Valerie Valeria

May 17

defranco:

Sherlock inspired “Not a Fake” Shirts available for the next 48 hours or until we sell 1,000 of them on FHP.  Posters are always available.  Get it while you can here.

Side Note:  I’ll randomly give someone who reblogs this a free poster/shirt.  But please don’t spam.

He’s so awesome. And I love him even more when he shows clips with his girlfriend. They’re perfect together. DFTBA.

May 13
May 06

doctorwho:

“Courage isn’t just a matter of not being frightened, you know. It’s being afraid and doing what you have to do anyway.”

prustens:

20 quotes to live by: Doctor Who Edition - #3

Third Doctor, Planet of the Daleks

May 04

butnotquite:

Remember this, Pia. One day all of this bullshit will make sense.

What doesn’t kill you, doesn’t kill you.

May 03
doctorwho:

TARDIS PC Case
queentimelady:

An official TARDIS PC is being released by Scan computers. It not cheap at £745.99, but at least you’ll never run out of hard drive space.


So amazing! Want.

doctorwho:

TARDIS PC Case

queentimelady:

An official TARDIS PC is being released by Scan computers. It not cheap at £745.99, but at least you’ll never run out of hard drive space.

So amazing! Want.

Apr 26
Apr 26
Apr 23
Apr 21

Doctor Who's sonic screwdriver 'invented' at Dundee University →

doctorwho:

Scientists claim to have invented their own version of Doctor Who’s famous sonic screwdriver.

The Dundee University researchers have created a machine which uses ultrasound to lift and rotate a rubber disc floating in a cylinder of water.

It is said to be the first time ultrasound waves have been used to turn objects rather than simply push them.

The study could help make surgery using ultrasound techniques more precise, the physicists said.

Ultrasound waves could already be made to push objects and scientists believed they could also turn them - but the Dundee University team claims to have now proved it.

They used energy from an ultrasound array to form a beam that can both carry momentum to push away an object in its path and, by using a beam shaped like a helix or vortex, cause the object to rotate.

The results of the sonic screwdriver experiment will be published in the American Physical Society’s journal Physical Review Letters.

Apr 19