Currently playing this weeks North American Online League #baduk match: https://online-go.com/game/53724180
It's a good one so far :)
💊 new episode!💊
Trans people are such a small part of the population that very few medical studies are done on us. As a result we end up learning more from each other than we do from our doctors. And that's MESSED UP. So let's talk about it.
Writer, director, & actor Ava Davis joins us to discuss jelly beans, and finally feeling at home in your own body. Also you can't surgery yourself so please don't try.
#trans #transgender #transrights #transrightsarehumanrights
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/tillys-trans-tuesdays/id1661980695
I did get out early this morning, and spent a couple of hours in the park before work. It was slow at first, despite the apparently heavy migration last night, but I wound up sitting for 40 minutes or so at Azalea Pond and the birds came out one by one; 11 warbler species including nice views of a Bay-breasted and a singing Tennessee Warbler.
I ended up with 40 species on the day, and one new species for the year, Lincoln's Sparrow.
Research Article
Knitted origami
Elizabeth L. Wilmer
"Techniques are presented for embedding horizontal, vertical, and45◦diagonal crease lines into garter stitch knitted fabric. While theseare mostly based on standard lace knitting stitches, the horizon-tal creases use double-cable-crossed elongated stitches in a non-standard way. This crease library suffices to knit a model of a squaretwist, a foundational origami tessellation unit."
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/epdf/10.1080/17513472.2023.2191572
Another fun fact:
The Hungarian version of "the tables have turned" is "visszanyal a fagyi"
Which literally translates into
"The ice cream licks back"
🍦
A new study proposes why there are so few insects in the ocean, relating back to the oxygen-centric mechanism they use to harden their exoskeletons!
https://phys.org/news/2023-05-explanation-insects-ocean.html
I recently received my annual letter from Elsevier for a book that I published 10 years ago <https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-94-007-7223-6>. Royalties were insufficient to write a check to me, but Elsevier still sells the book for 118 Euros, and includes it in their library book packages. Tell me again why I published it with a big publisher instead of posting it for free on the Internet so my colleagues could benefit from it?
Hello everyone, let me give my #introduction . I'm a doctoral student from The Philippines, researching about #ClimateChange, #ClimateJustice, #Flooding and #MachineLearning and of course #OpenScience ! Hope I can get to connect with all of you!
Maryland Highway Administration quietly closed my service request from February to review a terrible intersection design. They did not realize that I have a Kanban board called "Local Government" with regular reminders to follow up on service requests I file.
This morning I escalated the close and extracted a promise of adding "guide marks" though the intersection.
Don't try to out-bureaucrat me, I've been forged and sharpened in the glowing furnace of federal contracting project management.
Genuinely shocked to find people don't find proboscis monkeys to be aesthetically pleasing. I think they're beautiful creatures.
Just the Zoo of Us: 192: Proboscis Monkey & Sarcastic Fringehead
Episode webpage: https://maximumfun.org/podcasts/just-the-zoo-of-us/
not an original idea, certainly, but I think the Black Mirror episodes that represent the complexity and nuance of human interaction with technology are almost uniformly more interesting than the ones that just extrapolate to an obviously bad future outcome. Certainly the latter are memorable and significant, but there's a richness to episodes like "San Junipero" or "Be Right Back" and maybe "Striking Vipers" that deal with how technology interplays with intimate personal relationships that has me returning to consideration of then repeatedly.
anyone else decide not to use a piece of open source software because, on the off-chance you might want to contribute a feature or fix, you don't want to write code in a certain programming language or environment? That's me with nodeJS projects. Maybe it's actually really nice to work with if you give it a chance, but it's always been that a pain for me. Also I'd have to be coding in JavaScript.
A capable software engineer and aspirating (sic) cook. Also posting about space stuff (mostly NASA) occasionally
pronouns: he, him