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rovlemhage · 2 years
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In case you didn't already know this, the AO3 work posting form defaults to using HTML
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But you can easily change that by tapping the Rich Text button, which will give you an interface more like a standard word processor.
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And if you tap on the little circle with the question mark in it
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You'll see instructions for how to paste in formatted text from Google Docs, Scrivener etc.
There's also a question mark bubble on the HTML tab that shows you what HTML tags work in the form. That's how I found out you can use tables!
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rovlemhage · 2 years
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Bleu Finnegan from Blue Monday
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rovlemhage · 2 years
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The Admiral, from As Foretold So Below, a webcomic set to release in 2022
(All artwork is Conceptual/in progress, designs not yet finalized)
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rovlemhage · 3 years
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As I draw for a living, I can’t even remember the last time I sat down and just drew aimlessly, not knowing what the end result will be. It must have been 2 years!
So, I sat down, started to draw. Guzma appeared. He was taking his shirt off. Then, The Road to Eldorado scene popped into my mind with @elbdot‘s adorable El and here we are.
Dork dynamics for the win!
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rovlemhage · 3 years
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REDBUBBLE SALE!
Hey everyone! I'm just gonna qUICKLY DROP MY MERCH STORE AGAIN because Redbubble is doing a Christmas sale, around 20-60% OFF! For example, you can get 30% off on posters, cups and phone cases! :D
11/29/21 EDIT: NEW CODE for the current sale is "CYBER5"
Here is a smol collection of pieces you can find at my store!
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Go check it out if you'd like to :D STORE: https://www.redbubble.com/people/EleanorTopsie/shop?asc=u
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rovlemhage · 3 years
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All newspapers and photos of the end credits to my last video I had WAY too much fun with creating these, so even though they don't fully make sense without the video, I really wanted to upload them separately here :D
For full context, you can watch the video here!
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rovlemhage · 3 years
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revamping Jekz color scheme, probs finalized, maybs
(TWITTER)
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rovlemhage · 3 years
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quick coloring! (TWITTER)
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rovlemhage · 3 years
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A Nanowrimo reminder
While it is really awesome if you reach 50,000 words, it is also really amazing if you wrote 500 words this month despite whatever life was throwing at you.  
The real win is that you have more words in your story than what you had before.  And that is something to be proud of.  
\^o^/
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rovlemhage · 3 years
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Tobey Maguire Spider-Man "it's a hard knock life" fancam hours
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rovlemhage · 3 years
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Next commission highlight is for TheWeebulous over on Twitter of both of their models!
I’m really proud of how this one came out! Especially the girl in the front - I think the shading really really popped! :D
My commissions aren’t open right now, but I’m hoping to open more slots soon! You can always check out information about them by checking out the link below!
Commissions Info | ko-fi | Patreon  | Check out my patrons!
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rovlemhage · 3 years
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Post Trauma is a very creepy Silent Hill inspired fixed camera survival horror adventure with a 57 year old protagonist and grotesque monsters that may not always be hostile!
Read More & Play The Alpha Demo, Free (Windows)
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rovlemhage · 3 years
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A group of scientists biked around Costa Rica’s tropical forests, hanging chunks of raw chicken from the trees, in April 2019. They were trying to catch a rare insect: carrion-eating bees.
Slowly, over the next five days, large bees with long, dangling legs flocked to the bait. They crawled over the folds of raw chicken, using special teeth to slice off bits of meat. They gathered the flesh in little baskets on their hind legs, where other bees collect pollen, or swallowed the meat to store in their stomachs.
The bees were preparing to carry the chicken back to their hives, where they would enclose the meat chunks in pods, leave them there for two weeks, then feed them to their babies. Scientists aren’t sure what happens inside the pods during those two weeks, or how it affects the meat. The adults don’t need to eat protein. They survive on nectar.
The bees with leg baskets still collect pollen for their babies, too. But three species – out of more than 20,000 known bee species – feed their larvae an entirely carrion-based diet. They’re called “vulture bees.”
Continue Reading.
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rovlemhage · 3 years
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NEW BLOG! Follow @dnd-prompt-s for D&D themed prompts to inspire your next adventure ⚔️🧙‍♂️
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rovlemhage · 3 years
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I guess the answer should be obvious since you've moved on to the Yummies, but are you really done with the Dopants already? They're some of my very favorite creatures in tokusatsu. Could I trouble you to at least post the Money Dopant for old time's sake? His episode was the one that got me into watching W, the first KR series I got into and still my favorite.
Here are some ;-)
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rovlemhage · 3 years
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Black Holes Dine on Stellar Treats!
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See that tiny blob of light, circled in red? Doesn’t look like much, does it? But that blob represents a feast big enough to feed a black hole around 30 million times the mass of our Sun! Scientists call these kinds of stellar meals tidal disruption events, and they’re some of the most dramatic happenings in the cosmos.
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Sometimes, an unlucky star strays too close to a black hole. The black hole’s gravity pulls on the star, causing it to stretch in one direction and squeeze in another. Then the star pulls apart into a stream of gas. This is a tidal disruption event. (If you’re worried about this happening to our Sun – don’t. The nearest black hole we know about is over 1,000 light-years away. And black holes aren’t wild space vacuums. They don’t go zipping around sucking up random stars and planets. So we’re pretty safe from tidal disruption events!)
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The trailing part of the stream gets flung out of the system. The rest of the gas loops back around the black hole, forming a disk. The material circling in the disk slowly drifts inward toward the black hole’s event horizon, the point at which nothing – not even light – can escape. The black hole consumes the gas and dust in its disk over many years.
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Sometimes the black hole only munches on a passing star – we call this a partial tidal disruption event. The star loses some of its gas, but its own gravity pulls it back into shape before it passes the black hole again. Eventually, the black hole will have nibbled away enough material that the star can’t reform and gets destroyed.
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We study tidal disruptions, both the full feasts and the partial snacks, using many kinds of telescopes. Usually, these events are spotted by ground-based telescopes like the Zwicky Transient Facility and the All-Sky Automated Survey for Supernovae network.
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They alert other ground- and space-based telescopes – like our Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory (illustrated above) and the European Space Agency’s XMM-Newton – to follow up and collect more data using different wavelengths, from visible light to X-rays. Even our planet-hunting Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite has observed a few of these destructive wonders!
We’re also studying disruptions using multimessenger astronomy, where scientists use the information carried by light, particles, and space-time ripples to learn more about cosmic objects and occurrences.
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But tidal disruptions are super rare. They only happen once every 10,000 to 100,000 years in a galaxy the size of our own Milky Way. Astronomers have only observed a few dozen events so far. By comparison, supernovae – the explosive deaths of stars – happen every 100 years or so in a galaxy like ours.
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That’s why scientists make their own tidal disruptions using supercomputers, like the ones shown in the video here. Supercomputers allow researchers to build realistic models of stars. They can also include all of the physical effects they’d experience whipping ‘round a black hole, even those from Einstein’s theory of general relativity. They can alter features like how close the stars get and how massive the black holes are to see how it affects what happens to the stars. These simulations will help astronomers build better pictures of the events they observe in the night sky.
Keep up with what’s happening in the universe and how we study it by following NASA Universe on Twitter and Facebook.
Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space!
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rovlemhage · 3 years
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not a fan
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