Which reminds me of this guy.fresh_42 said:They used to sell radioactive compounds in drug stores in the early years:
View attachment 363573
or this one
BillTre said:One time I was goofing around with a gieger counter measuring radioactivity around and about the lab. Ran into this professor who had a big watch with glowy numbers on it. We measured it and saw it was radioactive. The prof. said there's a lot of metal in the watch so his wrist should be protected from it. I flipped his arm over and measured the radioactivity going through the back of the watch and his arm. He stopped wearing the watch after that.
Neurobiology and behavior.sbrothy said:You don't mention what the professor's teaching subject was
Well at least he took the watch off. So he can't have been completely incompetent.BillTre said:Neurobiology and behavior.
Many biologists don't have a deep understanding of things outside their field, but some do understand basics.sbrothy said:Well at least he took the watch off. So he can't have been completely incompetent.![]()
So if I paint your house, the job is a lot more valuable if I use a toothbrush? It takes a lot more to achieve the result that way.fresh_42 said:I define value by what it takes to achieve or produce something
There's a book called "Parkinton's Law" which takes a cynical view of administrative and bureaucratic work which states that employees will fill to accomplish the work no matter how much work there is. It's pretty funny.PeterDonis said:So if I paint your house, the job is a lot more valuable if I use a toothbrush? It takes a lot more to achieve the result that way.
Yes, that book is indeed funny--but the underlying point it's making is that all the extra effort involved in the various bureaucratic processes it describes adds no actual value at all. At one point, Parkinson has an official, A, who is overworked and hires subordinates, and ends up heading an office of seven people--but when a document comes in that requires a response, even though all seven of them weigh in on it, the final response is the same as what A would have produced on his own if the other six officials had never been born.sbrothy said:It's pretty funny.
Yes. It's ironic, sarcastic even. Anyone who've visited the DMV probably recognizes a lot of it's tropes.PeterDonis said:Yes, that book is indeed funny--but the underlying point it's making is that all the extra effort involved in the various bureaucratic processes it describes adds no actual value at all. At one point, Parkinson has an official, A, who is overworked and hires subordinates, and ends up heading an office of seven people--but when a document comes in that requires a response, even though all seven of them weigh in on it, the final response is the same as what A would have produced on his own if the other six officials had never been born.
Or anyone who's worked in a large bureaucracy.sbrothy said:Anyone who've visited the DMV probably recognizes a lot of it's tropes.
I guess it's time for my annual check of my list of interesting webpages.Borg said:TIL about Historical Tech Tree - visualize the entire history of technologies, inventions, and (some) discoveries, from prehistory to today.
https://www.historicaltechtree.com/
"When a bee is drunk, it’s not hard for other members of the colony to notice it in their waggle dance.
Once spotted, the guard bees of the hive will immediately begin their investigation and punishment.
Honeybees are quite strict, and their reaction to a criminal offense is borderline medieval.
Without question, the guard bees will bite off the drunken bee’s legs, leaving it with little to no chance of survival. Pretty harsh for an accidental buzz.
This punishment serves as a warning to the rest of the hive."
---- easyscienceforkids"To prevent the negative effects of drunken bees, guard bees act as vigilant bouncers.
They detect intoxicated intruders attempting to return to the hive and refuse entry, even resorting to aggressive measures like biting off legs if necessary.
These measures ensure that order is maintained and the impact of inebriated members is minimized, ultimately protecting the hive’s integrity."
Is there a reason? Is it because FB find it pornographic?!fresh_42 said:TIL that FB censors photos of a 29,500-year-old neolithic sculpture, the Venus of Willendorf.
Depends on your definition or who you ask. In a European sense: no, in an American sense: yes.sbrothy said:Is there a reason? Is it because FB find it pornographic?!
“[…] Usually, two back seats rides are available at each air show; one goes to a member of the press, and the other to the "Key Influencer". […]”
I'd be interested to hear his last words.fresh_42 said:Italian businessman Marco De Veglia, known as one of the most vocal anti-vaccine activists who advocated that the coronavirus pandemic was a "pharmaceutical conspiracy," died of COVID-19. This was reported by Página 12 on August 4, 2021.
DaveC426913 said:I'd be interested to hear his last words.
In the 'irony is not dead but ubiquitous' category:DaveC426913 said:I'd be interested to hear his last words.
Apparently that video drew a lot of interest, but many people still had questions or had trouble understanding it.Swamp Thing said:TIL how an aha moment yielded a key insight into the analogy between electrical and mechanical systems, leading to a secret device that contributed to McLaren's success in Formula-1 for several years.
DaveC426913 said:I'd be interested to hear his last words.
Speaking of Covid, I read an amusing note recently that said this offers an excellent litmus test for dating:
"Did you mask during Covid?"
You can learn a lot about someone by their answer to this simple question.
I heard yesterday, I think it was Michelle Thaller, that there is a running gag among astrophysicists: "With an impact, you can explain everything."pinball1970 said:T.I.L. something about axions/dark matter.I have heard of them so looked them up at wiki, then CP violation, then CP violation, parity then gave up.
Article here https://phys.org/news/2025-08-intergalactic-mysterious-dark-particle-clever.html
Paper here.
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41550-025-02621-8/figures/3
Me, I need a hook - something about a show to intrigue me.pinball1970 said:Speaking of Covid. I watched this last night. I do not think you should be told what a film is before you watch it, it spoils the he surprise.
I think it may have helped me with this though.
Unsure if related or not, L.N.I.L. about "exonym" and "endonym".jack action said:TIL:
'Nickname' is not 'nick' + 'name.'
It was originally 'ekename.' 'Eke' was the Middle English word for "also" or "in addition."
Since 'ekename' began with a vowel, people used 'an' before it.
Over time, 'an ekename' became 'a nickname.'
Apparently, no:gmax137 said:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mendeleev's_predicted_elements#Prefixes said:To give provisional names to his predicted elements, Dmitri Mendeleev used the prefixes eka-, dvi- or dwi-, and tri-, from the Sanskrit names of digits 1, 2, and 3, depending upon whether the predicted element was one, two, or three places down from the known element of the same group in his table.
Atomic Rockets has a page on those too. It might be a funnier read. As always YMMV:Borg said:TIL about Historical Tech Tree - visualize the entire history of technologies, inventions, and (some) discoveries, from prehistory to today.
https://www.historicaltechtree.com/
Lime and limpid green, a second scene
Now fights between the blue you once knew
Floating down, the sound resounds
Around the icy waters underground
Jupiter and Saturn, Oberon, Miranda and Titania
Neptune, Titan, stars can frighten
I know that!gmax137 said:Lime and limpid green, a second scene
Now fights between the blue you once knew
Floating down, the sound resounds
Around the icy waters underground
Jupiter and Saturn, Oberon, Miranda and Titania
Neptune, Titan, stars can frighten
jack action said:Astronomy Domine
Good original from Pink Floyd:
Better cover from Voivod: