Head out somewhere dark and enjoy the show! đź“·:Â Casey Horner/Unsplash/ScienceAlert https://ift.tt/2vxGpA7
I answered 11 of 12 questions correctly!  What’s your score?Â
What does “URL” stand for? What was the first widely popular graphical Web browser? Which university was the first on Facebook?
Test your knowledge of technology and the web by taking our short 12-question quiz. When you finish, you will be able to compare your “Web IQ” with the average online American based on the results of our nationally representative survey of 1,066 adult internet users.Â
Quiet people have the loudest minds.
Stephen Hawking (via quotemadness)
Travel can make you a poet. Travel can be spiritual. You meet people on the road you’d never met otherwise. Travelling rearranges your cultural furniture, challenging truths you assumed were self-evident and God-given. By traveling, you learn not only about the people and places you visit–you learn about yourself.
Rick Steves (via fatfashfem)
Plotting our next adventure.
Keep in mind, “Likes” are not votes.
NowThis made a bold statement earlier this year when the video publisher shut down its desktop homepage to focus on social media distribution. While the publisher still maintains a mobile website and an app, it distributes its content mainly on Facebook, Google+, Twitter, Instagram, Tumblr, and Snapchat, among others. “What we drive home is the concept of producing platform appropriate content and that means that it’s custom and built for that platform specifically,” said Athan Stephanopoulos, svp strategy and partnerships. We talked to him about what a successful story looks like across platforms.
Always get up and keep moving forward… It may be slow but it is still progress.
Diana Morrow (via deeplifequotes)
Focus on PROGRESS, not perfection.
The Museum’s Apatosaurus, collected in the late 1890s, was the first sauropod dinosaur ever mounted anywhere. Museum preparators labored over the specimen for years before it finally went on view in 1905. These towering dinosaurs (the Museum’s specimen is 86 feet in length) are among the biggest terrestrial animals in the history of the Earth, and could weigh up to 20 tons. Apatosaurus was a herbivore, and likely ate up to 880 pounds of food per day.Â
Technology, travel, and other things that inspire me.
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