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Mint.com catergorized my spending trend into a pie chart. Hopefully this website will visually see ways I can cut down and save for a few trips at the end of the year and next year.
Mint.com catergorized my spending trend into a pie chart. Hopefully this website will visually see ways I can cut down and save for a few trips at the end of the year and next year.

Four galaxies are involved in this pile-up 280 million light years from Earth. The bright spiral galaxy at the center of the image is punching through the cluster at almost two million miles per hour. (via Multi-Galaxy Collision Caught in Action | Wired Science | Wired.com)
Four galaxies are involved in this pile-up 280 million light years from Earth. The bright spiral galaxy at the center of the image is punching through the cluster at almost two million miles per hour. (via Multi-Galaxy Collision Caught in Action | Wired Science | Wired.com)

Higher ground

zachklein:

National Geographic’s July cover story ponders the mysterious downfall for Angkor, the most extensive urban complex of the preindustrial world and crown jewel of the Khmer kingdom which reigned Southeast Asia from the ninth to the 15th century:

Angkor is the scene of one of the greatest vanishing acts of all time … As many as 750,000 people lived in Angkor, its capital, which sprawled across an area the size of New York City’s five boroughs … By the late 16th century, when Portuguese missionaries came upon the lotus-shaped towers of Angkor Wat—the most elaborate of the city’s temples and the world’s largest religious monument—the once resplendent capital of the empire was in its death throes.

The article is threaded with speculation ranging from religious upheaval to bloodthirsty foreign invaders. What’s most likely is that the city’s vast water storage dependence failed during an extended drought and was abandoned for coastal settlements.

Pushing that story aside, it’s interesting to immediately switch to the article in the today’s Telegraph titled US cities may have to be bulldozed in order to survive.

The government is looking at expanding a pioneering scheme in Flint, one of the poorest US cities, which involves razing entire districts and returning the land to nature.

Appearing on that shortlist is Detroit, which the New York weekly Outlook described in 1929 as “The most modern city in the world, the city of tomorrow.” This wasn’t sensationalism, at very least Detroit was widely perceived this way.

Detroit is Angkor, and this makes me think: It’s astounding that after 500 years of similar cases our collective consciousness and sophistication doesn’t prevent us from similar short-sighted and sometimes irresponsible development of urban areas! It should be instinctual by now, like Don’t touch the pan! It’s hot!

Einstein’s definition of insanity was doing something twice and expecting a different result.

Maybe it’s time to move New Orleans to higher ground?

I’ve been wanting to subscribe to National Geographic since a month ago when I was on a small island in the south pacific ocean. At the resort I was staying at, had stacks of NG mags. I fell in love because of it’s articles. There I knew why the hell I was a biology major.

Higher ground

zachklein:

National Geographic’s July cover story ponders the mysterious downfall for Angkor, the most extensive urban complex of the preindustrial world and crown jewel of the Khmer kingdom which reigned Southeast Asia from the ninth to the 15th century:

Angkor is the scene of one of the greatest vanishing acts of all time … As many as 750,000 people lived in Angkor, its capital, which sprawled across an area the size of New York City’s five boroughs … By the late 16th century, when Portuguese missionaries came upon the lotus-shaped towers of Angkor Wat—the most elaborate of the city’s temples and the world’s largest religious monument—the once resplendent capital of the empire was in its death throes.

The article is threaded with speculation ranging from religious upheaval to bloodthirsty foreign invaders. What’s most likely is that the city’s vast water storage dependence failed during an extended drought and was abandoned for coastal settlements.

Pushing that story aside, it’s interesting to immediately switch to the article in the today’s Telegraph titled US cities may have to be bulldozed in order to survive.

The government is looking at expanding a pioneering scheme in Flint, one of the poorest US cities, which involves razing entire districts and returning the land to nature.

Appearing on that shortlist is Detroit, which the New York weekly Outlook described in 1929 as “The most modern city in the world, the city of tomorrow.” This wasn’t sensationalism, at very least Detroit was widely perceived this way.

Detroit is Angkor, and this makes me think: It’s astounding that after 500 years of similar cases our collective consciousness and sophistication doesn’t prevent us from similar short-sighted and sometimes irresponsible development of urban areas! It should be instinctual by now, like Don’t touch the pan! It’s hot!

Einstein’s definition of insanity was doing something twice and expecting a different result.

Maybe it’s time to move New Orleans to higher ground?

lushvuitton:


chris-o:

iPhone Case.
(via Andy Chiu).

nice original playstation!!! this is awesome

lushvuitton:

chris-o:

iPhone Case.

(via Andy Chiu).

nice original playstation!!! this is awesome

why is percy weasley such a douche?

If he doesn’t get his act together he will be my least favorite weasley. I haven’t even met Bill and Charlie and I think they are wayyyyyyyy cooler. I think the prefects has gotten to his head.

lickystickypickyme:
A child is held up by his father during the opening ceremony of the sixth Annual International Cine Fest Petrobas Brazil at Summer Stage in Central Park in New York CityPicture: AP

lickystickypickyme:

A child is held up by his father during the opening ceremony of the sixth Annual International Cine Fest Petrobas Brazil at Summer Stage in Central Park in New York City
Picture: AP

liz:

wtfdude:

Couldn’t be more hip, yet it’s still so lovely.
via colesmcgee

want.

liz:

wtfdude:

Couldn’t be more hip, yet it’s still so lovely.

via colesmcgee

want.

ostensiblyshingles:

Lacking disgusting or gruesome bodily events completely corresponds with lack of updates.

Believe me, I am trying.

I haven’t seen you in years, and all I ask is for you to update, but you fail at that. Sometimes I wonder if I’m asking for too much. I’m very disappointed.