-
I was born on December 17th, 2006, and that's pretty much it.
-
The Apple iPhone was released and has become one of the most popular objects ever.
-
I passed the SAIL test in 2nd grade, and I was able to join SAIL in 3rd grade. I've been in SAIL for five years now, and it's my favorite class. We do lots of fun projects, and I love it. Right now we're doing a Romanian penpals project, where we send letters to Romania.
-
The eighth Harry Potter book came out then. It was actually a play about his son James, who became a Slytherin, and had to defeat Voldemort's unknown child and save everyone from Voldemort returning. It was weirdly awesome. As an added bonus, the day it came out was Harry Potter's birthday.
-
The first black hole to be photographed. It was a supermassive black hole at the center of a galaxy, M87, which is a galaxy 56 million light-years away. It proved that scientists aren't crazy people talking about space holes.
-
I got my Chiweenie Cersei then. She was a puppy and liked to bite people. She still bites people. She's just more aggressive than before. I love her though.
-
This happened at the beginning of the school year. We played three songs - Pride of the Regiment, Mountain Songs, and Ancient voices. They were all really fun to play. We're preparing to play new songs for our Spring performance. One of them is from Star Wars.
-
This object was discovered by New Horizons on new years day. It was named 2012 MU69 originally. Arrokoth is the Powhatan word for the sky. It is the farthest out object to be visited by a spacecraft and New Horizons is continuing outward.
-
I was in our school's drama club musical Dear Edwina. I played the plate. It's even sadder than it sounds. I'm the stage manager for our new play The Super Non-Heroes.
-
NASA's Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satelite (or TESS) discovered a small star system made out of more than one earth size planets circling a dwarf star, that looks like it has good conditions for life. There were no detectable flares from the star, and they are close enough to get about 86% of the energy we get from the sun. TOI 700 d might be able to support life later on and is being looked at more closely. It was discovered by Emily Gilbert.