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Why do ~all mice and trackballs have keys with short travel? For keyboards, ~most custom builds use switches with large-fraction-of-cm travel. For mice and trackballs, I haven't seen a single custom build (not ploopy, not a few other trackballs or mice I've seen) that uses something other than microswitches, perhaps with a level arrangement, that gives travel in the range of a single mm.

What would be wrong with a mouse (or a trackball) that used mechanical keyboard switches for buttons?

nitter.net/fchollet/status/155

I am really confused. This seems like Amazon being (wilfully?) blind to people using their platform for copyright infringement against book publishers. Do book publishers have ~zero clout? If CDs were still common, would Amazon be just as passive if this were happening to music?

Random, riddle-ish:

Population of Goms, VS (in Switzerland) is going to be 10x normal for the next two weeks.

TIL:

etymonline.com/search?q=milk
> milk (n.)
> (...) Of milk-like plant juices or saps from c. 1200 (...)

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The sigil was drawn in ash, salt, and blood. The candles, carefully placed at the cardinal points, flared up, as a tired figure appeared.
"You have misspelled Azth'luh."
"I didn't," the summoner said.
"There, you have written Azth'loh. Summons an editor, not a demon."
"I know."
#MicroFiction #TootFic #SmallStories

Some part of our "ability" to read things from faces of other humans seems to be projection, while we intuitively think otherwise: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kuleshov

robryk boosted

@WanderingBeekeeper

But when I look at small billiard balls
They aren't like normal billiard balls
They can pass through both slits
Just like light they deblur a bit.

Should I say that light is like balls
Or that balls are like light
And that I don't know balls at all?

When it's raining, how much water in the air is in form of liquid compared with water in the of water vapor?

std::borrow::Cow is a very useful way to provide a value that can be copied on demand _for types that can be cloned_. In many cases it would make sense to:
- for cloneable types accept Cow<T>,
- for other types accept T.

We could make this work with Cow<B>, using a very weird construct (have B be essentially equivalent to Infeasible, but implement ToOwned with Owned = the_type_we_want). Is there a less cumbersome way?

I (often?) complained that the history that's taught in schools is history of politics and of military. I've realized that the history of military isn't really taught outside of its intersection with history of politics: the influence of technology on military was very spottily covered (I remember hearing about effects of the invention of crossbows, firearms in general, and sailing ships (as opposed to oar-powered ones), but nothing about observation balloons -- even in the context of Napoleon, I can't recall a single discussion of use of new ways to communicate, nothing about Haber process (!), nor about improvements to aiming, guidance, and explosion timing for various weapons).

Why is history, as taught, so devoid of talking about effects of inventions, even in areas that it sort-of covers? My experience is from Polish schools, is it different in other places?

Imagine a hollow shell (with massless walls) filled with an incompressible, nonviscous fluid. How can one find effective moments of inertia of such a shell?

Obviously, when the shell is spherical, the moment of inertia is zero. If the shell is a cube, it seems that the moment of inertia is no larger than the moment of inertia of the fluid outside of the largest inscribed sphere. However, this isn't likely to yield correct results in general: moment of inertia for a spherical shell with 3 perpendicular crossbars through the middle is almost surely lower than that of all the fluid present there.

, a problem in the style of

From the category of people who are in a surprising intersection of categories: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hannes_K

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Pe Lang has a temporary exhibition in Paris (in deniserene.fr/) until ~first week of July: bibliogram.art/p/Cdf2MDjseRm

Pe Lang makes artifacts that, for me, show some nonobvious or obvious-but-often-overlooked physical property. pelang.ch/works.html has some examples (but even not the ones I liked most when I saw his exhibition in, sadly defunct, museum of digital art in Zürich).

It seems that mastodon does server-level blocking ("suspension") of other servers in a way that appears as if it considered all the signatures from that server invalid. Thus, it seems that we can test whether Mastodon server A suspends server B by sending it any public object from B and seeing what the result will be.

That should be non-disruptive, accurate _for Mastodon servers_, and cheap, so it could probably be used to archive the history of suspension graph.

Thoughts on desirability?

To be more precise: the interesting thing is that one can interpret D_JS(A||B) as a mutual information between something for any pair of distributions. (One can do the inverse with D_KL: I(A;B) for any two variables can be interpreted as D_KL between some two distributions.)

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