Some guys reviving a scanning electron microscope from early 90s that was being scrapped: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL1OWIgy9S0sOFNL3VpJq7UkqUR78M9EEU (commentary in Polish)
And there's one more eruption near Grindavik (this time closer to the town).
Source of the image: https://en.vedur.is/media/uncategorized/Kort_StadsetningGoss2.jpg
> The use of the system resembled its name, which had been intended to be spurious.
The I in LLM stands for intelligence
On how people now use AI to submit security reports on #curl.
https://daniel.haxx.se/blog/2024/01/02/the-i-in-llm-stands-for-intelligence/
MORPHOTROPHIC, a new novel in 2024.
In a world where the cells that make up our bodies are not committed to any one organism, Marla is confronted by the fickleness of her cytes, and resolves to understand them with help from a centuries-old Flourisher. Swappers like Ruth embrace fluidity, and meet with others to exchange cytes, seeking the perfect mix. But Ruth faces her own crisis, and as the technology to manipulate cytes advances, all three are drawn into a struggle to shape the future of life.
Coming in March 2024.
“The previous May [1921], he had proposed salt iodisation to the canton’s health authority, only to be told, in the recollection of his then assistant, that ‘the people will never, ever permit themselves to accept something like that.’ https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v45/n23/jonah-goodman/a-national-evil via https://mastodon.social/@mhoye/111655219188539326
A thoroughly-proven and low-burden intervention for a horrible medical condition? With at least several years of safe use with well-understood side effects? “The people will never, ever permit themselves to accept something like that”? Yes, we know all about that now don’t we.
A fantastic story to add to our mental model, where it will stand next to
Ignaz Semmelweis (who was persecuted for demanding doctors working at his hospital wash their hands before delivering babies),
rehydration therapy (which cuts deaths from cholera and other diarrhea-based killers by 95+%, see https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2013/07/29/slow-ideas and https://octodon.social/@22/108453773380832231) and
the story of how vitamin C was discovered, then lost for a century, and painfully rediscovered (TERF-minimized Maciej Ceglowski has the canonical blog piece about this that I link to only because I can’t find another treatment of the rise and fall angle yet https://idlewords.com/2010/03/scott_and_scurvy.htm)
#physics riddle
My parents have a garden ornament that contains a "vertical spiral thingy" that can freely[^] rotate. When wine blows, it sometimes rotates clockwise and sometimes counterclockwise. What gives? When it has rotated by 180 deg it should be in the same position as if the wind was blowing in the opposite direction (the cage around it nonwithstanding), so I'd expect it to always rotate in the same direction, or to oscillate.
Some videos: https://photos.app.goo.gl/CQWvBBggW4jXQPKZ9
[^] there might be some weird hysteresis there, because it's basically a wire that slips in a hole
I can finally reveal some research I've been involved with over the past year or so.
We (@redford, @mrtick and I) have reverse engineered the PLC code of NEWAG Impuls EMUs. These trains were locking up for arbitrary reasons after being serviced at third-party workshops. The manufacturer argued that this was because of malpractice by these workshops, and that they should be serviced by them instead of third parti
es.
1/4
Note that https://sensors-eawag.ch/sars/overview.html has recently had very large (positive) derivatives (so much that I'm somewhat surprised not to see anything that looks to my eye as timing variation across different regions).
https://x.com/kayseesee/status/1725587747279380831
For people not wanting to click Twitter links:
> I am proud to present you the pre-print of our paper on GWP-ASan. 5+ years of work by four companies, spanning Server, Desktop, and Mobile, running on billions of devices. Finding and fixing thousands of bugs and potential vulnerabilities.
I enjoy things around information theory (and data compression), complexity theory (and cryptography), read hard scifi, currently work on weird ML (we'll see how it goes), am somewhat literal minded and have approximate knowledge of random things. I like when statements have truth values, and when things can be described simply (which is not exactly the same as shortly) and yet have interesting properties.
I live in the largest city of Switzerland (and yet have cow and sheep pastures and a swimmable lake within a few hundred meters of my place :)). I speak Polish, English, German, and can understand simple Swiss German and French.
If in doubt, please err on the side of being direct with me. I very much appreciate when people tell me that I'm being inaccurate. I think that satisfying people's curiosity is the most important thing I could be doing (and usually enjoy doing it). I am normally terse in my writing and would appreciate requests to verbosify.
I appreciate it if my grammar or style is corrected (in any of the languages I use here).