Me too, buddy. Me too.
This is a man who knows how to gling. He is glinging. Yesterday, he _____.
Me too, buddy. Me too.
Thank u very hepful
Who is that
Welcome!
Honestly, never heard of this before. Gonna try this for brainstorming. I think this might work well for this specific book idea since I have a bunch of plot beats I would like to hit but not a very strong opinion about what order to hit them in.
Looks like Dwarf Fortress
If you dunk your phone in water the post will teleport away
Technically the concept of a planet is a social construct. Scientists have been scurrying around redefining the definition of a planet to exclude asteroids ever since they discovered them. Why can’t they just say that the Earth is a wet asteroid and be done with it?
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLW8fnbhC7olnxP0sPD4IMYUOnwwSWjYtq&si=ki4x2HL4HPvADnsa
This is the series in question. I think it’s obvious why little kids like it
Gorb Gundelbury lookin ass
Thats a very cute giant rat
deleted by creator
Tbh I am not a patreon member, this was shared to me by a mutual who got it from a mutual. So I thought this was normal
Well, now it’s officially out
I think they don’t federate by default
I think this would probably be the real reason
Tbh if my kid came up with something like that, I would not stop bragging about it to teachers and other people with a psych background
That is a very good point. My concern is that some of these bugs are pollinators, and spending god only knows how long circling that light is wasting time and energy they could be using to pollinate
I am assuming that somebody in their community saw the bugs going in fairly consistent circles, thought about what they were doing, and used common sense to decide that the bugs were trying to keep the light in one side of their body for some reason.
It does solve the problem of “why don’t insects all try to fly into the sun?” which the warmth-seeking hypothesis didn’t explain
The previous (barely tested) model was that they were actively trying to fly to the light. Previous research tested what qualities of the light caused the behavior, but there was very little research into what exactly was going on in their tiny bug brains that made them do that.
It’s always Christmas in your heart