[-] [email protected] 5 points 1 day ago

Even despite the past year+ shenanigans with tiktok's algorithm, it's still scary good at figuring out one's preferences, and there's a lot of good left-wing people on there. The trick is to make extensive use of the like button, it's really as simple as that.

[-] [email protected] 6 points 1 day ago

I recent got back onto tiktok, and despite being a cis bi man, it seems to think I'm a trans woman and/or lesbian due to all the videos I've liked out of solidarity to those commnities. Not really complaining though, most of their videos are funny as fuck.

[-] [email protected] 11 points 1 day ago

Tortillas are used a lot on the international space station. They're a very practical way to keep all the food under control in microgravity.

[-] [email protected] 17 points 2 days ago

(Insert usual caveat about how my respect for SpaceX's accomplishments is strictly for the actual scientists and engineers and technicians actually doing the work, and not for the know-nothing dipshit who owns most of the shares.)

In fairness they are trying to develop an entirely new type of spacecraft that's never been tried before by anyone, an upper stage that's actually reusable without refurbishment. My hope is that the Chinese space agency sees what works and what doesn't with Starship, and applies those lessons to their R&D program.

[-] [email protected] 2 points 3 days ago

Serial Experiments Lain. The story of a hyperfragmented, hypercapitalist corporate hellscape where everyone (even schoolkids) are carrying around a 24/7-internet-connected pocket computer that they mainly use to shitpost and gossip.

[-] [email protected] 6 points 3 days ago

I keep seeing people here talking about some Andor TV series, but I have never once heard them mention Commander Shran. What's the deal with that?

[-] [email protected] 56 points 3 days ago

This woman is fearless.

[-] [email protected] 9 points 4 days ago

It's the beginning of the end!

[-] [email protected] 23 points 4 days ago

This is seriously impressive work. They even seem to have done an in-flight full engine shutdown, and restart of at least one landing engine while in freefall. That's a major engineering challenge.

[-] [email protected] 30 points 4 days ago

This is why I believe that we need to be on tiktok and youtube way more than we are. They're the new public square. Get people interested in communism via short form video, leveraging righteous anger and comedy both. Once they're hooked, then send them blog post links.

If Lenin were alive today I firmly believe that he would be on tiktok constantly - and that he'd be amazing at it.

[-] [email protected] 30 points 5 days ago

Of course the obvious result is that more children will simply go missing after being murdered by their SAer.

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submitted 2 weeks ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

"This rocket that was involved in the incident on the launch pad this week..."

"The one where the front fell off?"

"Yeah."

"Yeah, that's not very typical, I'd like to make that point."

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submitted 1 month ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

Sometimes a BOTW isn't terribly compelling.

This is not one of those times. This is one of the ones that will be remembered.

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submitted 1 month ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

I've been digging up some of my own old programming projects, polishing them for the public releases I'd always intended. The first is Notable, a pastebin server clone. It's under the AGPLv3. It has a few design principles in mind:

  • Must work over Tor unmodified, no javascript, light page loads, fits within the standard window size.
  • Must be as easy as possible to run. No outside database needed, it uses sqlite3.
  • Control over if notes expire, and custom time limits.
  • Notes can be updated or delete with the randomized per-note password given when creating a note.
  • Understands Markdown.
  • Written to be portable. If Go and CGo compile to your server's OS, Notable will work.

The README has further details.

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submitted 1 month ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

Now I'm not talking about smuggling anything illegal, I aim to keep my activities on this side of the border strictly legal. Not out of love for cops but as a defence against them harassing me. I'm thinking about things like "helping" Americans pay only $2000 for an iphone instead of $3000, that sort of thing. Any pointers, tips, ideas?

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Calvin & Hobbes Search Engine (michaelyingling.com)
submitted 4 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

An essential tool for finding that perfect individual strip from the greatest comic ever created.

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submitted 4 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
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submitted 5 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

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submitted 5 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

My god they are on point with this one, such as when Mike casually commits verbal murder.

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submitted 5 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

78 thousand laughing emojis and counting!

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submitted 6 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

Study detects synergistic effect making substances more dangerous, raising alarm since humans are exposed to both

Few human-made substances are as individually ubiquitous and dangerous as PFAS and microplastics, and when they join forces there is a synergistic effect that makes them even more toxic and pernicious, new research suggests.

The study’s authors exposed water fleas to mixtures of the toxic substances and found they suffered more severe health effects, including lower birth rates, and developmental problems, such as delayed sexual maturity and stunted growth.

The enhanced toxic effects raise alarm because PFAS and microplastics are researched and regulated in isolation from one one another, but humans are virtually always exposed to both. The research also showed those fleas previously exposed to chemical pollution were less able to withstand the new exposures.

The findings “underscore the critical need to understand the impacts of chemical mixtures on wildlife and human health”, wrote the study’s authors, who are with the University of Birmingham in the United Kingdom.

PFAS are a class of about 15,000 compounds typically used to make products that resist water, stains and heat. They are called “forever chemicals” because they do not naturally break down and accumulate, and are linked to cancer, kidney disease, liver problems, immune disorders, birth defects and other serious health problems.

Microplastics are tiny bits of plastic that are either intentionally added to products or are shed by plastic goods as they deteriorate. They have been found throughout human bodies, and can cross the blood-brain barrier. Research has linked them to developmental harms, hormone disruption cardiovascular disease and other health issues.

Plastic is often treated with PFAS, so microplastics can contain the chemical.

Researchers compared a group of water fleas that had never been exposed to pollution with another group that had been exposed to pollution in the past. Water fleas have high sensitivity to chemicals so they are frequently used to study ecological toxicity.

Both groups were exposed to bits of PET, a common microplastic, as well as PFOA and PFOS, two of the most common and dangerous PFAS compounds. The mixture reflected conditions common in lakes around the world.

The study’s authors found the mixture to be more toxic than PFAS and microplastics in isolation. They attributed about 40% of the increased toxicity to a synergy among the substances that makes them even more dangerous. The authors theorized the synergy has to do with the interplay in the charges of microplastics and PFAS compounds.

The remainder of the increased toxicity was attributed to simple addition of their toxic effects. Fleas exposed to the mixture showed a “markedly reduced number of offspring”, the authors said. They were also smaller at maturation and showed delayed sexual growth. The effects they observed “significantly advance” the understanding of exposure to multiple chemicals and substances, the authors wrote.

“It is imperative to continue investigating the toxicological impacts of these substances on wildlife to inform regulatory and conservation efforts,” they said.

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submitted 6 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

A pale blue-green enigma, the planet Uranus has long fascinated astronomers precisely because of its extreme distance, some 1.6 billion miles (2.6 billion km) from Earth. While it is comparatively easy to gaze upon neighboring celestial bodies like the Moon and the planets Mars and Venus, Uranus is difficult to see without the most powerful telescopes, such as the James Webb Space Telescope. As technology has advanced, it has unlocked more secrets of the strange, tilted planet (it orbits on its side compared to other planets in the solar system), from the fact that it may rain diamonds to discovering previously-unknown moons.

Now a trio of recent studies has revealed that one of its moons, Miranda, likely has a stirring ocean beneath its surface, meaning it could harbor extraterrestrial life, and that the planet’s own internal dynamics are more bizarre than we ever imagined.

In a study published in The Planetary Science Journal, University of North Dakota astronomer Caleb Strong explained that their research revealed Miranda likely has a subsurface ocean, which Strong described as “weird.”

“It was not expected based on previous estimates of its size, which means there are likely many surprises awaiting us in the Uranus system,” Strong told Salon.

He added that it is premature to assume the presence of oceans means there is life on the planet, telling Salon that “we really don't know enough about Miranda or the Uranus system to say. While interesting, the question of life is beyond the scope of our paper.”

Astrobiologists believe that extraterrestrial life, if it exists, would require a planet or planetary moon with water and carbon in order to form organic molecules, which is why there is interest in Miranda. The Miranda paper relied on images taken from the Voyager 2 probe, the one and only spacecraft to visit Uranus, to reach these conclusions. The Voyager 2 probe was also used by a recent study from the journal Nature Astronomy which used those images to learn about the magnetosphere of Uranus. A magnetosphere is the region around a planet where its magnetic field is dominant, protecting the planet from the Sun’s destructive particles. According to Jamie Jasinski, a space plasma physicist at the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, past space voyages have provided mysterious readings about the exact nature of the Uranus magnetosphere. Their new research transforms everything.

“Our findings change the view that the Uranus system is an extreme environment pertaining to intense radiation belts and a magnetosphere (or magnetic bubble) that has no plasma from the moons,” Jasinski said. “These were two major mysteries leftover from the Voyager 2 flyby, both of which can be reasonably explained by the arrival of an intense solar wind event that compressed the magnetosphere dramatically just before the flyby started i.e. squashing the magnetosphere to about 20% of its size.”

This finding has implications for another moon with an ocean, Enceladus, which orbits Saturn. Because of the strong magnetosphere of its host planet, the water on Enceladus is ionized and gets trapped within the Uranus magnetosphere. While scientists expected to see this same ionization near the Uranus moons, they were surprised to see a “vacuum magnetosphere” with no water ions. This made them speculate that the moons are inert with no ongoing activity, but that assumption was literally smashed when they realized a solar wind event had impacted Uranus several days before Voyager 2’s flyby. The astronomers realized that this could have increased the plasma loss and emptied the magnetosphere of evidence of lunar activity, and similarly could have explained the intense electron radiation belts they observed.

“If we had arrived a week earlier with Voyager 2, then the spacecraft would have made completely different measurements, and our discoveries would have been very different. Voyager 2 arrived at just the wrong time!” Jasinski said.

The scientists who studied Miranda also used Voyager 2 to discern features they may have otherwise missed.

“Miranda may have a thin ice shell (~30 km/18 miles), which would explain why it has the weird ridge structures that would have formed in response to severe tidal stress. And of course it may have a subsurface ocean,” Strong said. “Its subsurface ocean is likely to be relatively deep (~100 km/62 miles) compared to the estimated depth, say of the ocean on Saturn's moon Enceladus (~10 km/6 miles).”

The final recent paper was published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Based on the data, also acquired from Voyager 2, researchers led by a University of California Berkeley professor of earth and planetary science speculates that the surface of Uranus is layered and, like oil and water, the two layers never mix.

“After working on this project for more than ten years, I opened my laptop one morning and could not believe my eyes,” Militzer said. “The materials in my computer simulations had formed two separate layers, a bit like oil and water. This was my ‘Eureka’ moment and became the basis of the new paper.”

As for the paper itself, it is “primarily about the interiors and the magnetic fields of Uranus and Neptune, not about their atmospheres,” Militzer told Salon. “Their magnetic fields are disordered and do not have the well-defined north and south poles that we know from Earth, Jupiter and Saturn. This has been a long-standing puzzle since the Voyager 2 spacecraft detected this in 1986.”

This explains why both Uranus and its solar system neighbor, Neptune, have magnetic fields very different from the one we experience on Earth.

“Uranus and Neptune have disordered magnetic fields because they produce these fields in a thin water-rich layer in their mantles while our Earth generates its magnetic field in the core,” Militzer said.

As noted, it is extremely hard to make observations about Uranus because of its distance and the fact that we’ve only sent a probe to visit once. To make matters worse, it probably won't be until the 2040s before anything else we send there arrives. But that doesn’t mean scientists aren't making do with what they have, while revealing how truly weird this planetary system is.

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submitted 6 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

In this new exciting trivia contest between Mike "Goldfish Memory" Stoklasa and Rich "Voice of an Angel" Evans, our host Handsome Jay quizzes our two contestants on how well they remember their own show!

Witness such exciting events as:

  • Mike forgetting things!
  • Rich laughing!
  • Mike forgetting more things!
  • Rich laughing more!

Who will win? Who will lose? Who's to say?

view more: next ›

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