Today I Learned #2: Gone for a Wiki Walk

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TIL:

Your Thumbs Are All The Charge You Need

In the not-too-distant future, technologists say, most computers will be tiny, ubiquitous, and won’t ever need new batteries— because they won’t have any. Their latest proof is an unusual Nintendo Game Boy. Custom designed to run without batteries, the handheld gaming device is powered by small solar panels as well as the button presses of the person playing it. Even after the apocalypse, survivors will at least have “Tetris.”

The implications of this demonstration are potentially huge. In our battery-free future, carbon, moisture and light sensors that last for decades could be scattered by drones across farms; smart cities might be inundated with all-seeing, all-hearing surveillance devices; vehicles and buildings could use artificial intelligence to anticipate needs and perform simple tasks, and “implantables” in our bodies will more tightly integrate humans with everything else connected to the internet. Nvidia Corp. Chief Executive Jensen Huang has predicted this future of computing will eventually include trillions of devices. “I hope for God’s sake they’re not all powered by batteries,” says Josiah Hester, an assistant professor of computer engineering at Northwestern University, and a co-lead on the Game Boy project.

There are many practical and environmental reasons to hope for battery-less sensors. But battery or no, a key concern is what happens to a sensor’s data when it runs out of power. To address this problem, the Game Boy research team upended a fundamental rule of computers: If you turn it off, you lose unsaved work. Their system, by contrast, can lose power completely, and the instant it gets enough power again—say, from a player impatiently mashing buttons—it picks up right where it left off.

Known as “intermittent computing,” this system relies on a still-exotic kind of memory chip. Almost every computer in history has had two separate forms of memory: volatile RAM and more permanent, but harder to access nonvolatile storage, which includes anything from punch cards and magnetic tape to hard drives and flash memory. But these researchers are using a new type of RAM—ferroelectric RAM or F-RAM—that erases the distinction. It’s as quickly and easily accessible as typical RAM, but as persistent as any permanent storage medium. It takes only a minuscule amount of electricity to make it work.

Jasper de Winkel, a Ph.D. candidate at Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands, and the technical lead on the battery-less Game Boy project, married this power-sipping, nonvolatile memory to a power-sipping processor from Ambiq, a company that specializes in processors for smart watches, industrial sensors and other ultralow power devices. The total package—including the memory, processor and display— draws on average 11.5 milliwatts of power. By comparison, a typical smartphone draws 1 to 3 watts of power from its battery when in use, or around a hundred times more. It’s this combination of traits— never needing to reboot, using very little power, and harvesting energy from the environment—that yields a system that could be a “perpetual” computer, says Dr. Hester. In perpetual computing, tiny sensors, radios and other devices gather, process and transmit data until at last they physically break down.

Joshua R. Smith, a professor at the University of Washington, where he heads up the Sensor Systems research group, has demonstrated it’s possible to use the radio waves already coursing through our environment to power tiny sensors and computers. In 2005, his group was the first to show off a small micro-controller powered by radio waves beamed over a considerable distance. In one of the lab’s latest projects, the team wirelessly powered a small, battery-less video camera.

As enticing as this technology sounds, it will always be limited, especially compared with the ever more powerful computers we’re accustomed to carrying around. Still, with a growing array of processors and sensors that can sustain themselves on a few hundred micro- watts of power the number of possible ambient energy sources multiplies significantly. In addition to existing ways to harvest energy, from radio waves, solar power and vibration, there are some in development that sound more sci-fi. For example, researchers at Northwestern recently demonstrated a novel



This Game Boy is powered by solar panels and the pressing of its buttons. PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY WSJ; PHOTO: JASPER DE WINKEL




thread that can turn body heat, or any thermal energy, into electricity. The result could be, for example, a hat that powers health sensors, or a ski jacket that trickle-charges your phone. Other researchers at a variety of institutions are working on ways to produce electricity from the microbes that live in soil. And when you combine multiple energy sources, you get a package that could go places few computers have before—like inside construction material. Researchers have previously proposed putting wireless sensors into freshly poured concrete, where they could monitor strain more or less indefinitely.

“A bridge is supposed to have a lifetime of 50 years, and in the U.S. we’ll leave it up for 200 years,” says Dr. Hester. “Imagine getting stress and strain data at high resolution across a bridge for that entire time.”

In other words, someday we might know it’s time for a repair when the bridge itself cries out for help.
Jasper de Winkel, Przemyslaw Pawelczak and Vito Kortbeek built a Game Boy that uses ‘intermittent computing’ and requires no batteries.

JAMES BROADHEAD
 
The end of an era - Tom Seaver, Lou Brock and now Bob Gibson have died recently

The MLB channel is playing Gibson vs Detroit in the '68 WS now. He was 84

I cant believe how lousy the film is, its a grainy black and white with audio thats difficult to make out sometimes.

9 time all star, 9 golden gloves, 2 cy youngs

In 1968, Gibson authored the greatest season by a pitcher in modern history. His 1.12 ERA established an all-time record for 300 or more innings. Gibson posted a 22-9 record with league-leading totals of 13 shutouts and 268 strikeouts. During one stretch, he surrendered merely two earned runs over 95 innings. Gibson was named the N.L. Cy Young Award winner and MVP. For an encore, Gibson set a record with 17 strikeouts in Game 1 of the World Series against the Detroit Tigers (a 4-0 victory). He pitched two more complete games (winning Game 4 by the score of 10-1 before losing Game 7 by a 4-1 margin) to run his streak to a record eight straight distance-going performances. Gibson totaled 35 strikeouts in the three games to establish a Fall Classic standard.

https://www.mlb.com/cardinals/fans/complete-gamer

interesting, Curt Flood stole 2nd and they had a split screen to show him taking his lead.

its weird looking at the crowd, its a sea of white men in white shirts and ties.... Well, those are the people who could afford WS tickets I guess

Gibson set the World Series record for Ks at 17, I think Koufax had 15

Pitchers like that made it easier on managers

I watched an interview with Gibson and Tim McCarver (his catcher), Tim said all the white shirts out in the CF bleachers made it hard to pick up the ball coming from pitchers. Green walls or darker backdrops provide a nice contrast so hitters can see the ball better.

One other thing, MLB lowered the mound 5 inches after Gibson's '68 season.
 
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I finished my Daddy Bootcamp book and the teleconference course itself. My wife did one for moms and 90% of the content was identical. There were some key differences in emphasis between them though,

Moms talked a lot about:
  • Post-partum depression and the baby blues
  • How important it is to not gatekeep the partner out of raising/interacting with the baby

Dads talked a lot about:
  • Do not shake the baby!
  • How important it is to not let the mom gatekeep you out of raising/interacting with the baby
 
I finished my Daddy Bootcamp book and the teleconference course itself. My wife did one for moms and 90% of the content was identical. There were some key differences in emphasis between them though,

Moms talked a lot about:
  • Post-partum depression and the baby blues
  • How important it is to not gatekeep the partner out of raising/interacting with the baby

Dads talked a lot about:
  • Do not shake the baby!
  • How important it is to not let the mom gatekeep you out of raising/interacting with the baby
As important as mums gatekeepering you out is other women doing so. Aunts, grandmas, the mother-in-law etc. Presumably you and your wife have agreed this is a partnership but other women, especially from older generations, may make assumptions based on their own experiences that won't match how much you two want you to be involved. You will probably want their support but make sure they don't take over.
 
The end of an era - Tom Seaver, Lou Brock and now Bob Gibson have died recently

The MLB channel is playing Gibson vs Detroit in the '68 WS now. He was 84

I cant believe how lousy the film is, its a grainy black and white with audio thats difficult to make out sometimes.

9 time all star, 9 golden gloves, 2 cy youngs

In 1968, Gibson authored the greatest season by a pitcher in modern history. His 1.12 ERA established an all-time record for 300 or more innings. Gibson posted a 22-9 record with league-leading totals of 13 shutouts and 268 strikeouts. During one stretch, he surrendered merely two earned runs over 95 innings. Gibson was named the N.L. Cy Young Award winner and MVP. For an encore, Gibson set a record with 17 strikeouts in Game 1 of the World Series against the Detroit Tigers (a 4-0 victory). He pitched two more complete games (winning Game 4 by the score of 10-1 before losing Game 7 by a 4-1 margin) to run his streak to a record eight straight distance-going performances. Gibson totaled 35 strikeouts in the three games to establish a Fall Classic standard.

https://www.mlb.com/cardinals/fans/complete-gamer

interesting, Curt Flood stole 2nd and they had a split screen to show him taking his lead.

its weird looking at the crowd, its a sea of white men in white shirts and ties.... Well, those are the people who could afford WS tickets I guess

Gibson set the World Series record for Ks at 17, I think Koufax had 15

Pitchers like that made it easier on managers
Our daughter and son-in-law have a cat named Bob Gibson.
 
Since what I actually learned is definitely too NSFW for posting....TIL to be careful where you click while on a wiki walk.
 
Please tell me you didn't wander unescorted into Encyclopedia Drammatica.
 
Thankfully no.
 
OK, I'd just dialled 9-1- but will now hang up instead of dialling the final 1.
 
TIL For a few weeks during infancy, baby brains grow 1% in weight each day. By the end of the growth spurt, their brain has doubled in size. This is partially why babies go through a super chubby phase - brain growth depends on a steady stream of fat and if they were to not have that fat for even a day during the growth spurt, it could kill them. They put on the pounds during the chubby phase so that when the later brain growth spurt hits, they have a ready supply to fall back on in times of famine.

Normally that brain spurt happens in the womb for other big-brained mammals, but it can't happen this way for humans because the giant post-spurt baby brain would kill the mom during childbirth. For the baby's ideal development, they'd stay in utero for ~15 months; ideal gestation for the mother would be about 6 months.
 
For a few weeks during infancy, baby brains grow 1% in weight each day. By the end of the growth spurt, their brain has doubled in size.
This is why in countries with chronic malnutrition we see entire generations in the classroom be unable to grasp simple concepts such as proportions and cross-multiplication, or long sentences.
 
TIL about Frestonia, an independent republic in North London that lasted for over 5 years.

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

Not officially recognised by anyone although it did produce its own postage stamps which were honoured by the Post Office.
 
TIL:
A Toxic Alien Is Taking Over Russia
The giant hogweed isn’t just an invasive plant. It’s a metaphor for what is happening to much of this country.


Hogweed.jpg



NYT said:
BALASHIKHA, Russia — Take any of the many highways out of the Russian capital and you can dissect the country’s strata like rings on a tree. Sentinel apartment towers replace the bustling illuminated center, then the belt of auto dealerships and box stores drifts by. Gradually, the landscape becomes sparse, with villages and towns sporadically punctuating the stretch of meadows and forests for thousands of miles in every direction.

Russia is the biggest country on Earth and both the state and the people take pride in the size of its territory — “from the southern seas to the polar fringes,” as the current national anthem goes. That quiet emptiness, the enormousness of Russia, has been infiltrated in recent decades by an alien force: the giant hogweed.

This invader, an exceptionally tall plant with a toxic sap that can cause third-degree burns and blindness, has come to symbolize the fate of rural Russia: malign neglect by the government. While Russia may be vast, most economic activity — and much of life in general — is concentrated in a handful of cities. And after various Soviet-era attempts to develop land through centralized planning, there is evidence that the current government is doing the exact opposite. Enter the hogweed.

In the summer, the giant hogweed assumes the look of dill on steroids; its coffee-table sized leaves create thickets impossible to pass without a hazmat suit. In the winter, it desiccates into a brown skeleton. Outside Moscow, the hogweeds are often the only visible landmarks over white fields, ominous umbrellas standing in the snow like War of the Worlds troops poised to march. Officials have begun to refer to overgrown areas as “contaminated.”Hogweed contains a high concentration of furanocoumarins, substances that cause severe burns and blisters when affected areas of skin are exposed to sunlight. Even so, the plant was grown nationwide. By the 1980s, when the plant began infiltrating central Russia’s wilderness, tests showed that cows fed on hogweed produced poor-tasting milk. Efforts to make the plant less toxic failed.

Image

Credit...Sergei Savostyanov/TASS, via Getty Images
The plague could not be contained. While some regional governments now try to spray problem zones with pesticides, Moscow hasn’t paid the problem any attention or sought to understand its scope. Tatarstan, the only region to monitor its spread, has pleaded for federal help, saying that the area overtaken by the hogweed grew tenfold in the past eight years, with thousands of burn victims and even fatalities.

Some activists and scientists are experimenting with solutions, ranging from hogweed-eating snails to moonshine production. One evening I joined an activist, Maria Popova, on a hogweed raid outside the Russian capital. We equipped ourselves with gloves, goggles and large kitchen knives on the edge of a field that is part of the popular Losiny Ostrov National Park — a large nature area close to Moscow.

“If you don’t interfere, the hogweeds multiply at a crazy rate and soon there is nothing but them,” she said as we hiked through the tall grass. Ms. Popova started patrolling the nearby fields when she came across “plantations” of hogweed on one of her walks. The national park, which is tasked with protecting biodiversity, has ignored the problem, she said. She called hogweed “a symbol of neglect.”

“At the national level, the government does nothing,” she said, rising up on tiptoes and hacking off giant umbrella-like flowering structures on stalks three meters in the air. It’s a trustworthy method to prevent the weed from seeding — one activist in a hogweed-fighting social networking group confessed to arming herself with a machete on cycling trips.

But urban activists are more likely to mobilize online, while in the provinces, there simply aren’t enough people who care, said Darya Grebenshchikova, a writer living in a shrinking village in Tver region.

“The hogweed is not perceived as a problem because there is no population here to perceive it as a problem,” she told me. “I have lost hope in some kind of renaissance of the village. The government has decided it’s too much hassle to keep the rural areas alive, so they are turning it into a desert.”
 
I suspect much of what we call disease has its origin in the gut

If you nurture well the little friends that live in symbiosis with you in your gut, they will return the favor :)

There is a tremendous lot of communication in your body going around influencing your metabolism, not just those hormones that you see articles about in newspapers.
Your gut having an important role.
Perhaps we can only model that properly to the benefit of healing diseases once we have quantum computers of adequate capacity up and running.
 
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TIL Al Roker and Roxie Roker were cousins.

 
we probably need a general rip thread, but Eddie Van Halen died after dealing with throat cancer for several years.


solo work from 5 years ago

 
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