lightingnerd

@lightingnerd@lemmy.world

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lightingnerd,

Well, with Putin suddenly deciding to unveil his newest intercontinental dildos, I doubt even the orange rapey puffball could have stood against the urges of the military industrial complex. This is it folks, we're once again comparing explosive rage boners for sport, what fun!

Humans are interesting, a little disappointing, but interesting nonetheless...

lightingnerd,

On the other hand, I have heard people ask that question, answered yes, and then checked my receipt later to find out that I just handed $0.57 to round out the cashier's drawer.

lightingnerd,

Destiny 2 as a F2P user has been surprisingly fun. Yeah, there are paywalls, but there's at-least 60-80 hours that you can play for free with how well the game is designed. Great group PvP and PvE challenges, public group PvE challenges, and over-all gorgeous modeling. Plus the combat mechanics aren't insanely hard to learn, but they can still provide a great challenge. I had my doubts because I've heard it was a microtransaction nightmare, but turns out it's not a pay-to-play scheme like Genshin. I might even buy the expansions and unlock the rest of the game.

lightingnerd,

If I ever build another campaign, I am going to have a meta side story where the players are asked to save the GM from a dungeon filled with "shiny math rocks". They'll be like the inverse of a mimic: they'll be bright shiny primitive solids, and depending on a roll from the related dice, they'll change form into a monster as many times as they have sides, and the monsters will be ranked in increasing difficulty. If they save the GM successfully, everyone in the party will get a free pass to roll with advantage.

lightingnerd,

This is good, very good. That reminds me, I wonder if r/HostileArchitecture is going to or has arrive(d) in the fediverse...

lightingnerd,

Mobile lemmy, yeah, this is a solid winner!

Should my wife tell her Dad that she's not his daughter?

My wife found out Saturday through an ancestry.com DNA test that her dad is not her actual biological father. Her mother had a supposed one time incident with a man she found on Facebook through the names on the ancestry test. Her parents separated when she was 6. She wasn't close with her dad over the years, but there was...

lightingnerd,

I juried a case regarding long term care, and I have to say that some businesses definitely treat their patients as numbers. While this is not what happened in the case I juried, I do know that in many states elderly care has gotten so bad that some clinics will intentionally misdiagnose and mistreat elderly patients for no other reason than to keep rooms filled.

lightingnerd, (edited )

While I loathe to admit it, this is just how communities seem to behave. Just like bacterial or fungal colonies on agar, the centers die from waste and lack of resources while the edges expand, and unless some larger force displaces some of the members to another plate, the culture will expand until it dies. This is why many of us moved from Reddit and other social media sites, we sort-of sporulated and rode the air currents to another petri dish.

The reason this system is unique, is that unless someone successfully patents and demands money for the software itself (which would be a legal nightmare to do at this point, if I understand correctly), we can rinse and repeat this process if and whenever it becomes necessary. Should lemmy.world become too congested, underfunded, or take the path of commercial giants like Facebook, Reddit, and Twitter--anyone can run up another server for their small group and start cultivating a new community, or move to any of the other growing communities.

There will be content and connections lost along the way, sure, but that's just part of the impermanence of life, which in my opinion is part of the fun!

Edit, additionally: Believe it or not, some communities are self-limiting and find a harmonious way of existing within the ecosystem--like instances that focus on special-interest discussion groups that share a common theme.

lightingnerd,

I use LibreOffice! Calc, Draw, and Writer are very user friendly once you get used to where the tools are. Impress is a pretty good replacement for Powerpoint: the stock graphics leave a lot to be desired--but that's a simple fix with a good stock image service. About the only thing LO doesn't do is notes, but I'd check out Xournal++ if you were looking for a way to replace OneNote. Plus, LibreOffice doesn't push OneDrive down your throat. It's been a win-win for me.

Another thing to consider if you really like typesetting is to learn LaTeX: it's a slightly steep learning curve(especially for advanced topics), but it'll do things that your typical WYSIWYG word-processing suite couldn't dream of doing. Plus there are a lot of templates available that you can adapt for your purposes.

lightingnerd,

One or two of the devs might have some strange opinions, but if one thing's for sure, they solved a bug report ticket I opened in just a single day--yeah turns out it was a simple fix, but that's a damn impressive turnaround. Just sayin'.

lightingnerd,

I used the tip of a specialized tooth-brush, and I dipped it into water and then swiped-up spores from the sample. I wouldn't recommend it though, because it turns out the brush fibers are too stiff and caught on the agar, pulling the plate around. It's probably better just to stick to swabs and use the same method.

Side thought: a lot of people recommend the z-shape swabbing, but it seems kind-of counterproductive if you're trying to select for the apparent speed and strength of mycelium growth.

lightingnerd,

Oh, that's a great idea! I'm clearly new to mycology, so I'm just kind-of experimenting--but you're right, we're talking billions of spores, and only two need to meet in order to form a strain. Hmm...

lightingnerd,

Thanks, that is fascinating, I'm definitely gonna check that out. No microscope yet, but it is on my list of things to obtain, although a proper HEPA filter and fan/motor will come first though, haha! Kind-of wondering if I should switch majors, but I'm already in my 400 series engineering classes--oof.

lightingnerd,

To be fair, it sounds like poetry that an AI model would spit out after being trained on text scraped from the internet...

lightingnerd,

"Ba da-da da-da da, it's the mothalurkin' S-P E-Z! Snoo-snoo, motha fucka" to "I'll see myself out" in 3-2-1...

lightingnerd,

That's an interesting piece of internet history! It is within the scope of my lifetime--but I somehow was uninitiated to the cult... XD

lightingnerd,

Yep, and the best way to make sure these places keep going is to contribute!

Also, if you can, consider donating to instance/server hosts and developers.

lightingnerd,

Not to mention the periodic spore clouds, haha! It would be really cool if it were possible though!

I wonder if it would be possible to get some radiotrophic fungi to absorb IR and UV, so they could functionally act as a thermal barrier, cooling during the summer and heating during the winter...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radiotrophic_fungus

lightingnerd,

Nice! Yeah, I mostly want it for convenience of working with agar--but the need just isn't there yet. I'm considering a redneck version using one of the 4" thick MERV 12 filters, which are rated to filter 0.3um particles, just not 99.99% of them. I know for a fact it would be much better than my SAB in terms of contamination risk, and I'm considering building my own wooden impeller fan, so if I can scrap an old high RPM motor--I may be able to finagle a basic FFU together for under $50.

lightingnerd,

Well, for a redneck FFU I would probably just be shooting from the hip--because I'd be building the fan from scratch--meaning it would be easier to build then measure the airflow rate of the custom fan, and then modify the design of the fan or modify the filter size until I get something good.

As far as resources, this seems to be on-point if you want to just buy the parts outright in a less redneck manner: https://learn.freshcap.com/growing/keeping-it-clean-how-to-design-and-build-a-laminar-flow-hood/

lightingnerd,

True, it's always good to verify with academic articles. I'd never trust ChatGPT without also verifying with sources--if for no other reason than its training dataset was cutoff in 2021. It's generally good to seek out research that is less than 3-5 years old when possible, due to how quickly the scientific landscape changes. According to this particular article from 2019, ChatGPT's response was pretty accurate.

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/ejlt.201900101

lightingnerd,

Solving this problem is easy, if A or D were correct, P = 0.5, if C or B were correct P = 0.25, since A and D require P = 0.25, and since C and B require P = 0 or 0.5 respectively, there is no correct solution that can be given, therefore the solution is “Undefined”.

Anyway, have a good troll!

lightingnerd,

Haha, I'm an engineering student, so I understand the jargon struggle, haha! Well, cheers and mush luck on your adventures!

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