While goofing around with a retired coil-on-plug pack, @MLE_online and I tried driving it far faster than spec. Fast enough to generate musical tones.
Please enjoy this rendition of "Ode to Joy" from Beethoven's Symphony #9 performed by sparky danger organ.
This hideous hack proved the concept is possible. But making it play WELL (bring it in tune, for starters) will take a lot more work.
More on the NY Times 'lab leak' fiasco from This Week in Virology. Again, Kathleen Kingsburg, Patrick Healy and the opinion editors made a choice to give a platform to this nonsense from Alina Chan. It was a mistake. Here's a discussion among experts. https://www.microbe.tv/twiv/
One more cool generator video - threading the rotor (the rotating bit) out of the stator (the stationary bit) on a 32MW synchronous generator.
You see the four poles with the magnetic windings sticking out around the rotor shaft - they call these “salient poles”. There’s also slip-rings on the rotor so it can get DC power (ballpark a hundred volts,
couple hundred amps) from the motor/generator exciter to energize the electromagnets (poles) on the rotor.
WE’RE GETTING A NEW CAT!
Internet, please bid a warm welcome to Miss Saison du Pris, late of Boone County Animal Care and Control and arriving at Beercats Manor likely tomorrow after some last-minute routine tests.
The last picture on the right may well be the moment I became smitten.
A pair of Texas professors figured out that their female students have sex and, boy, they do not like it.
So now the philosophy professor and finance professor are suing for the right to punish their students who, outside of class, have abortions.
"Pregnancy is not a disease, and elective abortions are not 'health care,'" University of Texas at Austin professor Daniel Bonevac sneers in a federal court filing with professor John Hatfield.
Instead, Bonevac writes, because pregnancy is the result of "voluntary and consensual sexual intercourse," students should not be allowed time off to get abortions.
If the students disobey and miss class for abortion care, the filing continues, the professors should be allowed to flunk students.
Additionally, Bonevac asserts that he has a right to refuse to employ a teaching assistant who has had an abortion, calling such women "criminals."
https://www.salon.com/2024/06/03/texas-professors-to-fail-students-seek-abortions/
Remember our siblings who, for whatever reason, are not able to be their true selves this Pride Month.
Hello out there!
More than 46 years after launch, more than 15 billion miles from home, NASA's Voyager 1 spacecraft is restored, rebooted, and once again sending data back to Earth.
https://blogs.nasa.gov/voyager/2024/05/22/voyager-1-resumes-sending-science-data-from-two-instruments/ #science #space #tech #nasa
• An Oxford comma walks into a bar where it spends the evening watching the television, getting drunk, and smoking cigars.
• A dangling participle walks into a bar. Enjoying a cocktail and chatting with the bartender, the evening passes pleasantly.
• A bar was walked into by the passive voice.
• An oxymoron walked into a bar, and the silence was deafening.
• Two quotation marks walk into a “bar.”
• A malapropism walks into a bar, looking for all intensive purposes like a wolf in cheap clothing, muttering epitaphs and casting dispersions on his magnificent other, who takes him for granite.
• Hyperbole totally rips into this insane bar and absolutely destroys everything.
• A question mark walks into a bar?
• A non sequitur walks into a bar. In a strong wind, even turkeys can fly.
• Papyrus and Comic Sans walk into a bar. The bartender says, "Get out -- we don't serve your type."
• A mixed metaphor walks into a bar, seeing the handwriting on the wall but hoping to nip it in the bud.
• A comma splice walks into a bar, it has a drink and then leaves.
• Three intransitive verbs walk into a bar. They sit. They converse. They depart.
• A synonym strolls into a tavern.
• At the end of the day, a cliché walks into a bar -- fresh as a daisy, cute as a button, and sharp as a tack.
• A run-on sentence walks into a bar it starts flirting. With a cute little sentence fragment.
• Falling slowly, softly falling, the chiasmus collapses to the bar floor.
• A figure of speech literally walks into a bar and ends up getting figuratively hammered.
• An allusion walks into a bar, despite the fact that alcohol is its Achilles heel.
• The subjunctive would have walked into a bar, had it only known.
• A misplaced modifier walks into a bar owned a man with a glass eye named Ralph.
• The past, present, and future walked into a bar. It was tense.
• A dyslexic walks into a bra.
• A verb walks into a bar, sees a beautiful noun, and suggests they conjugate. The noun declines.
• A simile walks into a bar, as parched as a desert.
• A gerund and an infinitive walk into a bar, drinking to forget.
• A hyphenated word and a non-hyphenated word walk into a bar and the bartender nearly chokes on the irony.
@moelassus @jeanettepizzurro Sorry for your loss, he sounds like quite a character
A teacher friend of mine posted this on FB, and I haven't been able to stop laughing since I read it:
OMG - a few weeks ago someone posted an idea for outsmarting ChatGPT. Imbed weird instructions in white font color in the assignment. If they’re just popping the instructions into AI the weirdness will be included. So guess who just got a paper about Zora Neale Hurston that has references to ostriches and labradoodles?!
@rmogull Smart dog!
Over on the bird site people are sharing a piece of advice that really struck them. There have been many for me, but the most recent came from a man on YouTube teaching his daughter to snowboard. At one point, she says “daddy I’m a little scared“ and he replies back “ that’s OK! What do we do when we’re scared?“ And she says with the most chin-up-eyes-forward-fire-in-my-veins tone: “We do it scared.”
Father, Fiancé, Volunteer EMT, (conflicted) Veteran, Computer Geek, Perpetual Student. Command line kind of guy (he/him) Very amateur woodworker, crude sketcher, proud nerd, liberal, wished I knew more math and science.
I’m willing to be wrong, certainty often means that I don’t actually understand the problem