I’ve uninstalled it, and here’s why you should too (if you have it). I
noticed Norton was giving it an extra amount of scrutiny lately, going
to guess this is why. Unfortunately when things seem to be too good to
be true, they usually are.
(æt əˈræk si ə), noun | It is defined as an emotional freedom, which is described as a calmness or peace of mind. It is the sensation of emotional tranquility.
If you want to vote to give it to Random Acts, all you have to do is like/reblog this post. The post that gets the most notes before next Friday (June 5th) picks the charity!
Space is so creepy and wonderful. Who the hell needs hell when there’s space.
Like there’s an old constellation called Eridanus that you can see in the southern sky, and its not a very interesting constellation. It’s a river. It’s actually the water that’s pouring out of Aquarius, so in the sky it’s kind of boring. It’s a path of stars.
But within Eridanus, in between the stars, there’s a place where the background radiation is unexplainably cold. Because after the Big Bang, there was all this light that scattered everywhere, and it’s the oldest light in the universe, but we can’t see it. It’s so dim that it only shows up as a glow of microwaves, so to us, it just looks like the blackness of the night.
But there’s this spot in Eridanus where that little glow of ancient microwaves isn’t what it should be. It’s cold and dark.
And it’s enormous. Like a billion light year across. Of mostly just emptiness. And we don’t know why. One theory is that it’s simply a huge void, like a place where there are no galaxies. Voids like that do exist. Most of them are smaller, but they’re a sort of predictable part of the structure of the universe. The cold spot in Eridanus, if it were a void, would be so enormous that it would change how we understand the universe.
But another theory is that this cold spot is actually the place where a parallel universe is tangled with our own.