science_memes

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Crul, (edited ) in *screams exestentially*

Hover text:

Honestly geometry’s pretty dicey, as are numbers larger than 1.

Bonus panelhttps://www.smbc-comics.com/comic/science-4

RSS Feed: www.smbc-comics.com/comic/rss

Arystique, in bro pls
@Arystique@beehaw.org avatar

Only if someone sticks their head in this one too

EternalNicodemus, in *screams exestentially*
@EternalNicodemus@lemmy.world avatar

I am utterly confused by this comic, it makes sense and at the same time it doesn’t

kromem,

It’s about the evolving picture of the universe over the past 300 years and how so much about that picture changed so quickly and is still left with very big open questions.

EternalNicodemus,
@EternalNicodemus@lemmy.world avatar

Why think when you can just say it is God’s magic 😎

MonkeMischief,

Or be like our boi Galileo who proved one can successfully do both. 😀

EternalNicodemus,
@EternalNicodemus@lemmy.world avatar

Sure lol

ElHexo, in bro pls

Seems like a poor allocation of resources, they’d need a much bigger loop or much better colliders to get anything really interesting out of it

shath,
@shath@hexbear.net avatar

ok make it bigger then

ElHexo,

It’s pretty hard to make a 27,000km ring

shath,
@shath@hexbear.net avatar

better get started then

Resistentialism,

You’ve never seen my arsehole after a night with a goth girl.

Why am I like this

Sylvartas, in bro pls

NA copium. Where’s

ToeNailClippings, (edited ) in bro pls

They’re doing it all wrong. They need to build it in space.

Guys I was taking the piss.

oxideseven,

This is exactly what I was thinking. Can make it as big as you want and no need to dig out the earth. Just a few “acceleration rings” and then the detector. I guess if it were feasible right now we’d be doing that though.

Enkrod,

Everyone underestimates how HEAVY the collider is, how often sensor modules need to be changed and mainly that the ring is just one part of the entire group of big buildings you need for this.

You need to create different beams of different makeup from different sources, different loops to make the beam hit sonething and maybe return the products into the loop, you need extensive sensory equipment where the collision happens and different sensors for different experiments.

It is just SOOOO much cheaper, easier and better to build it underground instead of in space.

ToeNailClippings,

I didnt underestimate anything. I was taking the mick

Having said that, the ISS didnt go up in one part, did it. Though there might be problems with cosmic rays and co interfering with the accuracy, etc.

improbably_me,

They already exist. Just wrangle a couple of neutron stars and put them next to each other. Bada Bing Bada Boom, Bob’s your uncle

Cowbee, in abandonware empires

IP shouldn’t exist in general.

Wilzax,

Property other than what you personally use to live shouldn’t exist, but if we’re moving away from capitalism, IP is not first on the list of things to abandon

Cowbee,

Yes.

frezik,

Also, I could see some forms of IP being higher on the list than others. A market socialist setup, where every company is a worker owned co-op, would still have a lot of use for Trademarks. It could be a far less abusive system than the one we have now, but we’d still want it to exist.

Market socialism itself is likely to only be a transitory step, though.

SkybreakerEngineer,

But then how would TCP and UDP work?

Cowbee,

Fair, lol

ASeriesOfPoorChoices,

Time to load up NetBIOS and… Stuff.

spudwart,
@spudwart@spudwart.com avatar

simple. TCP wouldn’t, and UDP never did anyway.

Quik,

and UDP never did anyway As a CS student I’ve laughed way to hard when reading this

Evilsandwichman,

It was so hard for me to grasp at some point over a decade earlier that in the past, in the middle ages and earlier for example, that people would publish all these educational books…and none of the info was copyrighted; literally anyone could find some book published by some random Greek or Arab person and just take all the knowledge, and release their own stuff that just freely builds on the knowledge contained within, or that inventions could be copied by anyone and no one was like ‘pay me for my brilliance’.

Cowbee,

Absolutely. Free flow of information without pay wall allows humanity to collectively build upon itself.

milicent_bystandr,

At the same time, paying people who generate, develop and curate information, enables and encourages more people to do so. IMHO one of the amazing things about the open source movement is it’s built on so much generosity of time and resources.

Astaroth,

Could your average joe even afford to buy a single one of those handwritten books? Or even read said book for that matter…

jadero,

Yes, but it’s important to remember that a much (most?) of that work was performed by those with hereditary wealth, under the patronage of those with hereditary wealth, under the patronage of the church, or by clergy who had plenty of free time beyond their duties and no separate need to earn income for housing and food. In fact, one reason to enter the clergy was to gain access to the resources to pursue other activities.

psud,

A monopoly is thought to inspire creation, if that’s so IP is good, but should be on human timescales.

100 years of monopoly won’t inspire me any better than 20 years, and even most cooperate products have less time in production than that

BelieveRevolt, (edited ) in abandonware empires

Not just science, factory equipment that needs ancient computers to function too. If you’ve ever wondered why some old PC parts are surprisingly expensive on eBay…

frezik,

Out of curiosity, I ran through some sample quizzes of the A+ exam a while back. Managed to pass, but I had to dig out a lot of my old knowledge about IDE master/slave setups and COM port settings and the like. That may be partially due to A+ being a silly, meaningless cert, but it’s pretty clear there is a need for that crap still.

Engywuck, in chemists?

I genuinely ROTLF’d here

Gorillatactics, in bro pls

So dollar for dollar, are all those colliders worth their value over say extra tenure position for scientists?

crackajack,

Perhaps, but we’d benefit more as a collective knowing the secrets of the cosmos.

fossilesque,
@fossilesque@mander.xyz avatar

The colliders wouldn’t exist without people in the tenured position. Tenure is protection from capital interests. It’s not just a culture war thing.

Gorillatactics,

I’m asking if the capital interest skew public research towards mega projects.

fossilesque,
@fossilesque@mander.xyz avatar

Yea, that is a problem just by the fact that it creates more pots of funding.

RedstoneValley, in *screams exestentially*

Just one more collider, bro. Please, bro

Starkstruck, in bro pls

I’d rather spend money on science than killing innocent people.

HawlSera, in *screams exestentially*

Can I has an afterlife?

photonic_sorcerer,
@photonic_sorcerer@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

No. Go make your own.

HawlSera,

Error: Failed to create item: Human Soul

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hardaysknight, in abandonware empires

Kinda off topic but he should just convert those Windows 95 computers to a virtual machine

uis,
@uis@lemmy.world avatar

Software may rely on specific hardware

Evilsandwichman, in abandonware empires

God, back when I was a kid my father used to be against me playing video games so I’d have to find some free way to game and I just lived on abandonware games. I downloaded games that were either kind of old and came out around the mid-90’s or even earlier, or had just been abandoned; that and a ton of gaming on emulators.

So many fun old games, sooooo many fun old games. Also lots and lots of ASCII rpg games, lots and lots of ASCII rpg games.

fossilesque, (edited )
@fossilesque@mander.xyz avatar
Evilsandwichman,

Hey, thanks for the links! These got my childhood in them!

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