Salta al contenuto principale


in reply to ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆

Potatoes are not the part of the plant that reproduces through pollination, seed potatoes are grown from other potatoes, the fruits are poisonous, potatoes are nightshades. I may be mistaken, maybe pollination helps? I know potatoes arent ready for harvest until after flowering

I think maybe you could argue cows are largely fed pollinated crops when raised in a feedlot





How close are we to solid state batteries for electric vehicles? - Ars Technica


Every few weeks, it seems, yet another lab proclaims yet another breakthrough in the race to perfect solid-state batteries: next-generation power packs that promise to give us electric vehicles (EVs) so problem-free that we’ll have no reason left to buy gas-guzzlers.

These new solid-state cells are designed to be lighter and more compact than the lithium-ion batteries used in today’s EVs. They should also be much safer, with nothing inside that can burn like those rare but hard-to-extinguish lithium-ion fires. They should hold a lot more energy, turning range anxiety into a distant memory with consumer EVs able to go four, five, six hundred miles on a single charge.

And forget about those “fast” recharges lasting half an hour or more: Solid-state batteries promise EV fill-ups in minutes—almost as fast as any standard car gets with gasoline.

This may all sound too good to be true—and it is, if you’re looking to buy a solid-state-powered EV this year or next. Look a bit further, though, and the promises start to sound more plausible. “If you look at what people are putting out as a road map from industry, they say they are going to try for actual prototype solid-state battery demonstrations in their vehicles by 2027 and try to do large-scale commercialization by 2030,” says University of Washington materials scientist Jun Liu, who directs a university-government-industry battery development collaboration known as the Innovation Center for Battery500 Consortium.

Indeed, the challenge is no longer to prove that solid-state batteries are feasible. That has long since been done in any number of labs around the world. The big challenge now is figuring out how to manufacture these devices at scale, and at an acceptable cost.

#tech


A VERY useful book for privacy (How to hide anything)


You're welcome I'll share even better books later.
in reply to Lunatique

If you're cooked, then just use a lighter to set the thing you don't want to be exposed on fire.
in reply to Matt

in reply to Lunatique

Here's an actual good book:

Helen Nissenbaum (2009). Privacy in Context: Technology, Policy, and the Integrity of Social Life. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. ISBN 9780804772891.



Para que Soberania não seja slogan vazio | Outras Palavras


cross-posted from: lemmy.eco.br/post/17328900


'CDC is over': RFK Jr. lays off over 1,000 employees in Friday night massacre


Amid the ongoing shutdown, the HHS secretary wiped out entire offices that investigate disease outbreaks, manage infectious disease responses and collect data.


North Country Delight. Brunswick, Vermont. October 2, 2012


This was the actual color of the mountains. That year it was warmer and a bit wetter than normal, so the trees went unusually red. On the drier years, you tend to get more oranges, golds and yellows. Taken from Vt. Rt. 102, looking east across the Connecticut River (yeah, it's there at the far edge of the field and not wide at all, that far into the north country..) into New Hampshire.

Was taken with a Sony DSC-P93A (honestly a tiny spitfire of a camera!), was 8 or 9 shots then stitched them together and did a bit of spot touching to hide the seams using Photoshop. No color adjustments at all though. This ended up a bit shorter than I wanted, as at the time I did not have a tripod to do pan shots with, so of course the camera was not as steady as I'd wished as I was taking the shots. lots of up and down.. Urgh. But.. a beautiful year up there..




Seeds of resistance: A war on Palestinian agriculture, sovereignty, and survival




A gaming matsuri across many images, please enjoy!


Beaverton, OR.

A few months ago, I tried my second attempt at my game matsuri idea. I wanted to revisit it at some point, using some props that I had forgotten about.

I ended up taking about two hours to build the set, and another four to shoot. I was pretty frustrated by my tripod, which had a minimum height because of a shaft on it, and for a lot of the street level shots, they were taken on a couple of soda boxes. However, the tripod was a huge boon because there were some twenty second exposures going on; turns out, I'm married to 100 ISO.

There's several neat elements happening with the set here: first, the main boulevard has been laid out like a roulette table, and every roulette table needs a zero -- I used kabufuda, an 8, 9, and 3, which is a hand worth zero points in a game called Oicho-Kabu. Coincidentally, this is where the Yakuza gets their name from. There's also a shogi king being checkmated in an alleyway, an artist painting another shogi piece, a riichi mahjong hand called thirteen orphans, as well as numerous other details throughout.

In addition, with clever editing and methods of capture, there's weather now! I was delighted to see that it came out quite well.

Though a lot of this was frustrating, I think I'm fairly-well satisfied by the end product. There's eight pictures in here, please see them all!

Thanks for seeing my work!



in reply to picofarad

You're probably thinking about populations, and the Sun is a Population I star, but it's impossible to state a specific number of stellar generations that preceded our Sun. The process turns out to be more complex than a simple linear sequence of star, supernova, star. While Sun's metallicity is definitive proof that it formed from the recycled remnants of earlier stars, the interstellar gas cloud that formed our solar system was a mix of material from many different sources over billions of years. Location also plays a role since a star near the galactic center might be highly enriched after a short time, while a star in the outskirts remains metal-poor for longer. Finally, many regions of the universe experienced sustained periods of star formation lasting hundreds of millions of years. During these episodes, stars were born, died, and enriched the surrounding gas, which then formed new stars within the same ongoing event. The best answer is that our Sun formed from a cosmic medium that was cumulatively enriched by countless stellar ancestors over the course of 9 billion years.


Pokemon Legends Z-A


It seems that we're getting close to a leak. Pokemon project has an update file available and from what I've seen, some people have game dumps but no one wants to leak it yet.

I've played the first two gen games when they came out. This one looks pretty interesting too. I'm excited to try it.



A gaming matsuri across many images, please enjoy!


Beaverton, OR.

A few months ago, I tried my second attempt at my game matsuri idea. I wanted to revisit it at some point, using some props that I had forgotten about.

I ended up taking about two hours to build the set, and another four to shoot. I was pretty frustrated by my tripod, which had a minimum height because of a shaft on it, and for a lot of the street level shots, they were taken on a couple of soda boxes. However, the tripod was a huge boon because there were some twenty second exposures going on; turns out, I'm married to 100 ISO.

There's several neat elements happening with the set here: first, the main boulevard has been laid out like a roulette table, and every roulette table needs a zero -- I used kabufuda, an 8, 9, and 3, which is a hand worth zero points in a game called Oicho-Kabu. Coincidentally, this is where the Yakuza gets their name from. There's also a shogi king being checkmated in an alleyway, an artist painting another shogi piece, a riichi mahjong hand called thirteen orphans, as well as numerous other details throughout.

In addition, with clever editing and methods of capture, there's weather now! I was delighted to see that it came out quite well.

Though a lot of this was frustrating, I think I'm fairly-well satisfied by the end product. There's eight pictures in here, please see them all!

Thanks for seeing my work!




Podcast clients?


Anyone have any suggestions for a decent linux podcast client. Doesn't need to be fancy or anything, basically just "Download and keep the last N items in the following podcast feeds." Extra points for cli/TUI.
in reply to Trent

Try github.com/manolomartinez/greg if you are interested in a minimalistic cli program.
in reply to Trent

gPodder is pretty simple. Link: gpodder.github.io/

Other than that, if you want CLI, while it's not a podcast program, yt-dlp is pretty good for downloading them. You can filter by title, date, etc. It's got a bit of a learning curve, tho.



in reply to n7gifmdn

If not for the banks investing hevily into it, i'd not be all that worried.

Every company in that list could shrink by half and we'd all be at worst back to covid times. Sure unemployment would suck, but do we REALLY need microsoft and NVidia to be as huge as they are?

in reply to n7gifmdn

I see "gold rush" the company selling shovels is making out like a bandit, everyone else is make a profit on the previous gen but requires a 10x cost increase for the next gen. And thus 10x more shovels.. As soon as 10x more shovels stops giving 10x+ improvements this is the wrong investment.

Hints are we already reached this point.

Some AI companies will pivot and improve in other ways with more linear costs/results.. The ones hoping the line continues to the moon.. I think they overshot.. I just don't know when it will fall back..



After Hyundai ICE Raid, Even South Korea’s Capitalists Question US Relations


Zip ties. Helicopters. Crowded cells. Guns trained on bewildered workers. Foul water. Forced vaccinations. An unconscious detainee left on the floor by negligent guards. A pregnant woman in handcuffs. A detainee being called “Rocket Man” (Donald Trump’s nickname for Kim Jong Un) by sneering federal agents. A menstruating woman forced to attend to her period with only toilet paper.

These are the details of 316 South Korean nationals’ experiences in Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention that have flooded the country’s media in the weeks after the September 4 raid on a Hyundai-LG electric vehicle battery plant in Ellabell, Georgia. A wave of fury is now pouring forth from across South Korean society — and the political consequences are only just beginning.

There is far more at stake than a single factory in Georgia, which by itself represented 8,500 jobs and $4.3 billion in investment, and is just one of 23 plants being built across the U.S. by Korean conglomerates. Since the raid, the U.S. and South Korea have announced that Korean workers will be able to use B-1 visas and ESTA visa waivers to continue working in the U.S. A new bill in Congress, the Partner with Korea Act, also seeks to extend 15,000 professional E-4 visas to South Koreans for the first time.

But U.S. flexibility on immigration is not all that matters. Seoul and Washington have yet to finalize their trade deal instigated by Trump’s threat to impose a 25 percent blanket tariff on South Korean goods. At the current stage of negotiations, South Korea has agreed to accept a 15 percent tariff on its exports and provide tremendous investments and other financial agreements: $350 billion in state-backed short-term investment, $150 billion in private sector contracts with U.S. corporations, and a guarantee to purchase $100 billion in U.S. liquid natural gas. Despite so much on the table, a written agreement has yet to be produced, and negotiations are proving tense as the Trump administration presses for Seoul to provide the lion’s share of its $350 billion commitment in cash. While some of the shock over the ICE raid has died down, Washington’s conduct over the course of months of negotiations has also raised deeper questions in South Korea about the real nature of the alliance — and whether this is a relationship that can last.

The Art of the Steal

The anger unleashed by ICE’s abuse of Korean workers has been building for some time. Trump’s tariff threats, announced in March, hit South Korea at a difficult time, when the impeachment of former President Yoon Suk Yeol was unresolved, and the country was reeling from years of flagging economic performance.

The issue was not only a matter of timing. The Biden administration’s CHIPS Act and Inflation Reduction Act also used similar (though less onerous) tariff threats to force South Korean conglomerates to transfer production and make large investments in the U.S. — which is how the Hyundai-LG plant made its way to Georgia in the first place. Having already complied with the previous administration, South Korea nevertheless now finds itself facing an even graver economic threat that could lead to recession: not just a 25 percent tariff on all exports (since reduced to 15 percent), but sector-based tariffs impacting most of South Korea’s key industries as well.

While much of the anger on either side of the Pacific has focused on the current administration in Washington, Trump’s tariffs are just the latest in a string of U.S. policies that have sought to deny South Korea its economic sovereignty, open its markets to foreign takeover, and degrade the rights and dignity of its working people.


Full Article



Stop Ignoring the Browser: The Biggest Frontend Shift in a Decade


Native browser APIs now provide powerful alternatives for routing, state management, and components. Never mind the frameworks, use the browser.
Native browser APIs now provide powerful alternatives for routing, state management, and components. Never mind the frameworks, use the browser.


Frieren - Capitolo 11


Il giorno di togliere da mezzo il drago (...ossia, il seguente) arriva, e così il guerriero Stark si trova a fare i conti con la sua paura...

stuff.octt.eu.org/2025/10/frie…



Frieren - Capitolo 10


Sempre guidata dalla sua irrefrenabile voglia di collezionare magie, Frieren in questo capitolo adocchia un grimorio sfortunatamente piazzato nel...

stuff.octt.eu.org/2025/10/frie…





Chinese scientists develop new AI method to control plasma in 'artificial sun'


Technology reshared this.





🐙 octopus stinkhorn


🐙—today's ultimate find, an "octopus stinkhorn" or "devil's fingers", i.e., fungus "Clathrus archeri (synonyms Lysurus archeri, Anthurus archeri, Pseudocolus archeri)". This fungus' smell is absolutely horrid.


Photographer @arsCynic@lemmy.ml


🐙—today's ultimate find, an "octopus stinkhorn" or "devil's fingers", i.e., fungus "Clathrus archeri (synonyms Lysurus archeri, Anthurus archeri, Pseudocolus archeri)".


🐙 octopus stinkhorn


🐙—today's ultimate find, an "octopus stinkhorn" or "devil's fingers", i.e., fungus "Clathrus archeri (synonyms Lysurus archeri, Anthurus archeri, Pseudocolus archeri)". This fungus' smell is absolutely horrid.




The Israeli media is reporting on a ‘secret clause’ in the Gaza ceasefire deal that no one is talking about





How do you all stay calm with all this pressure


Obviously a lot of people here hide a lot of information. What is keeping you all from extreme stress considering the possibility that a government is spying on your actions despite strict privacy practices?
Considering my current situation and my extreme threat model it feels like the privacy walls around me are closing in. I'm very paranoid. I do a lot of risky and dangerous shit on the internet. Every knock on my door and phone call feels like the police. I don't talk with others about what I do and I'm always hiding my internet activity from others. Any thoughts would be helpful
in reply to ringpop

I also fear the $5 wrench. Honestly if you're doing any risky and dangerous shit you have to ask yourself if its worth doing.

in reply to geneva_convenience

Hold on,are we not meant to be talking about that fella shocking his dog.Not the thousands of dead kids.
in reply to Kben

Yeah I mean, I don’t watch this guy but it really seemed like the dog thing was just an attempt by liberals to make a leftist look bad.



I found this little guy on a hike a while back.


I don’t know what it is. I’d never seen a mushroom with all these globs on it before and it caught my eye.
in reply to FRYD

The fluid production is called guttation. Looks like a pallette-swapped bleeding tooth-fungus, no idea if it's even related though.
in reply to mrsemi

Reading the article, it seems similar. This was on a pine tree, except this was in NY and not the northwest where the mushroom you linked is apparently common.

Edit: I guess the commenter I replied to nuked their account. They linked this en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydnellu…

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 settimane fa)