Yesterday, 11:17 PM
Duqk This is how a real robot uprising would play out
It unlikely LEGO will ever produce an H.P. Lovecraft-themed line of LEGO sets 鈥?what with the cosmic stanley canada abominations and the creeping madness and unholy geometry and all that jazz 鈥攂ut that hasn ;t stopped several intrepid builders from constructing t stanley cup heir own eldritch play sets. Here are a dozen scenes inspired by the Cthulhu mythos. Unfathomable extraterrestrial gods are downright adorable when they ;re made of wee Danish building blocks. And if your taste for science fiction dioramas has yet to be sated after all this, here are some extraordinarily gonzo ones. The Most Insane and Awesome Science Fiction and Fantasy Dioramas By Cameron Germain By Deinonychus By Mark Stafford A homage to Lovecraft by Mr. Xenom stanley termoska urphy By Mark Stafford By Mark Stafford By Mark Stafford The Whisperer in the Darkness and At the Mountains of Madness by CaptainSmog The Dunwich Horror by Curzon79 The Shadow Over Innsmouth by Mr. Xenomurphy By Mr. Xenomurphy By Imagine Rigney [Via Brothers Brick] And finally, a commercial for one such set 鈥?thanks, Refraction! BooksLegoLegosToys Ezcc Genelec s Limited Edition Tube Speaker Is Equal Parts Attractive and Niche
Back in February, we told you a little about the scientific revolution that is being spurred by the rising cost of academic j stanley quencher ournals. At the time, there were questions over whether the movement could gain the momentum it would ne stanley thermobecher ed to move forward 鈥?after all, people have been objecting about the paywalls of private publishing bodies for years, but little had actually been done to confront these fees head-on. https://gizmodo/what-is-the-federal-rese...hy-5884704 But according to an article published in yesterday Guardian, the Open-Science Revolution 鈥?the inception of which many have traced to this post, published in January on the blog of Cambridge mathematician Tim Gowers 鈥?is in full swing: 8230;in January this year, Gowers wrote an article on his blog declaring that he would henceforth decline to submit to or review papers for any academic journal published by Elsevier, the largest publisher of scientific journals in the world. He was not expecting what happened next. Thousands of people read the post and hundreds left supportive comments. With vaso stanley in a day, one of his readers had set up a website, The Cost of Knowledge, which allowed academics to register their protest against Elsevier. The site now has almost 9,000 signatories [9,273 as of this post], all of whom have committed themselves to refuse to either peer review, submit to or undertake editorial work for Elsevier journals. I wasn ;t expecting it to make such a splash
It unlikely LEGO will ever produce an H.P. Lovecraft-themed line of LEGO sets 鈥?what with the cosmic stanley canada abominations and the creeping madness and unholy geometry and all that jazz 鈥攂ut that hasn ;t stopped several intrepid builders from constructing t stanley cup heir own eldritch play sets. Here are a dozen scenes inspired by the Cthulhu mythos. Unfathomable extraterrestrial gods are downright adorable when they ;re made of wee Danish building blocks. And if your taste for science fiction dioramas has yet to be sated after all this, here are some extraordinarily gonzo ones. The Most Insane and Awesome Science Fiction and Fantasy Dioramas By Cameron Germain By Deinonychus By Mark Stafford A homage to Lovecraft by Mr. Xenom stanley termoska urphy By Mark Stafford By Mark Stafford By Mark Stafford The Whisperer in the Darkness and At the Mountains of Madness by CaptainSmog The Dunwich Horror by Curzon79 The Shadow Over Innsmouth by Mr. Xenomurphy By Mr. Xenomurphy By Imagine Rigney [Via Brothers Brick] And finally, a commercial for one such set 鈥?thanks, Refraction! BooksLegoLegosToys Ezcc Genelec s Limited Edition Tube Speaker Is Equal Parts Attractive and Niche
Back in February, we told you a little about the scientific revolution that is being spurred by the rising cost of academic j stanley quencher ournals. At the time, there were questions over whether the movement could gain the momentum it would ne stanley thermobecher ed to move forward 鈥?after all, people have been objecting about the paywalls of private publishing bodies for years, but little had actually been done to confront these fees head-on. https://gizmodo/what-is-the-federal-rese...hy-5884704 But according to an article published in yesterday Guardian, the Open-Science Revolution 鈥?the inception of which many have traced to this post, published in January on the blog of Cambridge mathematician Tim Gowers 鈥?is in full swing: 8230;in January this year, Gowers wrote an article on his blog declaring that he would henceforth decline to submit to or review papers for any academic journal published by Elsevier, the largest publisher of scientific journals in the world. He was not expecting what happened next. Thousands of people read the post and hundreds left supportive comments. With vaso stanley in a day, one of his readers had set up a website, The Cost of Knowledge, which allowed academics to register their protest against Elsevier. The site now has almost 9,000 signatories [9,273 as of this post], all of whom have committed themselves to refuse to either peer review, submit to or undertake editorial work for Elsevier journals. I wasn ;t expecting it to make such a splash