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#cool – @colinthrobinson on Tumblr
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formerly @stedestiel

@colinthrobinson / colinthrobinson.tumblr.com

Rhyan. 25. Bisexual. Autistic. He/Him or They/Them. SPN, OFMD, WWDITS & other fandom nonsense. Usually NSFW so 18+ ONLY! shitposting and hornyposting so follow at your own discretion. Garth-Coded Colin-Coded Laszlo & Metatron Girl. Older urls include @all-hail-the-prophet-chuck and @gncdestiel. AO3 & Fansong SoundCloud - MegaChoirQueer; Simblr - @MightyPistachio; Original Music Soundcloud - Bellamy Blue. Backup/Post-Limit account is @fatherauthorgod. Icon by @emeraldcas
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mapsontheweb

Guide to Figuring out the Age of an Undated World Map.

No but take the time to actually read it because I lost like 15 minutes.

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dare-to-dm

I have a friend who is really good at this type of thing.  He once found an old globe at a garage sale and he was able to pin the date of it’s making down to like a 6 month window, because it only would’ve been correct during a specific point in WWII.  

I was mad impressed, because I have no mind for geography.  I can barely remember my own state’s capitol.

My brother and I found an old celestial globe at an estate sale and bought it because we could tell it was made prior to 1924 because the Andromeda Galaxy was labeled “Andromeda nebula”

Source: xkcd.com
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.

@space-australians Feels like this would kinda fit your blog, specially for writers who want to make up weird human space shenanigans involving a ship and alien crew and what not.  Maybe someone can write about how a person fixed a specific part in the dumbest way possible using the right words XD

Guys, NASA is cool.

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emperorsfoot

If you scroll to the bottom of the page, they have a whole list of articles and pages to help sci-fi writers. NASA is the best! 

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In the remote Arctic almost 30 years ago, a group of Inuit middle school students and their teacher invented the Western Hemisphere’s first new number system in more than a century. The “Kaktovik numerals,” named after the Alaskan village where they were created, looked utterly different from decimal system numerals and functioned differently, too. But they were uniquely suited for quick, visual arithmetic using the traditional Inuit oral counting system, and they swiftly spread throughout the region. Now, with support from Silicon Valley, they will soon be available on smartphones and computers—creating a bridge for the Kaktovik numerals to cross into the digital realm.
Today’s numerical world is dominated by the Hindu-Arabic decimal system. This system, adopted by almost every society, is what many people think of as “numbers”—values expressed in a written form using the digits 0 through 9. But meaningful alternatives exist, and they are as varied as the cultures they belong to.
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basileater

this is so cool

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seventy5th

Absolutely love it

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