What is Hackers' Pub?

Hackers' Pub is a place for software engineers to share their knowledge and experience with each other. It's also an ActivityPub-enabled social network, so you can follow your favorite hackers in the fediverse and get their latest posts in your feed.

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A green sea turtle hatchling attempts to find its way to the ocean on Heron Island, Australia, in February. Each year between November and March, green sea emerge from the ocean to lay eggs on the coastline of Heron Island, before returning to the ocean. The hatchlings emerge about six weeks later and then have to survive a series of predators ranging from seagulls to reef sharks, with an estimated survival rate of one in 1,000
Photograph: James Gourley/Getty Images

A green sea turtle hatchling attempts to find its way to the ocean.
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A green sea turtle hatchling attempts to find its way to the ocean on Heron Island, Australia, in February. Each year between November and March, green sea emerge from the ocean to lay eggs on the coastline of Heron Island, before returning to the ocean. The hatchlings emerge about six weeks later and then have to survive a series of predators ranging from seagulls to reef sharks, with an estimated survival rate of one in 1,000
Photograph: James Gourley/Getty Images

A green sea turtle hatchling attempts to find its way to the ocean.
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A large sponge, a cluster of anemones, and other life is seen nearly 230 meters deep at an area of the seabed that was very recently covered by the George VI Ice Shelf in Antarctica. Sponges can grow very slowly, sometimes less than two centimeters a year, so the size of this specimen suggests this community has been active for decades, perhaps even hundreds of years.

ROV SuBastian/Schmidt Ocean Institute



A large sponge, a cluster of anemones, and other life.
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A large sponge, a cluster of anemones, and other life is seen nearly 230 meters deep at an area of the seabed that was very recently covered by the George VI Ice Shelf in Antarctica. Sponges can grow very slowly, sometimes less than two centimeters a year, so the size of this specimen suggests this community has been active for decades, perhaps even hundreds of years.

ROV SuBastian/Schmidt Ocean Institute



A large sponge, a cluster of anemones, and other life.
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"Todavía crecen flores"

Con la savia de las flores
que crecen en mis campos
y el fluir de la sangre de mis venas...
Construyo un escudo en mi vida
Silencio mi voz,
Escucho en quietud...
¡Y ya, ya no duelen mis penas!
Me bendice la vida y con asombro
Veo mariposas Monarcas
que reposan en mis hombros.
~Selah~
«Cultiva tu jardín
y las mariposas vendrán a ti»

via floresclandestinas




Monarch butterflies in Mexico.
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, West Bank

A boy waves a Palestinian flag over the rubble of the home belonging to the family of Malik Ismail Salem in the village of Bizarya near the West Bank city of Nablus. Fourteen countries, including Britain, Canada and Germany, have condemned the Israeli security cabinet’s approval of 19 new settlements in the occupied West Bank, saying they violate international law and risk fuelling instability.

Photograph: Alaa Badarneh/EPA



A boy waves a Palestinian flag over the rubble of a home.
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The saiga antelope (Saiga tatarica).

While this won’t be taking Rudolph’s job anytime soon, the just so happens to have its own special nose. Serving as a built-in humidifier and air filter, its nose helps it survive the dry steppes and deserts of central Asia where it lives. The saiga’s impressive nose filters out dust during dry summers and warms the air it breathes during frigid winters!

Photo: Vyacheslav Luzanov, CC BY-NC 4.0, iNaturalist

via amnhnyc

White/beige Saiga antelope with a big, flat nose.
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