Chirping Vkki
I'm the one who spill the beans... | CS Engineering #VIT | Speculator | NOC | Astronomy | Sci-Fi | Techie | Explorer | #Gamer | Bird Lover...
  • Ask Vkki
  • Submit
  • Twitter
  • Archive
  • Random
  • RSS
6431

Posted on Sunday.

Reblog
mattsjustaroundthecorner:

When it comes knocking, never refuse the sun to walk through your door.Let the light in. 
4010

Posted on Sunday.

Reblog
ripsher:

As part of a talk yesterday, I used one of my photos from Singapore to help demonstrate the problem with Feature Creep. These are air conditioning units on an ice cream factory.  “Feature creep, creeping featurism or featuritis is the ongoing expansion or addition of new features in a product, such as in computer software. Extra features go beyond the basic function of the product and so can result in over-complication rather than simple design.” (source: Wikipedia.com)
14

Posted on Sunday.

Reblog
alexanderpf:

This Is The World’s First Entirely 3D-Printed Gun (Photos) - Forbes)
via drwh0
25

Posted on Sunday.

Reblog
earthphotography:

Awesome photos (witouth Photoshop) Check it out! and Follow my blog for more:)
24377

Posted on Sunday.

Reblog
sscars:

☀ i follow everyone back until i reach my goal ☀ message me if i didint followed you ☼
210

Posted on Friday.

Reblog
futurist-foresight:

More exoplanets found in a Goldilocks zone (Habitable zone), which is a region around a star wherein a planet can maintain sufficient atmospheric pressure to maintain water in a liquid state on its surface.
wildcat2030:

The search for a far-off twin of Earth has turned up two of the most intriguing candidates yet. Scientists say these new worlds are the right size and distance from their parent star, so that you might expect to find liquid water on their surface. It is impossible to know for sure. Being 1,200 light-years away, they are beyond detailed inspection by current telescope technology. But researchers tell Science magazine, they are an exciting discovery. “They are the best candidates found to date for habitable planets,” stated Bill Borucki, who leads the team working on the US space agency Nasa’s orbiting Kepler telescope. The prolific observatory has so far confirmed the existence of more than 100 new worlds beyond our Solar System since its launch in 2009. The two now being highlighted were actually found in a group of five planets circling a star that is slightly smaller, cooler and older than our own Sun. Called Kepler-62, this star is located in the Constellation Lyra. (via BBC News - Kepler telescope spies ‘most Earth-like’ worlds to date)
1063

Posted on Friday.

Reblog
54195

Posted on Tuesday.

Reblog
375719

Posted on Tuesday.

Reblog
834

Posted on Tuesday.

Reblog
crucium:


Puesta de Sau (by Ibai Acevedo)