what on earth is high school choir like
okay so i went to a unit-wide choir concert i was part of tonight which is every year. today, one of the high schoolers had a love song harmonizing about mashed potatoes and the other group afterward was a very energetic acapella arrangement of william tell overture complete with a LOT of movement on the bleachers
the song is actually sung by little sisyphus
mr jashs just chilling
no wonder i've been seeing this for an entire day i thought i was just losing my marbles 😭
Alias
The Heart Ascendant
ooooooooo pretty :o
Requested by: Anon
💫 - ⭐️🌟⭐️ - ⭐️🌟⭐️ - ⭐️🌟⭐️ - 💫
You own a pendant that is supposed to softly glow when danger is nearby. One night as you are sleeping, the pendant brightens up the entire room.
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
[THAT IS QUITE A LOT OF YOU... YOUR NAMES ARE A NIGHTMARE TO KEEP TRACK OF.]
[I WOULD BE REMISS TO EXCLUDE THOSE OF YOU WITH ONLY MINOR MISTAKES. ENJOY YOUR PARTICIPATION TROPHIES.]
ASH from @theapollospectrohelioscopic's AU "Powder's Precarious Pain Précis"! (that punctuation there is weird but i put the exclamation mark to separate it from the actual name. sorry fellow grammar people) ASH is the AU's Mind equivalent. I started doodling this a few days ago. I don't have the other characters because they don't have a description yet. Except for Angel. Anyways, the style is based off ouji, which i thought fit the formal tone I thought would fit. The shading and anatomy and everything i did was weird. Based the sword (i cannot draw weapons too well unfortunately, wish i could have done better and made it specifically a rapier) off one ask someone else did on preferred weapons. Still, hopefully it's okay to y'all? Lux's AU can be found at @ask-pppp.
There’s a scientific journal called “Get me off Your Fucking Mailing List”.
In 2005, computer scientists David Mazières and Eddie Kohler created this highly profane ten-page paper as a joke, to send in replying to unwanted conference invitations. It literally just contains that seven-word phrase over and over, along with a nice flow chart and scatter-plot graph.
An Australian computer scientist named Peter Vamplew sent it to the International Journal of Advanced Computer Technology in response to spam from the journal. Apparently, he thought the editors might simply open and read it.
Instead, they automatically accepted the paper — with an anonymous reviewer rating it as “excellent” — and requested a fee of $150. While this incident is pretty hilarious, it’s a sign of a bigger problem in science publishing. This journal is one of many online-only, for-profit operations that take advantage of inexperienced researchers under pressure to publish their work in any outlet that seems superficially legitimate.
"You just gotta trust the process", says man working with no plan, no clear idea of what the ultimate outcome should look like, and even less of a clue about whether this is the way to achieve it.