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13 votes
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Astronomers find ‘missing’ matter
22 votes -
Genetic variant tied to doubled dementia risk for older men
14 votes -
The strange (pre-tectonics) hypothesis of Earth expanding like a balloon
6 votes -
A history of dome movie theaters
10 votes -
If you could travel back in time and bring one thing back to the modern day, what would it be?
I was having a conversation that made me go "damn the Romans for using up all the herbal birth control." Normally I'm not interested in doing time travel because I am too queer, loud, non-binary,...
I was having a conversation that made me go "damn the Romans for using up all the herbal birth control." Normally I'm not interested in doing time travel because I am too queer, loud, non-binary, woman coded, etc. to not get some sort of societal consequence in most of history. Also I like modern medicine and such. But, it got me thinking about how it'd be cool to be able to bring a large silphium plant back from before it went extinct.
Obviously I have no idea of the efficacy of silphium for medicinal purposes but it would be super cool to be able to grow it, sequence the DNA, and try to reintroduce it, even if only in gardens. And maybe it's actually even effective medically.
So what would you bring back?
Caveats:
- You must be able to carry the thing
- The thing will not age when traveling forward in time but you'll be able to demonstrate that you brought it from the past.
- It should be one "thing." If that "thing" is made up of multiple smaller things (not atoms ಠ_ಠ)... Well, if you're trying to loophole then you're on thin ice, but if a reasonable case could be made, then make it and let your fellow Tildese judge you.
- You can't bring anything back in time besides yourself, your clothes and your time machine remote control button.
- You cannot bring a person to the present. An animal that you personally can carry, and that will let you carry it, is up to you.
- ˗ˏˋ Bonus Style Points ˎˊ˗ (there are no points) for presenting your historical artifact in old timey Victorian gentleman inventor/traveler/archaeologist fashion, should the mood take you.
63 votes -
How the little-known ‘dark roof’ lobby may be making US cities hotter
30 votes -
Finland's obsession with saunas is going global – what does science say about the claimed health benefits?
28 votes -
The mother who never stopped believing her son was still there
26 votes -
Jupiter was formerly twice its current size and had a much stronger magnetic field, study says
22 votes -
When people think that protests are more likely to be met with state violence, they are more likely to view confrontational tactics as legitimate and effective
17 votes -
Norway is the 55th country to sign the Artemis Accords – document outlines best practices for responsible space exploration
8 votes -
Scientists developed a questionnaire to find out if your cat is a psychopath
20 votes -
Is all cooking "ultra-processed" food?
17 votes -
US President Donald Trump seeks to cancel NASA’s Mars Sample Return
34 votes -
Evidence of controversial Planet 9 uncovered in sky surveys taken twenty-three years apart
36 votes -
UK experiments to reflect sunlight one step closer
16 votes -
Can electro-agriculture revolutionize the way we grow food?
12 votes -
The US Food and Drug Administration just approved the first CRISPR-edited pigs for food
23 votes -
Startups are making synthetic butter and oil
12 votes -
Thousands of falling satellites put the atmosphere at risk
21 votes -
The ripe stuff: In pursuit of the perfect fruit
10 votes -
Meet the death metal singers changing vocal health research
28 votes -
On attempts to replace artificial food dyes by Mars Inc. (2016)
21 votes -
Japan has successfully used drones to trigger and guide lightning strikes - and keep flying
22 votes -
A nonsense phrase has been occurring in scientific papers, suggesting artificial intelligence data contamination
53 votes -
Arctic haze induced by an Icelandic volcanic eruption – evidence from China's highest-resolution trace gas monitoring
7 votes -
US National Institutes of Health guts its first and largest study centered on women
19 votes -
Norway has launched a new scheme to lure top international researchers amid growing pressure on academic freedom in the US
11 votes -
The scientists who leave little trace at the world's northernmost laboratory in Ny-Ålesund in Norway's Arctic
8 votes -
RNA motifs coming into focus
8 votes -
Gene-edited non-browning banana could cut food waste
24 votes -
I have no idea to advance in my career toward data science
I did a masters in data analytics, and then the niche I fell into in the working world was building dashboards, reports and spreadsheets of financial data for non-technical bureaucrats. Instead of...
I did a masters in data analytics, and then the niche I fell into in the working world was building dashboards, reports and spreadsheets of financial data for non-technical bureaucrats. Instead of ensuring data quality by technical means, my current company often just has me manually reviewing and checking financial data. This is pretty frustrating to me because I have no education in finance, and the things I miss or get wrong are so second nature to my boss that he doesn't even see them as something I should have been trained on. The only technologies I use are SQL server and excel. Any proactive steps I've made to automate processes has been discouraged as not worth the time.
I'm aware that most people spend years on tedious stuff before ever getting to work with more engaging technology, but honestly I'm starting to wonder if they've forgotten I'm not a finance guy. I want to move up in my career especially to escape my current role, but I'm feeling completely lost as to how. There's no obvious role in my company that could be a 'next rung of the ladder' to advance into, so there's nobody I can emulate to help chart a course. My boss had an unconventional path to his current role, and isn't really into manager stuff like career mentoring, so he's no help in that regard.
To anyone with experience in data science, what is the advancement supposed to look like? What are the key skills I should be developing? Am I being too averse to learning the subject matter of the data I'm working on? Any insight is appreciated!
13 votes -
Remembering Betty Webb: Bletchley Park and Pentagon code breaker
5 votes -
Aerosols: Airborne particles in Earth's atmosphere (2012)
4 votes -
US FBI raids home of prominent computer scientist who has gone incommunicado
36 votes -
As NASA faces cuts, China reveals ambitious plans for planetary exploration
16 votes -
Scientists scramble to track Los Angeles wildfires’ long-term health impacts
5 votes -
The history and economics of frozen orange juice
9 votes -
Virologists are still bringing dangerous, novel pathogens in from the wild
11 votes -
In 2019, scientist Steffen Olsen took a startling photo of huskies appearing to walk on water – photo quickly went viral as it revealed reality of Greenland's rapidly melting ice
15 votes -
Sociogenomics, a new scientific field is changing the understanding of how and why people develop the specific ways that they do
13 votes -
Hatching a conspiracy: an antitrust lawyer writes about the consolidation of ownership of chicken genetics and egg production
9 votes -
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and US influencers bash seed oils, baffling nutrition scientists
52 votes -
Nexus: A Brief History of Information Networks from the Stone Age to AI by Yuval Noah Harari
3 votes -
Show Tildes: we built the world's first legal AI API
22 votes -
Labradors and humans share the same obesity genes – new study
12 votes -
A daily tea routine partially protects people from heavy metals, study finds
23 votes -
Holotypic Occlupanids - How the internet invented bread clip science
14 votes -
Why Thomas Jefferson meticulously monitored the weather wherever he went
8 votes