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A Series of Tubes

  • List of alchemical substances - Wikipedia

    "Many of these terms were in common use into the 20th century."

    I hear many of these terms in common usage today, like potash, tartar, spirits, soda/soda ash, lime, soda lime, slacked lime, quicklime, lye, alkali, caustic soda, caustic potash, caustic alkali, quicksilver, chalk, cinnabar, fools gold, fulminating silver, fulminating gold, gypsum, vitriol has taken on a less specific meaning, aqua regia, turpentines, lead sugar, sulfur.

    I think the reason that so many of these terms are retained is that the substances they refer to have been known for thousands of years in some cases.

    brimstone is a much cooler name for sulfur that should be brought back. aqua vitae is a nice name for ethanol. the names of metals haven't changed.

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  • INTERPRETATIONS OF POWERS OF 10

    A nice trip up and down the scale of things. I especially like the ones from 10^1 to 10^14, inhumane numbers attempting to be brought to a human scale.

    Source: CRC Standard Mathematical Tables and Formulas (Zwillinger, Daniel) (Z-Library)

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  • Figs and Fig Wasps coupled sexual reproduction
    www.scanofthemonth.com Discovering Nature's Engineering Marvels Through Advanced CT Scans

    Join us as we unveil the intricate beauty of plants and fungi through the lens of industrial CT scanning technology. See nature in a whole new light.

    Discovering Nature's Engineering Marvels Through Advanced CT Scans

    Figs and fig wasps have a tightly coordinated reproductive cycle, and have been cospeciating for 70 to 90 million years. The pollination of figs is accomplished in an internal cavity only accessible to a specific species of wasp. The wasp enters through an opening that is only just large enough for it to get through, loosing it's wings and antenna in the process. Pollen on the wasp pollinate the fig's internal flowers, and the wasp lays it's eggs in some of the flowers before dying there. When the male wasps hatch, they fertilize the unhatched females, and burrow tunnels out of the fig before also dying inside it. When the females hatch, they exit the fig through the tunnels, taking pollen with them to search for a fig within which to lay their eggs.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syconium https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fig_wasp

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  • An introduction to Shader Art Coding

    A very good introduction to shader programming, goes through all the basics and offers lots of tools to help get you started. Get out there a program a shader.

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  • Scientists Recreate Pink Floyd Song by Reading Brain Signals of Listeners
    journals.plos.org Music can be reconstructed from human auditory cortex activity using nonlinear decoding models

    Using combined regression-based decoding models and encoding analyses, this study successfully reconstructed a Pink Floyd song from recorded neural activity, revealing involvement of the superior temporal gyrus in information processing during music perception, and making an important step towards a...

    Music can be reconstructed from human auditory cortex activity using nonlinear decoding models

    Reconstruction of auditory stimulus from intracranial electroencephalograms.

    Cool diagram from the paper: !

    Here's a phys.org write up of it also, with the audio easy to listen to.

    https://phys.org/news/2023-08-brain-patients-scientists-reconstruct-pink.amp

    >sourced from https://lemmy.ml/post/3589646

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  • List of unusual deaths - Wikipedia

    Some very strange ways some people have apparently died.

    Some of my favorites: >11 September 1063: Béla I of Hungary, when the Holy Roman Empire decided to launch a military expedition against Hungary to restore young Solomon to the throne, was seriously injured when "his throne broke beneath him" in his manor at Dömös.[68] The king—who was "half-dead", according to the Illuminated Chronicle—was taken to the western borders of his kingdom, where he died at the creek Kanizsa on 11 September 1063.[69][70]

    >9 March 2001: Bernd Jürgen Brandes was voluntarily slaughtered and eaten by Armin Meiwes, following an appointment via internet. At his request, Meiwes first amputated his penis and they unsuccessfully tried to eat it. Meiwes taped the entire amputation and killing, and conserved and ate Brandes' meat. Meiwes was eventually arrested and sentenced to life in prison. Meiwes became a vegetarian during his prison sentence.

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  • The Yandex Leak: How a Russian Search Giant Uses Consumer Data
    www.confiant.com The Yandex Leak: How a Russian Search Giant Uses Consumer Data

    In late January 2023, almost 45 GB of source code from the Russian search giant Yandex was leaked on BreachForums by a former Yandex employee.

    The Yandex Leak: How a Russian Search Giant Uses Consumer Data

    Yandex software source code leak examined, and some history about the companies relationship to the Russian government. An interesting look at what goes on under the hood of a big data advertising business like Google.

    cross-posted from: https://discuss.tchncs.de/post/1680842

    > cross-posted from: https://discuss.tchncs.de/post/1680837 > > > I feel it's relevant, because of it confirming the possibility of "big tech" spying and cooperating with 3-letter agencies.

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  • AKAT-1 Analogue Computer - reference photo for 3D model by Bethany Fox - (?) Muzeum Techniki, Warsaw, Poland

    cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/4807979

    > Source: AKAT-1 Analogue Computer (by Bethany Fox - ArtStation): > > An iconic Polish analog computer from the 60s made for my friends' awesome FMP set in a dystopian fascist museum > Authored at 4k. Has a clear screen that isn't shown in Painter since it displays opaque. > > The post only says "Reference picture", but I think it's the one at "Muzeum Techniki" in Warsaw, Poland: > https://flickr.com/photos/mwichary/2231616877/in/album-72157603823734926/ > > More pictures from the museum on Marcin Wichary's Flickr album: > https://flickr.com/photos/mwichary/sets/72157603823734926/ > > Some info from Jacek Karpiński's Wikipedia: > > > The breakthrough achievement of Karpiński's career was the construction of AKAT-1 in 1959 in co-operation with engineer Janusz Tomaszewski. AKAT-1 was a pioneering work – the world's first differential equations analyzer based on transistors. Karpiński built the device during his spell at the Polish Academy of Science's Institute of Automatics, where he found employment after the success of AAH. The aim of AKAT-1 was to simulate various complex dynamic processes like heat transfer or a shock absorber's mechanics. The innovativeness of the device was acknowledged by historians of computer science – e.g. Maciej Sysło claims it has to be conceded that Karpiński's effort preceded any other similar device. The construction was also lauded for its aesthetical merits – the panel designed by leading Polish artists – Emil Cieślar, Olgierd Rutkowski, Stanisław Siemek and Andrzej Wróblewski had been considered to 'innovatively merge all functions in a congruent and attractive form that anticipated the future trends'. The machine has been domestically welcomed warmly, having been covered by a host of country-wide media, including national television TVP1 and Polish Film Chronicle.

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  • How dangerous are magnetic items near an MRI magnet?
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  • Barbenheimer and our Malleable Reality
    theluddite.org The Luddite

    An anticapitalist tech blog. Embrace the technology that liberates us. Smash that which does not.

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  • Neural network model of gene expression - Vohradsky 2001

    A model of gene regulatory networks using the mathematical model for recurrent neural nets from computer science. It's such a great way to describe how a cell 'knows' things. every single celled organism or cell in a body contains within a complex information processing chemical network of gene-regulating proteins. One way to think of it is that every individual cell integrates information like a neural network. Good read, there are newer papers on this subject, but I'm not sure if there are better ones.

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  • The social ideology of the motorcar - Ecologise
    ecologise.in The social ideology of the motorcar - Ecologise

    “The worst thing about cars is that they are like castles or villas by the sea: luxury goods invented for the exclusive pleasure of a very rich minority, and which in conception and nature were never intended for the people”. So starts Andre Gorz’s justly famous 1973 essay which remains as relevant ...

    The social ideology of the motorcar - Ecologise

    Really great description of the american sprawl. These issues eat away my soul every single day, and this guy wrote about it in 1973.

    Some of my favorite excerpts: >The invention of the personal automobile, and destruction of public transportation, was a triumph of capitalist drug-peddling; suddenly, all at once, everyone’s personal mobility became dependent on a single, new commodity, gasoline. Without it, we are unable to function, since urban sprawl and suburbanization now means we can’t even walk to work if we wanted to.

    >“The typical American devotes more than 1500 hours a year (which is 30 hours a week, or 4 hours a day, including Sundays) to his [or her] car. This includes the time spent behind the wheel, both in motion and stopped, the hours of work to pay for it and to pay for gas, tires, tolls, insurance, tickets, and taxes .Thus it takes this American 1500 hours to go 6000 miles (in the course of a year). Three and a half miles take him (or her) one hour. In countries that do not have a transportation industry, people travel at exactly this speed on foot, with the added advantage that they can go wherever they want and aren’t restricted to asphalt roads.”

    >You’ll observe that automobile capitalism has thought of everything. Just when the car is killing the car, it arranges for the alternatives to disappear, thus making the car compulsory. So first the capitalist state allowed the rail connections between the cities and the surrounding countryside to fall to pieces, and then it did away with them.

    >These splintered cities are strung out along empty streets lined with identical developments; and their urban landscape (a desert) says, “These streets are made for driving as quickly as possible from work to home and vice versa. You go through here, you don’t live here. At the end of the workday everyone ought to stay at home, and anyone found on the street after nightfall should be considered suspect of plotting evil.” In some American cities the act of strolling in the streets at night is grounds for suspicion of a crime.

    >No means of fast transportation and escape will ever compensate for the vexation of living in an uninhabitable city in which no one feels at home or the irritation of only going into the city to work or, on the other hand, to be alone and sleep.

    https://lemmygrad.ml/comment/1364150

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  • How Brands Use Design & Marketing to Control Your Mind

    It was a well thought out and organized description of advertising, as a form of information transmission and a form of propaganda from someone working in the industry.

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  • Why the Titan sub failed

    The simplest and fairly well thought out idea behind OceanGate's failure. With demos!

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  • Compressors - Turbine Engines: A Closer Look

    A sort of museum style tour of some jet engine compressors at a repair shop.

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  • The Physics of GriGri | When does No-Hands Belay Fail?

    A well organized description of how a GriGri works, and when it fails. Based on good physics, not a lot of math in the video itself.

    cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/1167257

    > A good recent video from Hard is Easy on the GriGri belay device

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  • How the motion of DNA controls gene activity
    www.sciencedaily.com How the motion of DNA controls gene activity

    Despite being densely packed to fit into the nucleus, chromosomes storing our genetic information are always in motion. This allows specific regions to come into contact and thereby activate a gene. A group of scientists now visualized this dynamic process and give novel insights into the physical c...

    How the motion of DNA controls gene activity

    Using florescent markers, the researchers are able to track pairs of DNA loci in 3D, showing the interaction between distantly spaced parts of the genome. Implications in gene expression as enhancers and promoters for genes may be very far away from said gene.

    Paper: https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adf5568

    Sadly no SciHub :( https://sci-hub.st/https://doi.org/10.1126/science.adf5568

    secure DM if you want the paper.

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  • Potential CRISPR alternative gene-editing tool occurs naturally in animals
    newatlas.com Potential CRISPR alternative gene-editing tool occurs naturally in animals

    CRISPR-Cas9 has been the household name of genetic engineering tools over the past decade, but there might be other, better ways. MIT scientists have now demonstrated an alternative called Fanzor, which is naturally found in animals so could be a better fit for human use.

    Potential CRISPR alternative gene-editing tool occurs naturally in animals

    An interesting paper describing a eukaryote native RNA-guided endonuclease, like CRISPR. Seems less efficient at the moment, but it the scientific community gets behind it and starts developing the methods, it may superseded the efficacy of CRISPR in eukaryotic cells.

    The Paper:

    https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-023-06356-2

    (unfortunately not available on SciHub https://sci-hub.st/https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-023-06356-2 )

    If you want a copy of the paper, secure DM (matrix).

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  • Building an Electric Cargo Bike with Full Suspension & Cable Steering

    Pretty neat mini series about aluminum tube fixturing and welding used to build a custom cargo bike.

    cross-posted from: https://feddit.it/post/573825

    > Yeah I know he has hundreds of thousands euro of equipment > > > https://youtu.be/Ie3uTHq4LSE

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  • Principles of Neural Science, Sixth Edition (Eric R. Kandel, James H. Schwartz etc.)

    This is a really great course, taking you from a beginner in neuro-science, to a high level. It's probably worth having some background in biology, but the first few chapters do give a very brief review of some relevant topics, like genetic techniques. I haven't finished reading it yet, but I find myself picking it up all the time.

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  • Neuronal wiring diagram of an adult brain (Drosophila)
    www.biorxiv.org Neuronal wiring diagram of an adult brain

    Connections between neurons can be mapped by acquiring and analyzing electron microscopic (EM) brain images. In recent years, this approach has been applied to chunks of brains to reconstruct local connectivity maps that are highly informative, yet inadequate for understanding brain function more gl...

    Neuronal wiring diagram of an adult brain

    Pre-print describing their project to map out every connection in the adult Drosophila brain, parsed by AI and reviewed by experts. They also link to the viewer https://flywire.ai/ Which is openly accesable and can be used to explore the fly brain.

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  • Kinetochore and Mitosis

    WEHImovies and a playlist of interesting molecular-biological animations. Evolutionary selection operates int the realm chemistry and physics, and these videos offer a fantastic insight into that relationship.

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  • Antenna Theory Propagation

    Succinct intuitive introduction to antenna theory.

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  • I Am The Last Surviving Prosecutor of the Nuremberg Trials

    Description of the Nuremberg trials, a direct account.

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  • Playing with Cathode Ray Tubes (CRTs - with full explanation)

    Fun demos of CRTs with a brief explanation of the purpose of the different grids.

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  • Single electron double slit wave experiment

    Straight forward demonstration of electron wave-particle character.

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  • The sound of a dialup modem, pictured

    Communication protocol of a dialup handshake depicted with a spectrogram.

    cross-posted from: https://sh.itjust.works/post/500500

    > cross-posted from: https://sh.itjust.works/post/319324 > > > Source: https://www.windytan.com/2012/11/the-sound-of-dialup-pictured.html?m=1

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  • Optimising an Air Engine

    Interesting piston engine design that runs on compressed air. Very simple, and prototyped in the home shop.

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  • Pen Wiggler
    diode.zone Pen Wiggler

    It's a vibrating robot that draws using closed loop feedback. This video was made possible by my patrons, [https://patreon.com/scanlime] Project files: https://github.com/scanlime/wiggler

    Pen Wiggler

    Pretty neat low-fidelity closed-loop control robot made from cheap parts. It's all in the code.

    cross-posted from: https://diode.zone/videos/watch/e5c80ea3-7c9c-4feb-9afd-d03bcf58c49f

    > It's a vibrating robot that draws using closed loop feedback. This video was made possible by my patrons, [https://patreon.com/scanlime] Project files: https://github.com/scanlime/wiggler

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  • How big is a visible photon?

    Huygens Optics demonstrating an interesting experiment that really challenges your incorrect intuitions about optics and quantum mechanics.

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  • Should Knowledge Be Free?

    A discussion about the ethics of scientific journals, with compelling arguments. Giving some love to https://sci-hub.st/

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  • Movements of the Retinae of Jumping Spiders (Salticidae: Dendryphantinae) in Response to Visual Stimuli
    journals.biologists.com Movements of the Retinae of Jumping Spiders (Salticidae: Dendryphantinae) in Response to Visual Stimuli

    ABSTRACT. Movements made by the principal eyes of jumping spiders (Phidippus and Metaphidippus spp.) have been investigated using an ophthalmoscopic technique which permits simultaneous observation and stimulation of the retinal surface.The eye-movements are produced by six muscles. Four are attache...

    Movements of the Retinae of Jumping Spiders (Salticidae: Dendryphantinae) in Response to Visual Stimuli

    Awesome diagrams. They create an apparatus for tracking the field of view of a jumping spider to study what it's looking at.

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  • Amish building move!

    How to move a building by hand. or Trying to understand local dialects

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  • VFD Displays

    Vacuum florescent displays, a really nostalgic subject, and great macro photography of the technology.

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  • FASCISM: An In-Depth Explanation

    Very interesting exploration of politics, ethics, and human nature. He present information in a very level way without too much editorializing. This video is very approachable and level headed.

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  • The DSM LCD (like) you've never seen

    Beautiful photography of old Dynamic Scattering Mode LCDs, an interesting technology.

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  • Treat your to-read pile like a river

    "you're overwhelmed by things you do want to read." Just a nice article talking about dealing with information overload. Motivating to get back into reading

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  • Pyrotherapy

    Using heat to fight infections. Eg. infecting people with Plasmodium vivax (malaria), which causes an intense fever which can help cure syphilis, and then curing the patient of malaria.

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  • The Lorentz Oscillator and its Applications

    Widely applicable model that describes how electrons bound to an atom respond and generate electromagnetic fields, similar to a mass on a spring. Relevant to understanding EM waves and the usually glossed over topics of Reflection, Refraction, Absorption and optical properties of plasmas. Very interesting.

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  • Self-study computational neuroscience | Coding, Textbooks, Math

    Golden resources related to computational neuroscience and an introduction to the field. Artem Kirsanov, with incredible book recommendations and an entertaining format.

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