The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side

The Lighter Side

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Dog Reunited With Family After Going Missing for Almost a Week Following Winter Storm
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Dog Reunited With Family After Going Missing for Almost a Week Following Winter Storm

After disappearing during a powerful winter storm, a beloved dog was missing for nearly a week. Against the odds, the determined pup was finally reunited with its relieved and overjoyed family.

Dog Reunited With Family After Going Missing for Almost a Week Following Winter Storm
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www.godtube.com

Dog Reunited With Family After Going Missing for Almost a Week Following Winter Storm

After disappearing during a powerful winter storm, a beloved dog was missing for nearly a week. Against the odds, the determined pup was finally reunited with its relieved and overjoyed family.

Dog Reunited With Family After Going Missing for Almost a Week Following Winter Storm
Favicon 
www.godtube.com

Dog Reunited With Family After Going Missing for Almost a Week Following Winter Storm

After disappearing during a powerful winter storm, a beloved dog was missing for nearly a week. Against the odds, the determined pup was finally reunited with its relieved and overjoyed family.

Kids at Edinburgh Children’s Hospital Paint Pebbles for Penguins and the Response is Precious
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Kids at Edinburgh Children’s Hospital Paint Pebbles for Penguins and the Response is Precious

It’s mating season for penguins at the Edinburgh Zoo in Edinburgh, Scotland. In the wild, male penguins search for the perfect pebble to present to a female mate in hopes of winning her over. The male penguins also wanted to impress the female penguins at the Edinburgh Zoo. But, they do things a bit differently there. For the last four years, patients from Royal Hospital for Children & Young People have painted pebbles as part of a partnership with the zoo. “Penguins try to win over their perfect match by presenting the most beautiful pebbles they can find. And this year the colony was spoilt for choice… with more than 1,000 stunning pebbles to pick from,” an Instagram post reads. “A huge thank you to @echcharity for helping make this possible. Together we’re helping children stay connected to nature even during the toughest hospital stays.” View this post on Instagram A post shared by Edinburgh Zoo (@edinburghzoo) The Penguins at the Edinburgh Zoo Loved the Colorful Pebbles The Edinburgh Zoo shared a video of the penguins looking through the beautiful, colored pebbles and picking the one they loved the most. It’s such a sweet sight, almost like a groom choosing the perfect engagement ring for the girl of his dreams. Seeing the partnership between the children and the zoo made many people happy. “This is just brilliant! How wonderful to see a creative health initiative that actively connects the children with a purpose like this! I really hope you play live footage of the penguins receiving the pebbles and making their nests on the children’s ward too, I’m sure it would raise a lot of spirits!” Someone wrote. “My grandson painted a pebble. He’s hoping it gets picked,” a proud grandparent wrote. “I would cry if a penguin picked MY pebble. It’s a life goal lol,” a follower joked. You can find this story’s featured image here.

Gen X teens in 1986 predicted what life would be like today. Here’s what they got right.
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Gen X teens in 1986 predicted what life would be like today. Here’s what they got right.

Can kids predict the future? In 1966, the BBC’s Tomorrow’s World asked a group of 13-year-olds to share their predictions about what life in the year 2000 would be like. As you might expect, it was fascinating. Two decades later, the showrunners did the same thing again. Only this time, they asked the young teens of 1986 what they thought life in 2020 would be like. How did Gen X’s answers about the future differ from those of their Baby Boomer predecessors? The 1966 cohort’s predictions dealt with space travel, robots, and computers. They were concerned about overpopulation and nuclear war. “That was before the manned moon landings, the microprocessor, strategic arms limitation talks, or test-tube babies,” the feather-haired host shared. “So have the hopes and fears of today’s 13-year-olds changed as they look forward to the year 2020?” The kids from 1986 offered their predictions: “Perhaps brain waves to convert into radio waves, sent to someone else, convert back into brain waves. And it’d be like, what would you call it, like a telepathy thing.” Kids who listened to music on cassette tapes had no concept of the Internet. Photo credit: Canva “Well, instead of a channel tunnel, you could have something like a space tunnel, where you could go [from] one planet to the other, like bypasses.” “Obviously, nuclear war worries me, but I don’t think that’ll happen unless they’ve got computers that press the button for them. Because no, I don’t think any human being is capable of actually pressing some button that releases all nuclear arms cuz it just means destruction of the world.” “I don’t think they’ll be living on Mars yet, but I think they’ll still be living around here.” “I think they may, unless they have another planet to go to, just there’ll be loads of tower blocks. Or people will be restricted to a certain amount of kids.” “Probably be computers running the country.” Predicting the future is hard work. In 1983, most people viewed the home computer as a passing fad. Two @MIT professors debated the future of PCs.Michael Dertouzos tried to convince us that the home computer is here to stay, 1983 pic.twitter.com/HieMxHBsYx— Vala Afshar (@ValaAfshar) May 8, 2024 “But when it comes to wars and things like that, nuclear bombs, and then they’re designing these different gases that can kill people within seconds and things like that. I think that aspect of technology should be wiped out completely.” It’s interesting how similar many of the issues were between 1966 and 1986. Some of the worries these kids had are still major concerns 40 years later. But how accurate were their predictions of what 2020 would hold? The kid talking about not living on Mars yet was right. One could make an argument that computers do run the country, but not necessarily in the way a 13-year-old in 1986 would have imagined. They had no concept of the Internet at that point, which made imagining the reality of 2020 impossible. But the threat of nuclear war and questions about whether a person would ever actually “push the button”? That still feels relevant. “Every thinking person fears nuclear war, and every technological state plans for it. Everyone knows it is madness, and every nation has an excuse.” — Carl Sagan— Don Winslow (@donwinslow) March 8, 2026 However, it’s 2026, and there’s nary a space tunnel in sight, so that one was a bust. It’s wild to remember how we assumed things like flying cars and easy space travel would be common in adulthood. (And yet somehow Google Maps still feels like a miracle every time we use it.) It feels like we’re farther from actual telepathy than we imagined in the ’80s, but who knows? With advancements in nanotechnology and the Wild West of AI, even the near future feels entirely unpredictable. In 1985, wild-haired scientist “Doc” asked a philosophical question in Back to the Future: “Since when can weathermen predict the weather, much less the future?” Thankfully, we’ve drastically improved our ability to predict the weather since then. Predicting the future, however, remains as impossible as it has always been. The post Gen X teens in 1986 predicted what life would be like today. Here’s what they got right. appeared first on Upworthy.