Happy Monday! What motivates you?

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Second date, second twins assumption 👯👌 (at Normandale City Park)

Second date, second twins assumption 👯👌 (at Normandale City Park)

I love working with talented artists! Brand new website for www.heidisowa.com coming soon. I am fascinated with the costumes she created for this production.

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Altimeters aboard three satellites have measured changing sea surface heights accurate to within 1.6 inches for the last 23 years. The data indicates large areas of rising sea surface heights, with a few areas where sea level has stayed the same or gone down. Between North America & Europe, satellites recorded a slow migration of the Gulf Stream northward. The falling sea surface off California & Mexico is due to the Pacific decadal oscillation.

txchnologist:

Satellites Spy Nearly Quarter-Century of Sea Level Rise

These globes show a visualization of global sea level rise. The data used here, accurate to around 1.6 inches, comes from 23 years of direct NASA satellite measurement of changing ocean surface topography.

Josh Willis, the project scientist for JASON-3, NASA’s next mission to measure sea level rise from space, says what we see here is explainable by a simple fact. “As water heats up it takes up more room. This drives sea level rise,” he says in a recent video. “In addition, as glaciers and ice sheets are melted, extra water is added to the ocean–just like when you turn on your faucet in the bath tub.”

As the data shows, though, the simplicity of the drivers doesn’t mean the results around the planet are simple. Some parts of the ocean are rising faster than other areas, and a few regions are even seeing falling sea level heights. In the Eastern Pacific, for example, sea height dropped over the observation period due to a recurring phenomenon called the Pacific Decadal Oscillation. See the video below.

Keep reading

Employees at Amsterdam design studio Heldergroen won’t be putting in much overtime. Not in the office, at any rate.
That’s because every day at 6 p.m., their desks, tables and other work surfaces, with their computers attached, are hauled up to the...

Employees at Amsterdam design studio Heldergroen won’t be putting in much overtime. Not in the office, at any rate.

That’s because every day at 6 p.m., their desks, tables and other work surfaces, with their computers attached, are hauled up to the ceiling by steel cables normally used to move heavy props in theatrical productions. If you leave a half-eaten tuna sandwich on your desk, you’re out of luck.

Once the chairs and other workplace paraphernalia are cleared away, the space is free for evening and weekend use as “a dance floor, yoga studio … or anything else you can think of—the floor is literally yours,” creative director Sander Veenendaal


(via This Agency’s Office Literally Disappears After Hours So You Can’t Work Late | Adweek)