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4:07 AM
@flawr You can say "It's just a buzzword for the same stuff people were doing back in the 1950's. But now we have enough computing power to make it useful."
 
5:05 AM
posted on July 08, 2019 by Jiro Doke

Jiro‘s Pick this week is msgboxFontSize by Adam Danz.This utility reminded me of a very recent project, which would have benefited greatly. I was building an app that made use of warndlg and... read more >>

 
 
4 hours later…
8:56 AM
@AnderBiguri turns out that if you put a bunch of M&Ms in a bowl of water, you eventually get a Voronoi diagram:
user image
2
 
thats super cool!
 
The phenomenon responsible for it is this:
Diffusiophoresis is the spontaneous motion of colloidal particles or molecules in a fluid, induced by a concentration gradient of a different substance. In other words, it is motion of one species, A, in response to a concentration gradient in another species, B. Typically, A is colloidal particles which are in aqueous solution in which B is a dissolved salt such as sodium chloride, and so the particles of A are much larger than the ions of B. But both A and B could be polymer molecules, and B could be a small molecule. For example, concentration gradients in ethanol solutions in water move 1 μm...
 
they have funny names
 
I guess whoever did this experiment, didn't hear that one only needs 4 colors to color a plane :)
 
hahaha well, its true, but also you need to figure out where to put the M&Ms
 
9:29 AM
@excaza two or three years ago you sent me a NY Times article on how deplorable the NY metro is (with its infrastructure from 1930, having to make its own spare parts because they are so ancient etc). Was that this piece or is this a newer one?
Date suggests Nov 2017; but one of our news agencies just mentioned it being a good read
Hm, no idea why this was suggested for reading two years late, but it was a fun 30 mins nonetheless
@AnderBiguri and put them in very carefully presumably
 
 
2 hours later…
11:20 AM
posted on July 08, 2019 by Steve Eddins

My wife, Geri Eddins, has been making a lot of quilts lately. A few months ago, I printed out these 10 colors, showed them to her, and asked, "Can you make a wall hanging quilt with this color scheme? And make it look kind of mathematical?" (Whatever that means!)... read more >>

 
@Dev-iL nice
 
username StuckInPhD
 
And member for >7yrs; I hope they joined when still a student
 
12:34 PM
And it's getting comment-like answers of course :(
 
12:58 PM
@AnderBiguri stackoverflow.com/q/56934400/5211833 is it any better now? He did add the code he used and isn't working, removed the Python tag, but it still reads to me as "This code doesn't work: see images. Please suggest me/write me a code that does work"
 
thing is, this is someone doing minimal effort in solving a scientific (not programming) problem
perhaps is a bit better
but not sure if on topic
OP tried almost nothing and failed, no wonder
 
lol
 
It reads like they want us to do their PhD (or that they think that proper image segmentation is a small part of their PhD)
 
but OP is not even triying simple image segmentation
 
it says a lot about the state of the python tag that when I read their question I thought "hey, they sort of explained some of what they did"
 
1:01 PM
so I personally won't encourage that behaviour
@AndrasDeak lol
th eproblem if the question is also that it has no defined objective. "this is not good enough" well, what is?
not only that, but I'd say that the inverse of the purple is what OP wants
 
@AnderBiguri yeah, that did stick out to me
 
1:25 PM
   Top view (+Zsc view):
   ---------------------
                                            * * * * *
                                         *             *
                                       *                 *
                                      *                   *
                                     *                     *
                                    *                       *
                                    *                       *
                                    *       +Zb o----> +Yb  *
I love the ASCII-art in the NASA/NAIF documentation depicting and denoting satellite parts
 
ha, nice
 
sometimes I wonder why they not simply include a PDF :P
 
the manual must be printable on ancient CRT screens in space? ;)
 
Technically one would not use this stuff in space; the Navigation and Ancillary Information Facility usually calculates spacecraft paths and viewing directions before hand, and calibrates data afterwards
 
too bad, everything is cooler in space
 
1:29 PM
Depends on the location; Venus is quite hot at times
 
@Adriaan I guess Z is always aligned along the axis of rotation for each part? Still, I can't help but be slightly annoyed that they didn't try to align the coordinates of the parts so that they are all in the same direction in the default position.
 
@gnovice I have no idea where Z points; the entire purpose of the NAIF is to transform the weirdest coordinates into other weird coordinates, e.g. to calculate the viewing angle of a Martian moon as seen on a satellite flying by Saturn in a Mercury-fixed coordinate system
 
2:16 PM
thanks for fixing who I am @Adriaan
at least in 1 post
:P
You introduced a 90 deg rot : though
¨<-
 
Ah, I thought I'd leave my own Anderesque mark on it ;)
 
 
2 hours later…
4:27 PM
@Adriaan pretty sure it was this one theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2015/11/…
 
5:07 PM
posted on July 08, 2019 by Johanna Pingel

I’m pleased to be writing about a new exhibit at the Science Museum, London, featuring MATLAB for deep learning as it applies in autonomous vehicles. The exhibit named “Driverless: Who is in... read more >>

 
5:28 PM
posted on July 08, 2019 by Cleve Moler

(This is a reprint of the second ever Cleve's Corner, from the Winter 1990 MathWorks Newsletter.)... read more >>

 
5:51 PM
@excaza ah, so in two years nothing much happened. This year another instalment?
 
 
3 hours later…
8:45 PM
@Feeds "Computer tomography, which is the life-saving business of generating images from X-ray, magnetic resonance, and other scanners, is really a grown-up version of this question." @AnderBiguri
 
 
1 hour later…
9:46 PM
@CrisLuengo ive seen :D :D
look ma, something related to what I do its in Moler's post :D
 
"is it though?" :P
plus they called you a grown-up
 
10:36 PM
@AnderBiguri "Look ma, Moler says I work on grown-up problems!"
 

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