
Images

Read moreMap of the Week: Hill Mapper San Francisco
Hill Mapper San Francisco uses the Elevation API to show how steep streets are in San Francisco.

Read moreIf this isn’t the best photo on the internet today then I don’t know what is.
Thank fuck there’s Geena Davis.

Brighton, England. UK. 2008
if you’re reading that you should go read this http://www.nme.com/news/queens-of-the-stone-age/21302
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In this rare image taken on July 19, 2013, the wide-angle camera on NASA’s Cassini spacecraft has captured Saturn’s rings and our planet Earth and its moon in the same frame. It is only one footprint in a mosaic of 33 footprints covering the entire Saturn ring system (including Saturn itself). At each footprint, images were taken in different spectral filters for a total of 323 images: some were taken for scientific purposes and some to produce a natural color mosaic. This is the only wide-angle footprint that has the Earth-moon system in it.
The dark side of Saturn, its bright limb, the main rings, the F ring, and the G and E rings are clearly seen; the limb of Saturn and the F ring are overexposed. The “breaks" in the brightness of Saturn’s limb are due to the shadows of the rings on the globe of Saturn, preventing sunlight from shining through the atmosphere in those regions. The E and G rings have been brightened for better visibility.
Earth, which is 898 million miles (1.44 billion kilometers) away in this image, appears as a blue dot at center right; the moon can be seen as a fainter protrusion off its right side. An arrow indicates their location in the annotated version. (The two are clearly seen as separate objects in the accompanying narrow angle frame: PIA14949.) The other bright dots nearby are stars.
This is only the third time ever that Earth has been imaged from the outer solar system. The acquisition of this image, along with the accompanying composite narrow- and wide-angle image of Earth and the moon and the full mosaic from which both are taken, marked the first time that inhabitants of Earth knew in advance that their planet was being imaged. That opportunity allowed people around the world to join together in social events to celebrate the occasion.
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Uranus and its five major moons are depicted in this montage of images acquired by the Voyager 2 spacecraft.
The moons, from largest to smallest as they appear here, are Ariel, Miranda, Titania, Oberon and Umbriel.
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You’ve just spent five weeks in limbo, stateless, living in the interzone of an airport terminal.
Your rival for Technomad Citizen#1 was under “house arrest” in the country estate of a sympathetic aristocrat.
Fleeing the might of the Empire, he’s now residing in the diplomatic safe zone of a South American embassy, from which he conspired to break you out of Hong Kong with the power of the network and the voodoo magic of temporary papers he conjured up with his host, hacking Authority.
You’ve been granted a solar year of asylum in the bounds of the Russian Federation, formerly trading as the Evil Empire ™. Anna Chapman has already proposed to you. You can regroup at an undisclosed location of your choice. You literally left paradise when you began this journey. You are a massive geek, and are well aware that it would be an easier and less perilous to take a rocket to the ISS, than travel anywhere else on Earth.
Maybe you make this your temporary base of Bond Villain operations.
(You definitely aren’t still part of the Company. This isn’t a massive psyops action.)
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