@freemo That's brilliant! 14+ ish kgs in a year is massive.
IEEE, the largest professional org for electrical engineers, makes the case that power systems modeling should be #OpenSource and calls out the US for relying on proprietary codes for decision making.
Otherwise we will miss opportunities to integrate #renewables and prepare our grid for a changing #climate
The “traditionally closed and proprietary nature of energy system planning … is no longer fit for purpose.”
– European Scientific Advisory Board on Climate Change
@gojonnes The legend. Was listening to Loner while working out, just today.
#TuneTuesday #MusicStreets From the Album #BackOnTheStreets a #Song by #GaryMoore and #PhilLynott
Mozilla: "In a well-intentioned yet dangerous move to fight online fraud, France is on the verge of forcing browsers to create a dystopian technical capability. It would force browser providers to create the means to mandatorily block websites present on a government provided list. Such a move will overturn decades of established content moderation norms and provide a playbook for authoritarian governments"
https://blog.mozilla.org/netpolicy/2023/06/26/france-browser-website-blocking/
#france #browser #cybersecurity #mozilla #security #surveillance
Meet 10 Women in Science Who Changed the World
#WomenInSTEM #womeninmedicine
#medicalwriters #sciencejournalists #medicaljournalists
Great article in the March Discover magazine. The 10 women mentioned in the article are:
1. Ada Lovelace, Mathematician
2. Marie Curie, Physicist and Chemist
3. Janaki Ammal, Botanist
4. Chien-Shiung Wu, Physicist
5. Katherine Johnson, Mathematician
6. Rosalind Franklin, Chemist
7. Vera Rubin, Astronomer
8. Gladys West, Mathematician
9. Flossie Wong-Staal, Virologist and Molecular Biologist
10. Jennifer Doudna, Biochemist
@joshpersi Wow great. Yes, was looking for something like this. Thanks.
@josemanuel This is a slippery slope, I tell you.
Before tweeting anything, for sometime, I used to ask myself "Am I adding any value to the conversation? Do people really need to know my opinion about XYZ?" And most of the time the answer would be No. So I would end up not tweeting it.
While it helps to clear the clutter a lot, one should also be free to express whatever one wants, even if that adds nothing, subjectively or objectively.
@gmschroe Thanks! This looks promising.
@shibaprasad not sure if there is a solution for Jupyter Notebook, but Spyder (my preferred Python IDE) has a good variable explorer: https://www.spyder-ide.org/
@TruthSandwich I haven't done a lot of thinking about this. But why do you think that Fediverse is not "anti capitalist"? If you are implying about large conglomerates by that.
@LouisIngenthron Strong points!
Feel a need for a brief rant about #gunculture.
I am so glad I had a traditional introduction to #firearms. Anyone who wields a #firearm should definitely know the basic safety rules, but there are other rules of decorum that some folks (especially elected Republicans and the NRA) just don't adhere to. Since these are largely unwritten rules for a culture of responsibility, I figured it might be worth taking the time to put some of them to paper, as it were. So, here goes:
1) Guns are not toys. While obvious on the surface, there are ancillaries to this rule that many #gun owners don't seem to understand. I.e. we don't buy guns for "how cool they look" and we don't post pictures of us posing with our guns on social media (you may notice that when I post about guns, it's pretty much only about discussing safety / reliability). They're deadly tools, not toys.
2) Guns should be treated as objects of respect. An operator should have a degree of familiarity with a weapon before ever considering using it in a combat situation, but that familiarity should never override the basic respect for a deadly weapon. That respect leads you to follow the safety rules more strictly and with greater attention, to keep your deadly weapons under lock and key, to keep them clean and well-maintained to avoid accidents, and to think twice before brandishing one.
3) Guns are not macho. If you're carrying a gun, it's because you don't trust your skills at unarmed combat to defend yourself. There can be many good reasons for this (medical issues, deadly threats, etc.), but nonetheless, guns are the opposite of tough, and should not be handled nor brandished like a replacement penis. Bragging about guns is, and should be seen as, deeply shameful. Which leads me into...
4) Only tremendous assholes use guns for anything other than defense. When you see someone open-carrying or brandishing a weapon, they're not thinking about defense; They're trying to intimidate you with it to impose their will on the world around them. Open-carrying a gun is like strapping truck balls to your waist. Even responsible gun owners get nervous around these people.
(Note: some of the above does not apply to those who must carry a firearm for their work, but I think most of them would agree with the vast majority of this post wholeheartedly anyway)
TLDR: Humility, discretion, and thoughtfulness are the gentleman's way. If you must handle a gun, do it like a gentleman.
Come to think of it, this might be exclusive to RStudio only? Though I must say, it is a great feature.
My biggest pet peeve of using #jupyternotebook (coming from #rstats / #rstudio ) is that you can't see all the dataframes that you have either loaded or have wrangled and created in this session.
It is a big positive of using RStudio. You can quickly take a glance or scroll through if needed.
Is there a way to do this in Jupyter Notebook?
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