queer-as-folk-punk

Eternally listening to midwest emo

  • he/they

Queer Adult | POC | Anarchist | Gay Vampire |
They call me a "writer", I guess. Sure.
Multi-Fandom Enjoyer. I have succumbed to the 'tism.
Live fast, die young, punch fascists.
If you see me posting at 2AM when I should be asleep, no you didn't.


wolf-and-ghostling
@wolf-and-ghostling

a mobile web design accessibility thing that i have never seen addressed but impacts my daily life so much:

tons of websites just become unusable when you have your device's text display set to a larger size. text floats all over, button hitboxes overlap, images get pushed out of bounds etc

large text helps so much and i have it set up on both phone and tablet. but for a lot of websites the only way to get them functional is to go into desktop mode, which makes the text even tinier and i have to squint and suffer and zoom in and scroll horizontally every two words

eta: a lot of the time these websites are very important for people to be able to access, like identity document renewal info, healthcare info, nutrition and allergens info. there's ways around it, yes, but it just kind of sucks that it has to hurt or take more time to navigate these things if you have poor eyesight or migraines etc



ditherpod
@ditherpod

Explanation: Today's solstice marks the northernmost point of the Sun's annual motion through planet Earth's sky and the astronomical beginning of the northern hemisphere's summer. But only two days ago, the Full Moon nearest the solstice rose close to the ecliptic plane opposite the Sun, near its southernmost point for the year. Astronomer Anthony Ayiomamitis recorded this dramatic picture of the solstice Full Moon rising above Cape Sounion, Greece. The twenty-four hundred year old Temple of Poseidon lies in the foreground, also visible to sailors on the Aegean Sea. In this well-planned single exposure, a telescopic lens makes the Moon loom large, but even without optical aid casual skygazers often find the Full Moon looking astonishingly large when seen near the horizon. That powerful visual effect is known as the Moon Illusion.



Palette: eight-bit


Original

Solstice Moonrise, Cape Sounion


BiscuitAWitch
@BiscuitAWitch
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