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Happy Valentine’s Day!

Je viens de recevoir un e-mail de Flickr, comme quoi une de mes photographies a été utilisée pour remplir le guide touristique Schmaps, concernant Paris, selon les droits du Creative Commons.

Voici l’e-mail en question :

Hi Eryn,

I am delighted to let you know that one of your photos with
a Creative Commons license has been selected for inclusion
in the newly released tenth edition of our Schmap Paris
Guide:

Beaubourg Pompidou Center
http://www.schmap.com/paris/tours_tour2/p=5666/i=5666_134.jpg

If you use an iPhone or iPod touch, then this same link
will take you directly to your photo in the iPhone version
of our guide. On a desktop computer, you can still see
exactly how your photo is displayed and credited in the
iPhone version of our guide at:

Beaubourg Pompidou Center
http://www.schmap.com/?m=iphone#uid=paris&sid=tours_tour2&p=5666&i=5666_134

Please enjoy the guide!

Best regards,

Amanda Brooks
Editor, Schmap Guides

Ce qui me ravit, évidemment. :)

*94
gamefreaksnz:

Keybag

I want this.

gamefreaksnz:

Keybag

I want this.

The new phone’s technology.

(via accidette)

(via accidette)

rainbowsandwitheringwinters:

tumblrisforfaggots:

brb marrying my cousin tomorrow.

WHAT the .. what the fuck?!

rainbowsandwitheringwinters:

tumblrisforfaggots:

brb marrying my cousin tomorrow.

WHAT the .. what the fuck?!

lickystickypickyme:

Jin Zhang, a professor at the University of Western Ontario, is developing contact lenses that change color with the user’s blood sugar level. This could allow diabetics to monitor themselves without frequent blood samples. The technology:” …uses extremely small nanoparticles embedded into the hydrogel lenses. These engineered nanoparticles react with glucose molecules found in tears, causing a chemical reaction that changes their colour.” Source

lickystickypickyme:

Jin Zhang, a professor at the University of Western Ontario, is developing contact lenses that change color with the user’s blood sugar level. This could allow diabetics to monitor themselves without frequent blood samples. The technology:

” …uses extremely small nanoparticles embedded into the hydrogel lenses. These engineered nanoparticles react with glucose molecules found in tears, causing a chemical reaction that changes their colour.” Source