Go Houston Rockets!đ Excited and honored to throw the first shot at tonightâs game. Hmmm so, do you think I made the shot?
#TargetAquired
Celebrating Yahooâs 21st birthday with our founder, David Filo and CEO Marissa Mayer! Check out the photo in 3D â a sneak peek at our latest in ad innovations that incorporate Flickr technology for virtual reality.
Thank you to the hundreds of millions of people who watched Vines, and to the inspiring community of creators and editors. Special shouts to everyone in the Year 4 Playlist!
The Vine Camera is now available for iOS and Android! Weâre excited to see what you continue to make. Create short looping videos with the classic Vine shooting and editing features and post them to Twitter (where they will also loop!)
Today, we made an update to the website: the Vine Archive is a time capsule of all posts made to vine.co from 2013â2017. Jump into a classic meme, have a laugh, or look up a profile.
Looking for more info on these announcements? Visit the FAQ.
â Team Vine & Twitter
Win a tech device at http://bit.do/rewarding
Discover, Surface Studio @MicrosoftStore https://www.microsoftstore.com/store/msusa/en_US/pdp/productID.5074015900
More at: http://bit.ly/skrjifen (if your here for the iPhone/Pixel đ±,  youâll find it in giveaways [tap here])Â
âAntikythera Mechanismâ (via This Ancient Greek Astronomy Computer May Be 1,000 Years Ahead Of Its Time)
(via - âstemâ Magazine on Flipboard) PHOTO: sciencealert.comÂ
Our pale blue dot, planet Earth, is seen in this video captured by NASA astronaut Jack Fischer from his unique vantage point on the International Space Station. From 250 miles above our home planet, this time-lapse imagery takes us over the Pacific Oceanâs moon glint and above the night lights of San Francisco, CA. The thin hue of our atmosphere is visible surrounding our planet with a majestic white layer of clouds sporadically seen underneath.
The International Space Station is currently home to 6 people who are living and working in microgravity. As it orbits our planet at 17,500 miles per hour, the crew onboard is conducting important research that benefits life here on Earth.
Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com