arpeggia:

Looking Into The Past - Washington, DC

by Jason E. Powell

This is phenomenal if legit.

(via wanderer-of-thoughts)

 - 03 - Underworld - Dungeon Theme
[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

8-bit-invader:

Game: The legend of Zelda
Title: Underworld - Dungeon Theme
Platform: Nes
Year: 1988

(via chas0000)

82 plays
She was so perfect.

She was so perfect.

Reblog if you are nobodys favorite blog.

(via rockellephoto)



Write love letters to each other and place into a box along with a bottle of wine.nail it shut at the wedding. When you have your first fight, open it up, pour the wine, go to separate corners, read the love letter & remember what it’s all about….

Write love letters to each other and place into a box along with a bottle of wine.nail it shut at the wedding. When you have your first fight, open it up, pour the wine, go to separate corners, read the love letter & remember what it’s all about….

(via wanderer-of-thoughts)

pretendy:

Some perspective
Light travels at a speed of 299,792,458 metres per second exactly. No matter how fast you, or the light source is traveling, go try measuring it and you’ll find that this is exactly the case.
At this speed, it takes light:
18 milliseconds to travel between London and New York
0.13 seconds to circumnavigate the equator of the Earth
1.4 seconds to travel to us from the Moon
8.4 minutes to travel from the Sun
4.15 hours to travel from the Sun to Neptune, the most remote planet in the Solar System
17 hours to travel to the current location of Voyager 1, the farthest man made object from Earth
~0.8 years to travel from us to the Oort Cloud, a hypothesised spherical cloud of icy comets centered around the Sun, which marks the boundary of the solar system
4.2 years to travel to us from Proxima Centauri, the nearest star to Sun.
1,100 years to travel to us from the centre of our own galaxy, the Milky Way
100,000 years to travel across the whole disc of the galaxy itself
2.5 million years to travel to us from the Andromeda galaxy, our nearest neighbour
110 million years to travel across the Virgo Supercluster, our small, local little corner of the universe
After this it stops making sense to say “a distance x”, as the expansion of the universe warps our perception of distance on these immense timescales. Therefore, when you hear radio static, 1% of that is said not to originate from a place, but rather a time, roughly 13.5 billion years ago - the cosmic microwave background from the time of recombination at the dawn of the universe.
TL;DR: The universe is big.
(Photo: pretendy)

pretendy:

Some perspective

Light travels at a speed of 299,792,458 metres per second exactly. No matter how fast you, or the light source is traveling, go try measuring it and you’ll find that this is exactly the case.

At this speed, it takes light:

  • 18 milliseconds to travel between London and New York
  • 0.13 seconds to circumnavigate the equator of the Earth
  • 1.4 seconds to travel to us from the Moon
  • 8.4 minutes to travel from the Sun
  • 4.15 hours to travel from the Sun to Neptune, the most remote planet in the Solar System
  • 17 hours to travel to the current location of Voyager 1, the farthest man made object from Earth
  • ~0.8 years to travel from us to the Oort Cloud, a hypothesised spherical cloud of icy comets centered around the Sun, which marks the boundary of the solar system
  • 4.2 years to travel to us from Proxima Centauri, the nearest star to Sun.
  • 1,100 years to travel to us from the centre of our own galaxy, the Milky Way
  • 100,000 years to travel across the whole disc of the galaxy itself
  • 2.5 million years to travel to us from the Andromeda galaxy, our nearest neighbour
  • 110 million years to travel across the Virgo Supercluster, our small, local little corner of the universe

After this it stops making sense to say “a distance x”, as the expansion of the universe warps our perception of distance on these immense timescales. Therefore, when you hear radio static, 1% of that is said not to originate from a place, but rather a time, roughly 13.5 billion years ago - the cosmic microwave background from the time of recombination at the dawn of the universe.

TL;DR: The universe is big.

(Photo: pretendy)

(via wanderer-of-thoughts)

A place where I, n00bJesus, am here to soothe and say you. I am going to post things of unusual origin and context mostly.

I like....Cats. They are worth capitalizing, let-me-tell-you. I write music, so you'll see some of that stuff too.
Boogerbears.
haha

view archive



You gotta question?!? You in the right place, SON.

Submit