Troll Kingdom

This is a sample guest message. Register a free account today to become a member! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox!

I fucking KNEW it.

^^Are you serious? Why is that filter needed when you have a pic-size option?

Anyway...the letters being filtered between "antwrp" and "nasa" resemble ĝşƒċ, if you want to bother with the joke at this point. :shrug:
 
I seem to recall a time when giant astronomy pics were being used to blow out thread dimensions, people's cp's, or spammed to overwhelm the server. With the pic-resize option it shouldn't cause a problem visually, but if they still hog bandwidth I can see why it might be kept.

Pity...some great images at that site.
 
I seem to recall a time when giant astronomy pics were being used to blow out thread dimensions, people's cp's, or spammed to overwhelm the server. With the pic-resize option it shouldn't cause a problem visually, but if they still hog bandwidth I can see why it might be kept.

Pity...some great images at that site.

Yeah. Guilty of that one, way back when. Hubble pix.
 
eclipse20091231_Roux900.jpg


Explanation: The International Year of Astronomy 2009 ended with a Blue Moon and a partial lunar eclipse, as the second Full Moon of December grazed the Earth's shadow on December 31st. The New Year's Eve Blue Moon eclipse was visible throughout Europe, Asia, Africa and parts of Alaska, captured in this two exposure composite in cloudy skies over Saint Bonnet de Mure, France. Playing across the Moon's southern reaches, the edge of Earth's umbra, or dark central shadow, appears on the right side along with the prominent ray crater Tycho. At maximum eclipse, the umbra covered only about 8 percent of the diameter of the lunar disk.
 
Top