Nobody I had ever heard of.
Gunn ,'Not Fade Away'
Natter 57 Varieties
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
BOY-SHORT, peroxide-blond heads of hair are appearing all over fashionable London
And just as I stopped wearing it...but I'll be back soon enough.
Happy Birthday, Katie!
Kat, I'm soooo tempted to order that kimono top for Liv! I think she can probably still safely fit in 18-24 months.
Cash, it's adorable! As is this one which is also minkee lined: [link] I want one ME SIZED!
I have this temptation to go to Etsy and shop blouses. I'm wearing my latest Etsy purchase--wombat earrings. Which don't look anything like wombats. But they're very pretty, and I think I need prettier blouses.
Someone please stop me. I'm a hair away from being one of those women that lazily shops expensive lingerie on Melrose. Except I don't have a sugar daddy funding me.
Go etsy! pick etsy!
Or, you know, go buy a tea and relax with a book instead?
and see I was gonna come in and say, while etsy is great - take a step back from the consumption.
This is kind of awesome (even if the headline is wrong - it's the 'far side' of the moon, not the 'dark side'): MIT, NASA to probe universe from dark side of the Moon
NASA has selected a proposal by an MIT-led team to develop plans for an array of radio telescopes on the far side of the moon that would probe the earliest formation of the basic structures of the universe. The agency announced the selection and 18 others related to future observatories on Friday, Feb.15.
The new MIT telescopes would explore one of the greatest unknown realms of astronomy, the so-called "Dark Ages" near the beginning of the universe when stars, star clusters and galaxies first came into existence. This period of roughly a billion years, beginning shortly after the Big Bang, closely followed the time when cosmic background radiation, which has been mapped using satellites, filled all of space. Learning about this unobserved era is considered essential to filling in our understanding of how the earliest structures in the universe came into being.
The Lunar Array for Radio Cosmology (LARC) project is headed by Jacqueline Hewitt, a professor of physics and director of MIT's Kavli Institute for Astrophysics and Space Science. LARC includes nine other MIT scientists as well as several from other institutions. It is planned as a huge array of hundreds of telescope modules designed to pick up very-low-frequency radio emissions. The array will cover an area of up to two square kilometers; the modules would be moved into place on the lunar surface by automated vehicles.
Observations of the cosmic Dark Ages are impossible to make from Earth, Hewitt explains, because of two major sources of interference that obscure these faint low-frequency radio emissions. One is the Earth's ionosphere, a high-altitude layer of electrically charged gas. The other is all of Earth's radio and television transmissions, which produce background interference everywhere on the Earth's surface.
The only place that is totally shielded from both kinds of interference is the far side of the moon, which always faces away from the Earth and therefore is never exposed to terrestrial radio transmissions.
If I buy I'm supporting artisans. It's all so very pretty. I need pretty.
Jesse, Jesse, you're the lady
You can do it 'cuz you're not shady!!!
Hee! And yes, it was fine. Nobody really cared about the thing I was getting myself all psyched up for.