1. frcas:

wings-0f-a-butterfly:

HUGE SWITCH BS SHIFTY KICKFLIP

shifty?

When you kick it towards backside then bring it back

    frcas:

    wings-0f-a-butterfly:

    HUGE SWITCH BS SHIFTY KICKFLIP

    shifty?

    When you kick it towards backside then bring it back

  2. Skateboarding, cycling everywhere on my new bike,

    a slim jim, chilling in the sun, adventures, bonfires, bbqs, cider, picnics, quarry > cleaning the kitchen for two hours > revision

  3. hiphopfightsback:

“Doom nominated for the best rolled L’sAnd they wondered how he dealt with stress so well”

    hiphopfightsback:

    “Doom nominated for the best rolled L’s
    And they wondered how he dealt with stress so well”

    (via hotchoffe)

  4. [Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

    futuregrooves:

    Teengirl Fantasy - Motif

  5. SIT! (8 mins 18 secs)

  6. thedailywhat:

This Is All Kinds of Wrong of the Day: Banksy’s famous Parachuting Rat, located on a wall in the Melbourne, Australia suburb of Prahran, has been destroyed by builders doing drilling work for a café.
Local business owners were upset by the needless demolition of the piece by workers who apparently didn’t realize what they were destroying. The wall did contain other graffiti, but area taggers had avoided painting over the Banksy.
“Had it been 20cm higher or 20cm to the side this would never have happened,” neighboring business owner Jacqui Vidal told the Stonnington Leader, “This should have been avoided. It’s not a big piece, but it is one of the few remaining Banksys in Melbourne.”
The Rat was destroyed once before by cleaners who painted over it during a 2010 anti-graffiti campaign, but was later restored.
There is some good news, though: a possible new Banksy piece — showing an Asian boy hunched over a sewing machine and a Union flag — has appeared on the wall of a Poundland shop in London. It has yet to be confirmed as authentic on the artist’s website.
[heraldsun.]

Street art is temporary, that’s why it’s on the street. If you try and preserve every good piece we’ll run out of space

    thedailywhat:

    This Is All Kinds of Wrong of the Day: Banksy’s famous Parachuting Rat, located on a wall in the Melbourne, Australia suburb of Prahran, has been destroyed by builders doing drilling work for a café.

    Local business owners were upset by the needless demolition of the piece by workers who apparently didn’t realize what they were destroying. The wall did contain other graffiti, but area taggers had avoided painting over the Banksy.

    “Had it been 20cm higher or 20cm to the side this would never have happened,” neighboring business owner Jacqui Vidal told the Stonnington Leader, “This should have been avoided. It’s not a big piece, but it is one of the few remaining Banksys in Melbourne.”

    The Rat was destroyed once before by cleaners who painted over it during a 2010 anti-graffiti campaign, but was later restored.

    There is some good news, though: a possible new Banksy piece — showing an Asian boy hunched over a sewing machine and a Union flag — has appeared on the wall of a Poundland shop in London. It has yet to be confirmed as authentic on the artist’s website.

    [heraldsun.]

    Street art is temporary, that’s why it’s on the street. If you try and preserve every good piece we’ll run out of space

    (via hotchoffe)

  7. skateb0arding:

Wish this was my house.

    skateb0arding:

    Wish this was my house.

  8. jtotheizzoe:

Why Nikola Tesla was the greatest geek who ever lived
Word. Check out the whole comic at the link. So great. If you don’t know, now you know.
Previously: How Faust influenced Tesla. 
(via The Oatmeal)

    jtotheizzoe:

    Why Nikola Tesla was the greatest geek who ever lived

    Word. Check out the whole comic at the link. So great. If you don’t know, now you know.

    Previously: How Faust influenced Tesla

    (via The Oatmeal)

    (via ilivewithidiots)

  9. brain-food:

    Cult video games for natural conservation by Alexander Nedelev

  10. scientificillustration:

infinity-imagined:

This illustration shows a synapse.  When an action potential arrives at a synapse, the positive charge causes the opening of voltage gated calcium channels.  Calcium pours into the synaptic button and binds to several proteins, changing their shape.  The activated proteins dynamically rearrange the blue cytoskeleton to transport green vesicles filled with yellow neurotransmitters to the synaptic cleft, which is filled with red adhesion proteins.  Calcium-activated SNARE proteins bind to both the vesicle and the synaptic membrane, causing the vesicle to fuse with the membrane, turning it inside out and spilling neurotransmitters into the synaptic cleft.  The neurotransmitters then bind to proteins on the receiving cell.  There are several types of yellow-green receptor proteins.  Sodium (Na+) channels (excitatory) respond the the neurotransmitter Glutamate.  Chloride (Cl-) channels (inhibitory) respond to the neurotransmitter GABA.  Dopamine, Serotonin, and Opioids bind to G-Protein Coupled Receptors (GPCRs) which cause complicated phosphorylation cascades that change the metabolism of the cell.

Artwork by David S. Goodsell 

This makes me moist

    scientificillustration:

    infinity-imagined:

    This illustration shows a synapse.  When an action potential arrives at a synapse, the positive charge causes the opening of voltage gated calcium channels.  Calcium pours into the synaptic button and binds to several proteins, changing their shape.  The activated proteins dynamically rearrange the blue cytoskeleton to transport green vesicles filled with yellow neurotransmitters to the synaptic cleft, which is filled with red adhesion proteins.  Calcium-activated SNARE proteins bind to both the vesicle and the synaptic membrane, causing the vesicle to fuse with the membrane, turning it inside out and spilling neurotransmitters into the synaptic cleft.  The neurotransmitters then bind to proteins on the receiving cell.  There are several types of yellow-green receptor proteins.  Sodium (Na+) channels (excitatory) respond the the neurotransmitter Glutamate.  Chloride (Cl-) channels (inhibitory) respond to the neurotransmitter GABA.  Dopamine, Serotonin, and Opioids bind to G-Protein Coupled Receptors (GPCRs) which cause complicated phosphorylation cascades that change the metabolism of the cell.

    Artwork by David S. Goodsell 

    This makes me moist

  11. skatetochurch:

grubbs.

Best burgers in Btown

    skatetochurch:

    grubbs.

    Best burgers in Btown

  12. And now for something completely different.