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21 votes
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Costco capitalism
23 votes -
What does any of this have to do with physics?
41 votes -
Looking for suggestions that make fun of holier than thou/ sanctimonious people
I have seen the vibe I am looking for in the Best Little Whorehouse in Texas, Oh Brother Where Art Thou, the Hunt for the Wilderpeople, The Birdcage and I am hoping to find more. Making fun of the...
I have seen the vibe I am looking for in the Best Little Whorehouse in Texas, Oh Brother Where Art Thou, the Hunt for the Wilderpeople, The Birdcage and I am hoping to find more. Making fun of the characters who see themselves as morally superior. Thank you.
20 votes -
Why technology favors tyranny
15 votes -
Killing community
41 votes -
What color is the sun?
15 votes -
Cosmetic bug: a.link-group:visited in groups list has same colour whether subscribed or unsubscribed
See this image. Which groups are unsubscribed? All of the ~sports.X groups are unsubscribed, but american_football, basketball, football, and motorsports have been visited. The link-visited colour...
See this image.
Which groups are unsubscribed? All of the ~sports.X groups are unsubscribed, but american_football, basketball, football, and motorsports have been visited.
The link-visited colour set by
a.link-group:visitedis taking precedence over the default colour otherwise set by.group-list-item-not-subscribed a.link-group, hiding the colour change associated with-not-subscribed. This is particularly troublesome when unsubscribing from a group, since one must go to the group's page – visiting the link – in order to unsubscribe.6 votes -
Specimens are deteriorating at the Florida State Collection of Arthropods; this neglect could interfere with research
https://undark.org/2023/07/05/neglect-of-a-museums-collection-could-cause-scientific-setbacks/ IN A DUSTY ROOM in central Florida, countless millipedes, centipedes, and other creepy-crawlies sit...
https://undark.org/2023/07/05/neglect-of-a-museums-collection-could-cause-scientific-setbacks/
IN A DUSTY ROOM in central Florida, countless millipedes, centipedes, and other creepy-crawlies sit in specimen jars, rotting. The invertebrates are part of the Florida State Collection of Arthropods in Gainesville, which totals more than 12 million insects and other arthropod specimens, and are used by expert curators to identify pest species that threaten Florida’s native and agricultural plants.
However, not all specimens at the facility are treated equally, according to two people who have seen the collection firsthand. They say non-insect samples, like shrimp and millipedes, that are stored in ethanol have been neglected to the point of being irreversibly damaged or lost completely.
When it comes to how the FSCA stacks up with other collections she’s worked in, Ann Dunn, a former curatorial assistant, is blunt: “This is the worst I’ve ever seen.”
Experts say the loss of such specimens — even uncharismatic ones such as centipedes — is a setback for science. Particularly invaluable are holotypes, which are the example specimens that determine the description for an entire species. In fact, the variety of holotypes a collection has is often more important than its size, since those specimens are actively used for research, said Ainsley Seago, an associate curator of invertebrate zoology at the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh.
A paper published in March 2023 highlighted the importance of museum specimens more generally, for addressing urgent issues like climate change and wildlife conservation, with 73 of the world’s largest natural history museums estimating their total collections to exceed 1.1 billion specimens. “This global collection,” the authors write, “is the physical basis for our understanding of the natural world and our place in it.”
9 votes -
Aspartame may be declared a possible carcinogen by IARC
56 votes -
How The X-Files invented modern television
11 votes -
Stop talking to each other and start buying things: three decades of survival in the desert of social media
68 votes -
The adventures of fallacy man
21 votes -
Squarespace enters definitive agreement to acquire assets of Google Domains
14 votes -
Confessions of a slaughterhouse worker
24 votes -
Fontemon: A video game inside a font
6 votes -
Leo Tolstoy on finding meaning in a meaningless world
10 votes -
On progress and historical change
4 votes -
Your favourite Futurama opening line?
9 votes -
GPT-4
2 votes -
Project Code Rush - The Beginnings of Netscape (2000)
4 votes -
Much of what you've heard about Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan is wrong
11 votes -
Mastodon, the small web, and decentralisation: thoughts on running a small instance
8 votes -
Johnny Cash - Hurt (2002)
7 votes -
10,000 brains in a basement: The dark and mysterious origins of Denmark’s psychiatric brain collection
6 votes -
CHVRCHES - Leave a Trace (2015)
5 votes -
The mysterious, stubborn appeal of mass-produced fried chicken (2019)
11 votes -
Death and surrender to power in the clothing of men
6 votes -
Designing accessible color systems
5 votes -
The surprising reason that there are so many Thai restaurants in America (2018)
13 votes -
The problem with NFTs
8 votes -
MØ - Kindness (2021)
4 votes -
Christine and the Queens - La vita nuova (2020)
6 votes -
The economics of nuclear energy
5 votes -
‘You don’t look autistic’: The reality of high-functioning autism
10 votes -
When SimCity got serious: The story of Maxis Business Simulations and SimRefinery
7 votes -
The lonely work of moderating Hacker News
13 votes -
Death and surrender to power in the clothing of men
9 votes -
There is no algorithm for truth (presentation by Tom Scott)
7 votes -
You can now practice firing someone in virtual reality
6 votes -
How Aladdin changed animation (by screwing over Robin Williams)
7 votes -
Another Game of Thrones hot take
8 votes -
The Nintendo Switch’s Joy-Con drift problem, explained
11 votes -
The story of Lee Holloway: The decline of a brilliant young coder
13 votes -
Why Confederate lies live on
10 votes -
Why 10,000 volts at altitude is a bad idea
6 votes -
Werner's Nomenclature of Colours
4 votes -
The sixty-year-old scientific screwup that helped Covid kill
10 votes -
Everything you know about obesity is wrong
13 votes -
Wireless is a trap
31 votes