I quite like .ion or .iot
- 0 Posts
- 9 Comments
DigitalMus@feddit.dkto World News@lemmy.ml•How light can vaporize water without the need for heat | MIT2·1 year agoThe sun’s spectrum at the earth surface peaks in the green color range, which should make green the most efficient choice. Although, I wonder why they have to absorb only a single or a narrow band of color.
DigitalMus@feddit.dkto Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•A normal person is merely someone who has not been diagnosed properly.4·1 year agoWithout knowing much about psychology, I would imagine separating the mindset into a set of orthogonal axis is pretty difficult and certainly the normal range would probably not follow a normal distribution in each axis. As a result the N-dimensional volume would not be a N-sphere but some complex topological shape. Possibly even consisting of multiple disjointed sets. If any of these assumptions are true then the global point average over the entire space may lie outside many of the “normal” ranges.
DigitalMus@feddit.dkto Games@lemmy.world•Infinite Craft, an endless crafting game, is out.English6·1 year agoI feel like I met some recursive endgame boss… I made a penguapplepenguinpenguapplepenguapplepenguin partially from pineapples and penguins and something else I spam combined
DigitalMus@feddit.dkto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Spotify Wrapped 2023 - what 0.05% are you in over how many monthly listeners?3·2 years ago0.5% of eluveitie at 1443 minutes, I suppose not too impressive considering 907k monthly listeners. But I’m a varied listener
DigitalMus@feddit.dkto Technology@lemmy.world•The Future of Machine Learning: A New Breakthrough Technique (MLC)English2·2 years agoThis certainly could be part of the motivation for publishing it this way, to make themselves more noticed by the big players. Btw, publishing in open source nature is expensive, it’s like 6-8000 euro for the big ones, so there definitely is a reason.
DigitalMus@feddit.dkto Technology@lemmy.world•The Future of Machine Learning: A New Breakthrough Technique (MLC)English5·2 years agoWhile in not in the field either, I do know that it is quite unusual in computer science academics to publish in actual peer reviewed journals. This is because it can be a long process, and the field is very fast moving, so your results would be outdated by the time you publish. Thus, a paper is typically synonymous with a conference proceeding, and can be found on arxiv. I found this Paper on the arxiv from 2017/2018 which seems to be when this paper was originally published for the scientific community and presented at a very “good” (if I had to guess) conference. Google scholar says this paper has 650 citations, so it probably has had quite some impact. However, I would guess this method is well known and is already implemented in many models, if it was truly disruptive.
DigitalMus@feddit.dkto Technology@lemmy.world•Metamaterial can trap light to become 10 times more magneticEnglish21·2 years agoThe article linked here is rubbish, CrSBr is not a meta material and also not a superconductor. It is a layered semiconductor. However, the Nature article they link to is quite interesting. The background is in cavity engineering, which is where one tries to modify intrinsic material properties by coupling to light “strongly”. This is usually done by creating a cavity (think two opposing mirrors around the material) and have light bounce back and forth.
Here instead they don’t need to use mirrors, but the refractive index is different enough to trap light in the material, and the electronic properties seem to be quite sensitive to the light because the magnetic phase is sensitive to magnetic fields and the different magnetic phases have quite different electronic properties. So all in all they find a strong light-matter coupling but only below 132K (the critical temperature of the magnetic phase).
Thought I would mention Guix. I don’t know about using it as an OS but just the package manager is so nice to build reproducible software environments (although disclaimer I discovered this myself a few weeks ago). At least as close you can get without including proprietary hardware drivers. Building MPI applications on my laptop and moving them to an HPC cluster with full performance feels like magic.