to go by. If they had not discontinued it, I wonder what it could have been able to do today. O_o

Between Qrio and Asimo, would Qrio have won out? I think I’m leaning towards Qrio, because it just looks cuter. ^_^;;; Kawaii~~~ Asimo looks more scary and of course I would have rather have Qrio in my house. In a way, it’s scary enough these robots can do the things they do, so I don’t need them to look scary too. D=

Interesting.
arabesque:

30 Clever Logos With Hidden Symbolism | Bored Panda
life:

The Space Shuttle Atlantis appears almost infinitesimally small photographed in silhouette during a solar transit — in other words, when passing between the sun and the Earth — on May 12, 2009. Beyond the sheer scale of what we’re seeing (and it’s worth remembering that somewhere around 1,000,000 Earths would fit inside our sun), this picture is just eerily beautiful.
Looking Into the Sun

life:

The Space Shuttle Atlantis appears almost infinitesimally small photographed in silhouette during a solar transit — in other words, when passing between the sun and the Earth — on May 12, 2009. Beyond the sheer scale of what we’re seeing (and it’s worth remembering that somewhere around 1,000,000 Earths would fit inside our sun), this picture is just eerily beautiful.

Looking Into the Sun

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