YOONGI TALKED FRENCH AND SAID "C'EST PARTI" (LET'S GO) INSTEAD OF HIS USUAL "ARE YOU READY" AND HE GOT SO SHY LOOK AT HIM ♡
🐱: exactement! (exactly)
me: [losing it]
SUGA holding a telephone receiver to the ear of a statue. A phone exists for conversation, yet a statue can never listen or respond. It's communication without connection.
If the statue represents a fixed image or persona, then the scene suggests that no matter how much you try to explain yourself, you're still speaking to an unchanging perception. The real person keeps talking, but the image everyone knows never answers back.
Why do we still buy stadium tickets without ever seeing what the view from the seat actually looks like? ☠️
So I prototyped an idea.
A 3D seat view experience for a football stadium built with Fable 5 + @threejs, where you can preview exactly what you'll see from your seat before buying.
The entire 3D experience was working after the first prompt, and the whole prototype came together in just five prompts.
This is the kind of 3D experience I'd love to see more of, tbh. Feels so good.
Right now, buying a ticket gives you almost no sense of what the experience will actually feel like. We're still relying on static seat maps, charts, and boring UI layouts, when interactive 3D experiences could make that decision so much easier.
If you think, 3D development has the potential to create genuinely useful experiences. This feels like the direction we should be heading. 3D is the future.
I can already imagine this for cinemas, cricket stadiums, Wimbledon, concerts, and so many other venues.
I'm planning to take this further. What should I build next? More stadium features, or should I try another venue? Let me know :D
Code: https://t.co/6siJHap4fb
Live: https://t.co/n5eZfpf7Jw
When air quality levels are high, pets need protection too. Here's what to know. 🐾
WHEN AIR QUALITY IS UNHEALTHY FOR SENSITIVE GROUPS (AQI 101 to 150): Keep senior pets, flat-faced breeds, animals with heart or respiratory disease, very young animals, and birds indoors with windows closed. Very brief outdoor breaks only. Cancel vigorous outdoor exercise like running, fetch, and long walks.
WHEN AIR QUALITY IS UNHEALTHY (AQI 151+): Keep all pets indoors as much as possible, with outdoor time limited to short bathroom breaks. Move outdoor animals to the least smoky enclosed space available, away from chemicals and vehicles. No outdoor exercise. If smoke odor is strong indoors, treat it as high risk even if AQI data lag.
INDOORS: Keep windows and doors closed and run AC on recirculate if available. Skip smoking, candles, vacuuming, frying, and woodstoves. Use a HEPA air cleaner in your pet's main room if you can. Keep fresh water available and avoid outdoor bowls that collect ash. After outdoor time, wipe coats, faces, and paws with a damp cloth. Birds are especially susceptible, so keep them in the cleanest room available.
WHAT NOT TO DO: Never put an N95 or similar mask on a pet. It can obstruct breathing and the straps pose choking hazards. Don't leave pets outside because they're "used to it." Don't let pets drink from puddles or eat ash or debris.
WARNING SIGNS: Coughing, wheezing, rapid or labored breathing, open-mouth breathing (especially in cats), eye or nasal irritation, excessive drooling, lethargy, or reduced appetite. If you see breathing difficulty, persistent coughing, or a change in alertness, move your pet to the cleanest, coolest indoor air, stop all activity, and contact a veterinarian or emergency vet hospital right away.
BE READY: Build pets into your evacuation plan and pre-identify pet-friendly shelters, friends, or hotels. Pack a pet go-kit with a carrier or leash, several days of food and water, medications, bowls, familiar bedding, waste bags or litter, vet records, and photos. Keep ID tags and microchips current. If sheltering in place, designate one clean-air room where people and pets stay together, prioritizing pets at higher medical risk.
Jo Nagai was raising swallowtail butterflies at his home in Kobe, Japan, when he noticed something odd. The ones he had looked after as caterpillars seemed to recognize him. Wild butterflies fled. His didn't.
He was in second grade. He wrote a four-page letter to Dr. Martha Weiss, an entomologist at Georgetown University who had studied whether moths could retain memories through metamorphosis. He asked if she could help him design a version of her experiment for butterflies.
She said yes.
Using a muscle therapy device, Jo trained caterpillars to associate the scent of lavender with a mild vibration. When the caterpillars became butterflies, 70 per cent of them still avoided the lavender. Their brains had been completely rebuilt during metamorphosis. The memory survived anyway.
Then he bred them.
The offspring, which had never been trained, also avoided lavender. So did their grandchildren. Without ever experiencing the vibration, two generations of butterflies inherited an aversion to a scent their grandmother had been taught to fear.
Jo documented it all in a 33-page research paper and presented his findings at the International Congress of Entomology in Kobe in 2024. He was 10.
A second grader wrote a letter to a Georgetown professor, and together they found evidence that butterflies can pass memories down through generations.
-Wilderness Whisper
⚠️🚨 FORGET EVERY WILDFIRE YOU’VE EVER SEEN.
✈️This looks like a massive volcano eruption, but it is actually the sky over Canada right now. Pilot Scott Hatton captured this apocalyptic view from his cockpit over Thunder Bay, Ontario.
These aren't just smoke clouds—the fires have literally created their own terrifying weather systems. This is no longer a regional crisis; it is a continental disaster. Let’s break down the sheer scale of this anomaly...
#CanadaWildfires #ExtremeWeather #Pyrocumulonimbus #canada #sky #Ontario
when sudden realisation hits that youth is never coming back but bts will always bring it through their new eras to keep the nostalgia alive to remind us youth is in the moments we live.
Jude Bellingham on Messi after the match:
“I have to say, at 39 or 40 years old, to still be playing at this level is simply exceptional.
People watch him on television and think they understand how good he is, but when you’re actually on the pitch against him, it’s completely different.
He’s so quick over the first few yards. You think you’ve got him, then he changes direction, glides away and suddenly he’s gone. It’s almost impossible to get close enough to make a clean challenge.
The way he controls the ball is honestly alien. It feels like it’s glued to his foot. Every touch has a purpose, every movement creates space and he always seems one step ahead of everyone else.
I’ve never seen a player at that age move with so much intelligence and composure. Most players slow down, but Messi has found another way to dominate games. He doesn’t waste energy—he controls the tempo.
If I respected Messi before tonight, I respect him even more now. Sharing the pitch with him only makes you appreciate how special he really is.
He’s one of those players you study growing up, and then when you finally play against him, you realise why people call him one of the greatest of all time. He’s an exceptional footballer, and I feel privileged to have experienced that firsthand.”