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sunlit-music · 6 months
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This should go without saying, but don't harass, dox, or threaten anyone I complain about online or offline.
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sunlit-music · 7 months
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thurstonphoto
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sunlit-music · 7 months
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Surfers Paradise, Australia | benmuldersunsets
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sunlit-music · 7 months
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When you’re Australia and you’re technically allowed to participate in Eurovision
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sunlit-music · 7 months
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Down in the valley the wind ripped across the open expanse. At the top of the ridge near Mount York Teddy sat enjoying the view, basking in the sun and hoping that he wouldn’t get flung off a cliff in the high winds.
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sunlit-music · 7 months
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Solar Eclipse from Western Australia l Gwenaël Blanck
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sunlit-music · 7 months
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"The moon looks upon many night flowers; the night flowers see but one moon..."
saria_n_michael
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sunlit-music · 7 months
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its dangerous to go alone. here, take these bilbies
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sunlit-music · 7 months
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Rainbow Lorikeets (Trichoglossus moluccanus), family Psittaculidae, QLD, Australia
Photograph by Dave Arnold Wildlife Photography
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sunlit-music · 7 months
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Spiral orb webs showing some colours in the sunlight in a gorge in Karijini National Park, Western Australia, Australia
Bjørn Christian Tørrissen
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sunlit-music · 7 months
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sunlit-music · 7 months
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Ground Parrot (Pezoporus wallicus), family Psittaculidae, Tasmania, Australia
photograph by Subhranil Das
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sunlit-music · 7 months
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Where sunsets leave you breathless.
Photos by Paul Smith
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sunlit-music · 7 months
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❤️🤙🏻🌸🌊Elisetrigger..
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sunlit-music · 7 months
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Great Barrier Reef, Australia
The world's largest coral reef system has more than 2,900 reefs and 900 islands over a vast area of the ocean. It's home to several unique species of marine life, and is amazing to see from the sea and sky.
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sunlit-music · 7 months
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"Down Under, there’s a massive campaign to connect 315,000 hectares, or 750,000 acres, of coastal habitat for koalas in New South Wales into a single national park.
Now, a new logging ban to come into effect will protect 106 “hubs” across 8,400 hectares (21,000 acres) of forest where koalas in the wild are known to congregate in largest numbers.
It was a “historic step forward,” said Nature Conservation Council acting chief executive Brad Smith, describing the area as “the most important koala habitat in the world.”
The parcel is just one part, though key, of the 315,000 hectares that a coalition of conservation organizations is hoping to protect forever to ensure koalas can survive the eons.
Given the Moniker “Great Koala National Park,” the 315,000 hectares are currently split between conservation areas and state forest across an area the size of Yosemite. The GKNP would unify it all under a heavier level of protection.
Koalas need a particular kind of forest biome, one that lies close to the coast where real estate is often coveted. In this case, the 21,000 acres were saved from logging, another activity in these woods.
NSW government mapping of koala habitat confirms the GKNP proposal would protect the most important koala habitat in the region."
-via Good News Network, September 13, 2023
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sunlit-music · 7 months
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i am totally going to come across as a boomer in this post but as an engineer it's common sense to not build systems with a single point of failure. and i'm starting to realize that our usage of the smart phone is exactly that. a single point of failure. the calling/texting is the implied function of the smartphone, which is fine. that's what it's built for. but nowadays we don't think to keep a physical map or atlas or gps unit in our car because our phone has google maps. we don't keep address books anymore because it's all stored in our contacts. i serve customers who no longer carry a wallet/physical card because it's all on their phone. this is literally a single point of failure. if you lose or break your phone when you are in a foreign place you are fucking screwed. maybe you're still screwed even in your home town because so many people have become accustomed to using a smart phone to take them anywhere.
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