Comment SolarWinds ad is the post below this one lol. (Score 1) 27
SolarWinds is advertising software on the
SolarWinds is advertising software on the
SMH. Golden opportunity to sell an NFT for Slashdot itself.
We have that now. Google CRISPR/Cas9. Like all our cool tools for recombinant DNA, we stole it from existing life forms (bacteria usually).
G.
The slugs at some point in their past acquired the genes from algae that are required to maintain/repair the chloroplasts that each one collects from the algae they eat. The horizontal gene transfer is (presumably) not an ongoing process but something that happened in their distant past.
The baby slugs start eating algae and they digest most of them but they save the chloroplasts from the algae cells and integrate them into their own tissue. Once they accumulate enough of them they basically become solar powered and don't need to eat anymore.
Normally the chloroplasts would not survive very long without an algae around them to take care of them, but this is where the genes that the slug has that originally came from the algae come into play. The slug is thus able to provide the things that its adopted chloroplasts need to survive for many months.
Definitely very cool.
G.
No, I'm sorry, it appears to me that this is all photoshopped fakery. Yes, two-photon lithography is a real thing, but in this case we have some artist claiming to have done things which are not currently possible.
This kind of thing happens pretty frequently now and it pisses me off, sorry. Real scientists and engineers (and even artists) dream and strive to accomplish great feats of engineering and discovery. But some people like to pretend their dreams are real and by presenting fake accomplishments to the world they damage society by trivializing the actual accomplishments of real innovators. They present their "art" as if it were real, and it gets sent around the internet and people believe that it's true, and that further blurs the public's view of what's real and what's art or pure fantasy. What's the point of trying to actually do something like this when everyone thinks it has already been done?
So, anyhow, a few minutes googling will expose some of the original pre-photoshop images that these people appropriated to create their "art". For example, the microphotograph of the needle's eye can be found here with no tiny statue in evidence:
http://www.aber.ac.uk/bioimage...
In addition, depth-of-field, lighting, and other cues like the fact that there's no actual connection to the substrate make these fakes pretty obvious.
Ergo, I must presume the whole thing, including the video interview is all just "performance art".
Here's a tip: amazing and groundbreaking scientific and technological breakthroughs are generally not announced to the world by artists.
G.
Statistics tell you everything about everyone and yet nothing about anyone.
Considering all the other ridiculous acquisition prices from Apple, Facebook, etc. recently, I think $2B for the Minecraft "brand" is awfully cheap.
So I would imagine the "leak" of the news about these negotiations would come from Notch's side, just to make sure everyone knows that there's an opportunity to bid higher.
I can imagine a few large media companies waking up this morning going "Shit, Mojang is actually for sale? I gotta get me some of that".
So just as everyone "knew" Google was buying Twitch a few weeks ago, I wouldn't count my Minecraft Chickens just yet.
But then...
MIcrosoFT
MInecraFT
G.
Mod parent up please. The Scientific Python stack (numpy, scipy, pandas, etc.) with it's iPython Notebook interface (in the style of Mathematica) is rapidly taking the world by storm, both in the sciences as well as Big Data Analytics and "Data Science".
If you like software toys, or ever use a calculator, go get yourself the free Anaconda scientific python distribution (Win/Mac/Linux) from Continuum and try out the iPython Notebook. Seriously this is an out-of-the-box computing tool that is AMAZING and can do practically anything. Anaconda is built on the Conda package manager which makes installing any and all bits and pieces you need for any of the popular Python packages completely effortless.
The existence of these tools also makes Python absolutely the best "programming" language to learn, even if you only use it for scripting/invoking all the existing libraries that exist. Also Python is available as a scripting language built into many software packages (Blender etc.) which makes it a tool/skill that just keeps on giving.
R is fine, and currently very popular, but it's also a one-trick-pony when compared to the thundering herd of functionality available on top of Python. You can even invoke R from within an iPython Notebook and pass DataFrames back and forth between R and pandas for example.
I used to love calculators (back when calculator was spelled H-P rather than T-I) but apart from the standardized testing requirement, and the fun of hacking on hand-held devices, it's just silly to use one any more.
G.
References:
https://store.continuum.io/csh... (free, open source)
http://nbviewer.ipython.org/ (great way to share Notebooks)
http://computableapp.com/ (the SciPy stack for iPads
http://omz-software.com/python... (Great iOS Python environment)
http://numfocus.org/projects/i... (Foundation supporting the core SciPy stack components)
http://pythontutor.com/ (This is just too cool)
"So if you were interested in bioinformatics, or computational economics, or quantitative anthropology, you really needed to be part of the computer science world."
These weren't even things in 1984.
Computers were not so pervasive that you were missing out on much if you didn't know anything about them.
G.
When it stopped meaning "Suspend output to terminal" along with it's partner CTRL-Q.
In-Band serial flow control ftw!
G.
It probably wears out in a year or two and/or requires $100/month in exotic maintenance supplies, and if you ever put wax on the car it will destroy its self-cleaning properties, etc.
G.
"How to make a million dollars: First, get a million dollars." -- Steve Martin