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12 votes
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Meth addiction in fish poses threat to ecosystem balance, study says
7 votes -
Time to assume that health research is fraudulent until proven otherwise?
9 votes -
Spiders are eating snakes all over the world, and yeah, it's gruesome
10 votes -
Neurotype-matching, but not being autistic, influences self and observer ratings of interpersonal rapport
12 votes -
Apophenia, audio pareidolia, and musical ear syndrome
5 votes -
Everyone will say this craft breaks the laws of physics - Risking my life to settle a physics debate
21 votes -
What we learned doing fast grants
4 votes -
I touched the world's most painful plant - Gympie gympie (the suicide plant)
10 votes -
Researchers develop weight loss device using powerful magnets to keep your mouth closed
6 votes -
Why some biologists and ecologists think social media is a risk to humanity
15 votes -
The agony and the ecstasy of deep brain stimulation surgery
4 votes -
Can a $110 million helmet unlock the secrets of the mind?
6 votes -
ITER site construction is now 78% complete
11 votes -
How does film actually work? (It's magic) [Photos and Development]
10 votes -
Humpback whale gulps and spits out Cape Cod lobsterman
14 votes -
Vicious doctors and cruel diseases in 18th-Century Jamaica
3 votes -
I found a mud volcano in California
2 votes -
Plans to capture and run six-hour-long sound tests on young minke whales are set to go ahead in Norway despite condemnation from more than fifty international scientists
5 votes -
Why having a 'weak' hand is good, and why they may be better described as "support" hands
6 votes -
The long, strange life of the world’s oldest naked mole rat
8 votes -
I need help with a story that involves math
I'm creating the concept for a story called The Little Differences. It's about an accountant that, one day, out of the blue, notices that a certain calculation is producing a slightly wrong...
I'm creating the concept for a story called The Little Differences. It's about an accountant that, one day, out of the blue, notices that a certain calculation is producing a slightly wrong result. Barely noticeable, nothing world-changing,
He runs it on the computer, tries different software, a physical calculator... everything gives a result that's a little off. When he checks on paper himself, he gets the correct result. But, to his surprise, everyone else tells him that he's the one that's off, and that the incorrect result is actually perfectly sound.
I need something that makes sense, mathematically. The weird result must be something that really is wrong, and not just something that programs sometimes get wrong (I don't want it to be explained at all... I mean, the reason why it is occurring must not be something easily reducible to some well-known malfunction). But it must also be minor enough for someone to miss, something that wouldn't really cause much trouble in the real world (is that possible? IDK).
Lastly: it must be something that I'm able to explain (on some level) to a non-math reader.
So, Tildes math wizzes, what you suggest? :D
17 votes -
The military’s mobile nuclear reactor prototype is set to begin taking shape
11 votes -
Heads up! The cardiovascular secrets of giraffes
6 votes -
Mimicry: When animals copy other animals
4 votes -
A better way to picture atoms
5 votes -
Small modular reactors and the future of energy
7 votes -
Why 10,000 volts at altitude is a bad idea
6 votes -
What is in the COVID-19 vaccine?
4 votes -
The doomed mouse utopia that inspired the ‘Rats of NIMH’. Dr. John Bumpass Calhoun spent the ’60s and ’70s playing god to thousands of rodents.
10 votes -
The man who drank Cholera and launched the yogurt craze. Ilya Metchnikoff laid the foundation for modern probiotics.
5 votes -
How high voltage arcing happens, and why it happens so much easier at higher altitudes
5 votes -
Cornell researchers see atoms at record resolution
9 votes -
Robotic ‘Third Thumb’ use can alter brain representation of the hand
5 votes -
To the brain, a tool is just a tool, not a hand extension
5 votes -
I found an article that said "The microwave was invented to heat hamsters humanely in 1950s experiments." And I thought, no it wasn't. ...was it?
22 votes -
Politically polarized brains share an intolerance of uncertainty
5 votes -
"Using an implant, a paralyzed individual managed to type out roughly ninety characters per minute simply by imagining that he was writing those characters out by hand."
14 votes -
Autism and the social mind
2 votes -
Using lasers to create the displays of science fiction, inspired by Star Wars and Star Trek
7 votes -
The world’s first programmable organism
7 votes -
How carbon nanotubes have the potential to change the world
4 votes -
Claims of microwave attacks are scientifically implausible
11 votes -
If correlation doesn’t imply causation, then what does?
11 votes -
Scientists have taught bees to smell the coronavirus
7 votes -
Havana syndrome: US NSA officer’s case hints at microwave attacks since 90s
26 votes -
Unlocking history through automated virtual unfolding of sealed documents imaged by X-ray microtomography
7 votes -
Making transparent wood
11 votes -
The future of reasoning
7 votes -
How blackouts, fires, and a pandemic are driving shortages of pipette tips — and hobbling science
5 votes