#Crop Lab
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I'm alive
#had to crop out the flogger on my wall yall have to pay to see that#i think a meth lab just exploded down the street#i really dont think i pass but at least im comfy
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new horror movie dropping soon
original
#rhythm heaven#rhythm heaven fanart#love lab#pajama party#mako#tap troupe#tall tapper#stomp farmer#crop stomp#lockstep#(kinda)?#stomptapper
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Screenshots of Chase that I took that I enjoy to various degrees | Pt. 1 | Pt. 2 | Pt. 3 | 🎂 Pt. 4 (Happy Birthday to Chase Part 2: cropped edition!) 🎂 |
#alright for this one I actually made it even amounts of Chase for 5 seasons and so all these go 1-5 x 6#sorry for the shit quality but the already grainy quality gets especially shitty when you crop it 👍#this still isn't my last Chase birthday post 😎#disney lab rats#lab rats#lab rats bionic island#lab rats elite force#lref#chase davenport
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"i want right hand man and reginald copperbottom to admit their love to each other then hug it out please PLEASEPLSPLASE PO" submitted by anon
#THE FANDOM HAS BEEN WAITING FOR SO LONG#please copperright..#be real#why does the crop look so weird what was I doing in the lab#mod dave#thsc#thsc confessions#anon#thsc confession#thsc rhm#reginald copperbottom#copperright
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feelin sillay and made one of my fave rimworld settlers into a vampire today. teehee <3
#miles art#miles plays rimworld#this is Dog btw. she very easily became a fave#getting turned into a vampire in a lab bathed in red lights by a cloaked older woman who leaves the moment you collapse... uhh ummm 😳😳#edited to just the cropped version bc i prefer it. good ol ''head too big once i drew the body'' deal lmao
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Mystery Link’s beloved Chocolate Chonkster in her natural content state ❤️
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something about finding the people who sit through your info dumps with joy on their face and enthusiasm for your passions. something about finding the people who info dump right back at you because they know you love hearing about their passions. something about finding the people who manage to sum up your being in one niche, oddly specific sentence that lives in your mind rent free for the rest of time. something about finding the people who not only accept you for who you are but embrace you for who you are. who not only tolerate your quirks and differences but love and cherish them.
#i’m in my feels today if you couldn’t tell#just thinking about one friend in particular who i don’t get to see in person nearly enough but i text all the time#idk it’s the little things#the way we send each other videos of ourselves explaining whatever we’re learning about right now#the way we don’t write it in a long message because the emotion and vibes don’t translate properly#the way he’s told me that the way i dress is so gender nonconforming in his eyes#how even though i’m afab and i wear glittery makeup and crop tops and have pink hair#i still look so queer and so gnc and so Not Girl in his eyes#how that felt so validating#how i could feel the genuine love in his words#how he told me once that i’m ‘not a person with lore but rather a person with a schtick’#and how he explained to me what my schtick was and how accurate it was#how he told me he can’t wait for me to get my degree(s) and be an openly queer person in stem#how he can’t wait for me to defend my thesis sometime in the future and be wearing the brightest makeup and the biggest earrings#and the tallest boots#how he loves that i go to my chem lab every week with glitter on my eyes#how it’s cool that i don’t care if i stick out like a sore thumb because i’m me#i remember how he dropped the she/her pronouns immediately upon ne saying i didn’t really vibe with them#(even when they were still technically on my list of ‘ok to use pronouns’)#how his boyfriend who i don’t know very well has always they/them-ed me because my friend does#and if my friend is doing it then it must be the right thing#idk i just love my friends#and this friend in particular is someone i’ve gotten really close with over the past 6 months or so#and i’m so glad to have him in my life#platonic love#friendship#tell your friends you love them
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my head hurts so bad from lab this morning doing organic chemistry hw is almost soothing atp I dont even know if its right im having a great time
#chem lab saiko takahashi and iguchi again for crop#i imagine hes sending pics and stuff to kokomi.... shes too nice to block him so she just leaves him on read
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SNW Christine has the vibes of someone who pours a glass of wine, hands it to Uhura, then starts drinking from the bottle. SNW Christine says she’s going to have “one glass of Romulan ale” and then pulls out a comedically large glass as a goof. Christine wore white converse with her thrift store dress to space prom. I can see this all clearly. She is this to me:
#this is not slander it's her quirky girl moment#Uhura is worried when this happens but Ortega is like YEAAAAH WHOOO#SNW Christine's favorite type of weather is the rain and she WILL get Spock to run around in it#and Spock'll be like 'They never let me run around in the rain on Vulcan...'#and Christine will smile and say 'You're not on Vulcan anymore' and the music swells#Christine Chapel dead-eyed listening to BLARING music as she dyes her hair sheer white in the bathroom <- girlboss building her empire#When will Christine Chapel have her coolgirl monologue?? I am waiting#I want Christine Chapel to introduce Spock to doritos or something I actually can't wait to see how many y/n shenanigans they get themselves#into. I want her to introduce Spock to a junkfood like Doritos and have it play a KEY part in their terrible quasi romance#I do not enjoy their romance but I have fun laughing at it genuinely and I do like having fun <3#I cannot meaningfully engage with it it's just so silly I just keep hearing 'You Belong With Me' by Taylor Swift when it crops up#Christine lying on the floor of her lab as La la land by Demi Lovato plays#WHO SAID - I CAN'T WEAR MY CONVERSE WITH MY DRESS WELL BABY...THAT'S JUST ME!!!!
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i like to line my blorbos up and (literally) draw comparisons between them, so here's some notes about their ears for no reason other than i wanted to
in part because second chance shadow's ears are the most ??? at a glance, especially since that left one isn't consistent. if he's in good condition and has recently had it massaged to break up the scar tissue, it stands up like normal. the longer he goes without caring for it, the more it starts to bend inward like that.
keeping it in its "correct" position takes some amount of effort, so if he's relaxed or extra tired, it also starts to bend. it doesn't lay totally limp in either case; it just resets to this "frozen" position since it didn't heal correctly. that also means on bad days it's less mobile than usual, so even if his right ear is swiveling around and emoting like normal, the left one has comparatively limited mobility.
i'm still toying with lab rat's cropped ears as a concept. it kind of hit me earlier today that, based on second chance shadow's round and fluffy ears, lab rat's should be even rounder due to him being the youngest. so i'm seesawing between either having them just being as round and fluffy as they otherwise would be, or cropped like this as a result of the scientists testing a hypothesized way to restrict his regenerative abilities--and choosing a comparatively "harmless" spot to do it just in case.
#disclaimer: i do not condone ear cropping#in any case this also kind of doubles as a quill comparison but i didn't feel like writing notes for that too on here#shadow the hedgehog#semi-modern au#second chance au#lab rat au
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tumblr should also bring back farmville. let me send u some crops.
#that game made everyone crazy#had ppl using the computer lab to check their crops real quick#boy I semi liked that week friended me bc that dumb farm#but I got crop gifts out of it so…
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While MAIKA's extra phonemes were marketed as being useful for recreating various languages (notably English and Japanese, which Voctro Labs distributes plugins for), her extra phonemes are specifically intended to emulate the Catalan language, which is what the ONA mascot is used to demonstrate in marketing and events.
(source: Vocaloid Wiki)
#the way tumblr crops images is extremely frustrating. just let one of them be wider...it's ok...#maika#ona#vocaloid3#spanish vocaloid#voctro labs
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Q&A: Claire Walsh on how J-PAL’s King Climate Action Initiative tackles the twin climate and poverty crises
New Post has been published on https://thedigitalinsider.com/qa-claire-walsh-on-how-j-pals-king-climate-action-initiative-tackles-the-twin-climate-and-poverty-crises/
Q&A: Claire Walsh on how J-PAL’s King Climate Action Initiative tackles the twin climate and poverty crises
The King Climate Action Initiative (K-CAI) is the flagship climate change program of the Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab (J-PAL), which innovates, tests, and scales solutions at the nexus of climate change and poverty alleviation, together with policy partners worldwide.
Claire Walsh is the associate director of policy at J-PAL Global at MIT. She is also the project director of K-CAI. Here, Walsh talks about the work of K-CAI since its launch in 2020, and describes the ways its projects are making a difference. This is part of an ongoing series exploring how the MIT School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences is addressing the climate crisis.
Q: According to the King Climate Action Initiative (K-CAI), any attempt to address poverty effectively must also simultaneously address climate change. Why is that?
A: Climate change will disproportionately harm people in poverty, particularly in low- and middle-income countries, because they tend to live in places that are more exposed to climate risk. These are nations in sub-Saharan Africa and South and Southeast Asia where low-income communities rely heavily on agriculture for their livelihoods, so extreme weather — heat, droughts, and flooding — can be devastating for people’s jobs and food security. In fact, the World Bank estimates that up to 130 million more people may be pushed into poverty by climate change by 2030.
This is unjust because these countries have historically emitted the least; their people didn’t cause the climate crisis. At the same time, they are trying to improve their economies and improve people’s welfare, so their energy demands are increasing, and they are emitting more. But they don’t have the same resources as wealthy nations for mitigation or adaptation, and many developing countries understandably don’t feel eager to put solving a problem they didn’t create at the top of their priority list. This makes finding paths forward to cutting emissions on a global scale politically challenging.
For these reasons, the problems of enhancing the well-being of people experiencing poverty, addressing inequality, and reducing pollution and greenhouse gases are inextricably linked.
Q: So how does K-CAI tackle this hybrid challenge?
A: Our initiative is pretty unique. We are a competitive, policy-based research and development fund that focuses on innovating, testing, and scaling solutions. We support researchers from MIT and other universities, and their collaborators, who are actually implementing programs, whether NGOs [nongovernmental organizations], government, or the private sector. We fund pilots of small-scale ideas in a real-world setting to determine if they hold promise, followed by larger randomized, controlled trials of promising solutions in climate change mitigation, adaptation, pollution reduction, and energy access. Our goal is to determine, through rigorous research, if these solutions are actually working — for example, in cutting emissions or protecting forests or helping vulnerable communities adapt to climate change. And finally, we offer path-to-scale grants which enable governments and NGOs to expand access to programs that have been tested and have strong evidence of impact.
We think this model is really powerful. Since we launched in 2020, we have built a portfolio of over 30 randomized evaluations and 13 scaling projects in more than 35 countries. And to date, these projects have informed the scale ups of evidence-based climate policies that have reached over 15 million people.
Q: It seems like K-CAI is advancing a kind of policy science, demanding proof of a program’s capacity to deliver results at each stage.
A: This is one of the factors that drew me to J-PAL back in 2012. I majored in anthropology and studied abroad in Uganda. From those experiences I became very passionate about pursuing a career focused on poverty reduction. To me, it is unfair that in a world full of so much wealth and so much opportunity there exists so much extreme poverty. I wanted to dedicate my career to that, but I’m also a very detail-oriented nerd who really cares about whether a program that claims to be doing something for people is accomplishing what it claims.
It’s been really rewarding to see demand from governments and NGOs for evidence-informed policymaking grow over my 12 years at J-PAL. This policy science approach holds exciting promise to help transform public policy and climate policy in the coming decades.
Q: Can you point to K-CAI-funded projects that meet this high bar and are now making a significant impact?
A: Several examples jump to mind. In the state of Gujarat, India, pollution regulators are trying to cut particulate matter air pollution, which is devastating to human health. The region is home to many major industries whose emissions negatively affect most of the state’s 70 million residents.
We partnered with state pollution regulators — kind of a regional EPA [Environmental Protection Agency] — to test an emissions trading scheme that is used widely in the U.S. and Europe but not in low- and middle-income countries. The government monitors pollution levels using technology installed at factories that sends data in real time, so the regulator knows exactly what their emissions look like. The regulator sets a cap on the overall level of pollution, allocates permits to pollute, and industries can trade emissions permits.
In 2019, researchers in the J-PAL network conducted the world’s first randomized, controlled trial of this emissions trading scheme and found that it cut pollution by 20 to 30 percent — a surprising reduction. It also reduced firms’ costs, on average, because the costs of compliance went down. The state government was eager to scale up the pilot, and in the past two years, two other cities, including Ahmedabad, the biggest city in the state, have adopted the concept.
We are also supporting a project in Niger, whose economy is hugely dependent on rain-fed agriculture but with climate change is experiencing rapid desertification. Researchers in the J-PAL network have been testing training farmers in a simple, inexpensive rainwater harvesting technique, where farmers dig a half-moon-shaped hole called a demi-lune right before the rainy season. This demi-lune feeds crops that are grown directly on top of it, and helps return land that resembled flat desert to arable production.
Researchers found that training farmers in this simple technology increased adoption from 4 percent to 94 percent and that demi-lunes increased agricultural output and revenue for farmers from the first year. K-CAI is funding a path-to-scale grant so local implementers can teach this technique to over 8,000 farmers and build a more cost-effective program model. If this takes hold, the team will work with local partners to scale the training to other relevant regions of the country and potentially other countries in the Sahel.
One final example that we are really proud of, because we first funded it as a pilot and now it’s in the path to scale phase: We supported a team of researchers working with partners in Bangladesh trying to reduce carbon emissions and other pollution from brick manufacturing, an industry that generates 17 percent of the country’s carbon emissions. The scale of manufacturing is so great that at some times of year, Dhaka (the capital of Bangladesh) looks like Mordor.
Workers form these bricks and stack hundreds of thousands of them, which they then fire by burning coal. A team of local researchers and collaborators from our J-PAL network found that you can reduce the amount of coal needed for the kilns by making some low-cost changes to the manufacturing process, including stacking the bricks in a way that increases airflow in the kiln and feeding the coal fires more frequently in smaller rather than larger batches.
In the randomized, controlled trial K-CAI supported, researchers found that this cut carbon and pollution emissions significantly, and now the government has invited the team to train 1,000 brick manufacturers in Dhaka in these techniques.
Q: These are all fascinating and powerful instances of implementing ideas that address a range of problems in different parts of the world. But can K-CAI go big enough and fast enough to take a real bite out of the twin poverty and climate crisis?
A: We’re not trying to find silver bullets. We are trying to build a large playbook of real solutions that work to solve specific problems in specific contexts. As you build those up in the hundreds, you have a deep bench of effective approaches to solve problems that can add up in a meaningful way. And because J-PAL works with governments and NGOs that have the capacity to take the research into action, since 2003, over 600 million people around the world have been reached by policies and programs that are informed by evidence that J-PAL-affiliated researchers produced. While global challenges seem daunting, J-PAL has shown that in 20 years we can achieve a great deal, and there is huge potential for future impact.
But unfortunately, globally, there is an underinvestment in policy innovation to combat climate change that may generate quicker, lower-cost returns at a large scale — especially in policies that determine which technologies get adopted or commercialized. For example, a lot of the huge fall in prices of renewable energy was enabled by early European government investments in solar and wind, and then continuing support for innovation in renewable energy.
That’s why I think social sciences have so much to offer in the fight against climate change and poverty; we are working where technology meets policy and where technology meets real people, which often determines their success or failure. The world should be investing in policy, economic, and social innovation just as much as it is investing in technological innovation.
Q: Do you need to be an optimist in your job?
A: I am half-optimist, half-pragmatist. I have no control over the climate change outcome for the world. And regardless of whether we can successfully avoid most of the potential damages of climate change, when I look back, I’m going to ask myself, “Did I fight or not?” The only choice I have is whether or not I fought, and I want to be a fighter.
#000#Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab (J-PAL)#Africa#agriculture#air#air pollution#Anthropology#approach#Arts#Asia#biggest city#carbon#carbon emissions#career#challenge#change#cities#Cleaner industry#climate#climate change#climate crisis#coal#Collaboration#compliance#crops#cutting#data#deal#Developing countries#development
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Screenshots of Chase that I took that I enjoy to various degrees | Pt. 1 | Pt. 2 | 🎂 Pt. 3 (Happy Birthday to Chase!) 🎂 | Pt.4 |
#he's such a goofball your honor 🫶#but also an asshole (both lovingly and derogatory)#choose your fighter 💪 (I've got number 16)#there will be another part coming out today too except they are screenshots that I cropped of Chase since I have so many where he's not-#the main focus of the shot#I also may make another post of full-size screenshots like this one but we'll see#also for some reason I just now noticed that I cropped the twelfth picture wrong so ignore that#disney lab rats#lab rats#lab rats bionic island#lab rats elite force#lref#chase davenport
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The more you survive, the more likely you are to die from something cool!
#like asteroids!#or a new hero cropping out of nowhere!#or a radioactive spider!#or the scrapped weapons of a billionaire working with the USA for world peace#or from a gamma explosion!#oooh#or your own personal experiment to try copying someone's abilities going wrong#or finding your dad's secret lab as it explodes and caves in under your school
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I DONT THINK THATS PROPER LAB SAFETY
#the crop top with a lab coat over it is a LOOK tho#My tmnt media consumption pattern continues to be absolutely inscrutable#I like 2003 a lot better than 2012 tho I think I’ll actually binge this one
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