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Marcus Maertens

Randall Munroe Finally Finishes His 3,099 Panel xkcd Magnum Opus "Time" | Geekosystem - 3 views

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    Randall Munroe is simply the best.
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    Yeah I remember this comic was tough to hack... With Click and Drag it was peanuts to download all the tiles once you figured out the file name pattern, but with this one some strange server-side event thing was used to feed the images at random time intervals... Nice to be able to see it all finally!
Nicholas Lan

Nice sea and ocean depths diagram - 2 views

shared by Nicholas Lan on 10 Apr 12 - No Cached
Ma Ru liked it
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    What stroke me especially was the shape of the Marianas Trench (much wider than deep) [edit] This reminds me I used to have a printout of a similar, but more space-related, comic http://xkcd.com/482/ hanging on the wall next to my desk in estec... good ol' times...
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    and in case you missed it, check also the excellent Money infographic that guy created last year: http://xkcd.com/980/huge/
Dario Izzo

Space Oddity - YouTube - 4 views

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    And thats why we do what we do :) Enjoy!!
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    did you see the comment "This is the greatest thing to come out of ISS." :-)
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    Coming next: Dancing bear jumps through burning hoop! ... on Asteroid!!! :-P But seriously - Chris Hadfield did an amazing job in getting ordinary Earthlings interested in space. His educational videos can be found here: http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLUaartJaon3LV-ZQ4J3bNQj4VNVG2ByIG
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    and to poison the waters of an amazing performance, here's the relevant(?) copyright law: http://www.economist.com/blogs/economist-explains/2013/05/economist-explains-12?fsrc=scn/tw_ec/how_does_copyright_work_in_space_
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    And in case you wonder, this is *not* the most expensive music video ever made. Also, launching his guitar to the orbit was still far cheaper than the cost of some guitars sold on earth. Where else can this info come from if not http://what-if.xkcd.com/45/
Marcus Maertens

xkcd: Galilean Moons - 3 views

shared by Marcus Maertens on 06 Dec 13 - Cached
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    These annoying resonances... I want to kill Io after this!
Thijs Versloot

Norway loves electric cars - 0 views

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    The main reasons: (1) awareness, people know that a variety of consumer cars exist (2) negative incentives that push people away from gasoline powered cars, eg fuel taxes (3) positive incentives, exemption from road tax, purchase tax and free parking (all temporary) and (4) extensive recharging infrastructure. Other countries have some/all of these elements, but Norway has pushes mostly and the result is that the nissan leaf was the best sold car in September and October, beating all other cars.
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    If there's anyone who could afford such things, it is Norway... According to http://xkcd.com/980/, Oljefondet (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Government_Pension_Fund_of_Norway) is currently worth nearly as much as US has spent on wars. I mean, all of them together... One of the biggest problems in Norway is what to do with this money without damaging the economy in the long run :-)
jcunha

Silicon Valley celebrates Moore's Law 50 years anniversary - 2 views

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    A bit late, but it is very interesting and instructive to listen to Gordon Moore's words "It almost doubled every year (...) so I said in the next 10 years it's going to continue to double every year, we are going to go from 16 components on a chip to 16 000. Pretty wild extrapolation!". This extrapolation (exponential with only 5 initial points) is now well-known and is one of the things that changed the World, it is pretty amazing how this "wild" futuristic vision came true.
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    A great source is also the blog from Chris Mack (http://life.lithoguru.com/?p=451) who is a semicon pioneer and publisher of many books on the subject. He wrote an article for IEEE Spectrum on Moore's law and its future. Find it here, http://spectrum.ieee.org/semiconductors/processors/the-multiple-lives-of-moores-law
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    Whenever I think about moore's law and extrapolating like that I end up back at this xkcd comic https://xkcd.com/605/
LeopoldS

CPU and password strength - 4 views

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    true?
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    Isn't that why systems have a "wait for 15 minutes before trying again" after 3 or 5 wrong guesses? All the brute force in the word can't save you from real-life latency.
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    Oh, so you haven't heard about diceware yet? http://world.std.com/~reinhold/diceware.html And, of course, a related XKCD...
pacome delva

Radiocarbon Daters Tune Up Their Time Machine - 2 views

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    funny how a curve can change (pre)History !
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    Reminds me of this: http://xkcd.com/687/ :)
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    xkcd must be the new calvin and hobbes, where luzi usually has an example for any given situation
Francesco Biscani

xkcd: The Cloud - 4 views

shared by Francesco Biscani on 09 Jun 11 - No Cached
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    Cloud computing explained.
LeopoldS

BBC News - Speed-of-light experiments give baffling result at Cern - 5 views

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    Sante, Luzi have a look at this???!!!
  • ...3 more comments...
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    and here's the xkcd on it: http://xkcd.com/955/
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    And here's the arXiv paper http://arxiv.org/abs/1109.4897 Serious? Difficult to say. I'm theorist and can't really rate their measurement techniques. Certainly be cautious, mostly such things disappear faster than they appeared.
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    it took them 3 years to "appear"!
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    Leo, you mean that they measured 3 years? That's not a point to criticize: since the only interaction of neutrinos with matter is the Weak Interaction (which is indeed very, very weak), it is extremely hard to get a reasonable statistic. By the same reason, it's essentially impossible to shield the experiment from the background. And this background (solar neutrinos, cosmic radiation neutrinos) is huge.
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    for sure a result to be taken seriously. It makes a buzz in my lab... but always be cautious with this kind of declaration, that hugely violates all physics we know and even most of the reasonable alternative theories... Remember the Pionneer anomaly for which it took almost ten years to set up that finally its a thermal effect.
Ma Ru

New LHC Sabotage Theory - 3 views

shared by Ma Ru on 15 Nov 09 - Cached
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    I find it much more plausible than the theory of a bird bombing it with a baguette...
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    The obligatory xkcd: http://xkcd.com/401/
Francesco Biscani

xkcd: Future Timeline - 5 views

shared by Francesco Biscani on 18 Apr 11 - No Cached
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    Our job is now useless :P
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    this entry tells it all: "2066 - Cyprus achieves its goal"
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    > Francesco And all it took was a simple well-written google bot...
Thijs Versloot

Alternative sleep cycles - 1 views

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    Give the Ubermancycle a try?
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    I was into this some time ago and found a documentary in which they performed an experiment on a guy. Long story short, it didn't work that good. He was semi-lucid all the time and his mental performance dropped. Perhaps it is possible to survive like this for months, but if your goal is to maximize your daily output, you will not gain extra work hours due to being 3/4 conscious most of the time. EDIT: Not related to the documentary I mentioned but some first hand stories: http://www.reddit.com/r/IAmA/comments/co5t9/i_attempted_polyphasic_sleep_for_a_documentary_ama/c0tza1e
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    I also heard about it. At the moment, I am on some sort of bi-phasic sleep and I am not feeling more tired than with the monophasic one (while sleeping effectively less right now).
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    If it exists, there's an xkcd about it: http://xkcd.com/320/ Actually the schedule proposed there is quite useful if you're into this whole Friday / Saturday night thing..
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    I don't see why it wouldn't work if you manage to detach yourself from the cycardian input. As in never ever see sun and daylight :))
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    > As in never ever see sun and daylight :)) Like in the Netherlands you mean?
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    Tri-phasic sleep rhythm works fine.
anonymous

How fast would you have to go in your car to run a red light claiming that it appeared ... - 6 views

shared by anonymous on 10 Oct 12 - No Cached
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    did you read this one? "When my wife and I started dating she invited me over for dinner at one time. Her kitchen had something called Bauhaus chairs, which are full of holes, approx 5-6 millimeters in diameter in both back and seat. During this lovely dinner I was forced to liberate a small portion of wind and was relieved that I managed to do so very discretely. Only to find that the chair I sat on converted the successful silence into a perfect, and loud, flute note. We were both (luckily) amazed and surprised and I have often wondered what the odds are for something like that happening. We kept the chairs for five years but despite laborious attempts it couldn't be reproduced."
Annalisa Riccardi

Up Goer Five - 4 views

shared by Annalisa Riccardi on 14 Nov 12 - No Cached
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    Rocket science!
Marcus Maertens

Everything You Wanted to Know about Space Tourism but Were Afraid to Ask | Space Safety... - 3 views

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    "chances are that if 700 passengers are flown annually, up to 10 of them might not survive the flight in the first years of the operations." most remarkable also the question who is to blame if a dead and burned space tourist corps comes crashing down from the sky into your car.
  • ...3 more comments...
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    How sure is the information that a human body would not completely burn / ablate during atmospheric re-entry? I am not aware of any material ground tests in a plasma wind tunnel confirming that human tissue would survive re-entry from LEO.
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    Since a steak would not even be cooked by dropping it from very high altitudes (http://what-if.xkcd.com/28/) I would doubt that a space tourists body would desintegrate by atmospheric re-entry.
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    Funny link, however, some things are not clear enough: 1. Ablation rate is unknown 2. What are the entry conditions? The link suggests that the steak is just dropped (no initial velocity). 3. What about the ballistic coefficient? 4. How would the entry body orientation? It would be a quite non-steady state configuration I guess with heavy accelerations. 5. How would vacuum exposure impact on the water in the body/steak and what would be the consequence for ablation behaviour? 6. Does surface chemistry play a role (not ablation, but catalysis)? My conclusion: the example with the steak is a funny and not so bad exercise, not more.
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    This calls for some we serious simulations by the Petkow code it seems to me ...
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    I still would need some serious input data...
santecarloni

Relativistic Baseball - 2 views

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    What would happen if you tried to hit a baseball pitched at 90% the speed of light? --not sure it is correct, but it would be a lot of fun :)
Ma Ru

Error Undoes Faster-Than-Light Neutrino Results - 3 views

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    :-)
  • ...1 more comment...
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    And this guy is 200 bucks ahead http://xkcd.com/955/
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    Well, it's not yet confirmed... That error would be worse than the magnetic moment of the muon about 10 years ago. There, it was "at least" a conflict of conventions used in the computer codes!
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    In a statement based on an earlier press release from the OPERA collaboration, CERN said two possible "effects" may have influenced the anomalous measurements. One of them, due to a possible faulty connection between the fiber-optic cable bringing the GPS signals to OPERA and the detector's master clock, would have caused the experiment to underestimate the neutrinos' flight time, as described in the original story. The other effect concerns an oscillator, part of OPERA's particle detector that gives its readings time stamps synchronized to GPS signals. Researchers think correcting for an error in this device would actually increase the anomaly in neutrino velocity, making the particles even speedier than the earlier measurements seemed to show. CERN's statement says OPERA scientists are studying the "potential extent of these two effects" but doesn't indicate which source of error (if either) is likely to outweigh the other. However, Lucia Votano, director of the Gran Sasso laboratory, says the "main suspicion" focuses on the optical-fiber connection. She adds that OPERA researchers deserve credit for "having tenaciously followed this particular evidence via checks completed in the last few days." The two effects will get a new round of tests in May, when the two labs are scheduled to make velocity measurements with short-pulsed beams designed to give readings much more precise than scientists have achieved so far.
LeopoldS

Testla energy Tesla Motors - 2 views

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    tesla announcing home batteries at 350$/kW
  • ...1 more comment...
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    Good stuff, no way it will be done in the netherlands however due to the 'equal-return' law in place here still that puts the price of returning to the grid equal to the costs of buying. The costs of this law are enormous however and energy companies would love to get rid off it, and it will in the upcoming years most likely. I wonder however if that makes sense on a regional/national level, returning to the grid on that scale produces a more stable supply. Why store for personal use only?
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    Let's do some simple maths... Here in UK, example "economy 7" tarif yields night kWh approx. 12 pence cheaper than during day. Let's say the goal is to store energy equivalent to running a 2kW storage heater for 6 hours during the day. We need 12 kWh, so 12 times $350 this means need to spend approx. 1920 pounds for batteries. Time to break even at ROI: 1920 / 0.12 ~ 7.3 years... And this is assuming using the heater 365 days a year, and quite an expensive tariff (prepaid). SIWB :-)
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    Also need to take into account that battery capacity tends to go down with time and usage
Ma Ru

Tesla reveals robotic snake car charger - 2 views

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    Quoting Elon Musk, "it does seem kinda wrong"...
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    Is it just me but isn't this just needlessly complicated? I mean, you can design the plug on the car, its horizontal and symmetric. Why not just translational motors. Probably because its boring and one wants to make a metal Dr. Octavius tentacle of course
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    Precisely!
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