prostheticknowledge:

Bronson Caves by Brice Bischoff

Experimental long-exposure photography in natural cinematic location:

Notes: A performance executed after sunset. Since early cinema, the Bronson Caves have been used as a film location, mainly appearing in science fiction and western movies.

Complete collection can be seen here

Pretty, cool.

awelliott:

Funny, but also smart and serious talk by Cory Doctorow on copyright and internet policy from 28c3. “Sopa [is] breaking the internet on this fundamental level in the name of preserving top 40 music, reality TV shows & Ashton Kutcher movies.”

(via emergentfutures)

prostheticknowledge:

Rare, last look inside space shuttle Atlantis

Photo gallery from collectSPACE looks around the grounded Atlantis space shuttle.

Full collection of photographs can be seen here

Even with all those lights and buttons, I’d still manage to press the one self destruct button.

Sometimes I’m terrified of my heart; of its constant hunger for whatever it is it wants. The way it stops and starts.
Edgar Allan Poe (via jarrodis)

(Source: each-beat, via jarrodis)

jarrodis:

GIVE ME MONEY

It’s too bad that anyone I know doesn’t have enough to give me.

jarrodis:

GIVE ME MONEY

It’s too bad that anyone I know doesn’t have enough to give me.

jarrodis:

casiotone for the painfully alone (by image noise for the painfully alone)

jarrodis:

casiotone for the painfully alone (by image noise for the painfully alone)

(via jarrodis)

BPS Research Digest: Why we're better at predicting other people's behaviour than our own

Psychologists have identified an important reason why our insight into our own psyches is so poor. Emily Balcetis and David Dunning found that when predicting our own behaviour, we fail to take the influence of the situation into account. By contrast, when predicting the behaviour of others, we correctly factor in the influence of the circumstances. This means that we’re instinctually good social psychologists but at the same time we’re poor self-psychologists.

(Source: futuramb, via emergentfutures)

Simplicity
has more advantages
than complexity simply
because there is less to fuck up.