Memory shortages are having a huge impact on gaming right now — and Xbox CEO Asha Sharma believes it's its "biggest challenge and opportunity." 🤔
"How do you make affordable products during that time? That's what the next 100 days will be about."
https://t.co/8vPMTs1H2w
ESA/Webb Picture of the Month: A Stellar Nursery in Chaos! Deep behind the glowing veil of the famous Orion Nebula lies the Orion Molecular Cloud complex — a cosmic factory where stars are born. This stunning new Webb image zooms in on a small but incredibly active region called https://t.co/PCh5qIIvlO just 150 light-years of space, you can witness every single stage of star formation happening at once: Tiny, hidden stellar embryos still forming inside their dense cocoons
Protoplanetary discs swirling with the raw material for future planets
Newly minted pre-main sequence stars already flexing their power
These molecular clouds are far denser than the emptiness of normal interstellar space, giving gravity the upper hand to pull gas and dust together. As the youngest stars heat up, they release enormous energy in violent, high-speed jets of plasma blasting out from their poles These supersonic jets slam into the surrounding gas like cosmic wrecking balls, creating glowing shockwaves and bright, razor-sharp ridges of heated material. The result? A dramatic battlefield of light and turbulence.Can you spot the hidden protostars? Just follow the glowing jets back to their source — they act like fiery arrows pointing straight to the invisible babies stars powering this incredible scene.
Credit: ESA/Webb, NASA, CSA, T. Megeath, M. Zamani (ESA/Webb)
Acknowledgement: M. Özsaraç
Rainbow Warheadz indoors 🌈🍬
Sticky frosted candies with a good amount of color! Nice cauliflower structure with a bomb candy warheadz nose & rainbow runtz terps 🔥
A breathtaking, giant emission nebula in the constellation of Cygnus known as the North America Nebula.
(Credit: T.A. Rector (University of Alaska Anchorage) and NOIRLab/NSF/AURA)
The “Exposed Cranium” Nebula: A Cosmic Brain Drifting Through Space
NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope has just given us one of the strangest and most mind-bending images in the cosmos: PMR 1, a nebula that looks disturbingly like a human brain floating inside a glowing, transparent skull.This ethereal cloud is the dramatic death throes of a massive star. In its final stages, the star violently expelled layer after layer of gas and dust, sculpting this intricate, brain-like structure. Webb’s infrared eyes have sliced through the obscuring dust to reveal details never seen before — delicate filaments, complex textures, and haunting symmetry.A dark, prominent lane slices straight through the center, likely the shadow of powerful twin jets blasting outward from the dying star’s core. Encircling it are beautifully layered shells of gas, each one a record of different outbursts during the star’s violent final chapter.The star’s ultimate fate remains uncertain. If it’s below a critical mass, it will quietly fade into a white dwarf. If it’s heavy enough, it will end its life in a brilliant supernova, seeding the galaxy with new elements.Either way, the “Exposed Cranium” is one of the most hauntingly beautiful stellar corpses ever captured — a dying star literally showing us its mind.Absolutely mesmerizing.