• 5 Posts
  • 525 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 25th, 2023

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  • Contramuffin@lemmy.worldtoScience Memes@mander.xyzOxygen
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    16 hours ago

    It’s very simple - the sun isn’t burning. The sun is actually a very large healing crystal. As you may know, healing crystals capture the harmonic vibrations of the universe and turn them into things that are good for our health, like warmth, vitamins, essential oils, and positive ions.

    The sun is made out of a healing crystal that converts the vibrations into warmth, witch is what we see as sunlight. The sun is so big that it’s able to capture a lot of harmonic vibrations and so it makes a lot of warmth.

    The real question is who polished the healing crystal that forms the sun, and who put it up into space. The natural answer is that it’s clearly done by my good friend Moonlight Namaste, and she will teach you how to do the same thing if you visit her blog and sign up for her meditation classes. With enough guided meditation, you too will start to see the universal vibrations and learn how to change your oscillations to match the universal vibrations. The first 200 people who sign up will get a free dream catcher, so sign up today!



  • Definitely not the same, at least in my experience. It differs by field, but in my field, grad programs basically have zero classes, and whatever classes there are are generally automatic A’s. In turn, the difficulty comes from the fact that you are basically in indentured servitude to your advisor, and there is no actual recourse for trivial things like “overwork” and “burnout.”

    I know of people who did 70 hour work weeks, and for a period of time, I had to do that as well. Also, you get paid less than you would if you had just gotten a 40 hour per week job at a company.

    Anyways, the advisor that you pick really makes or breaks your experience.




  • Yeah, but my impression has been that there was no need to keep perfect time - good enough and easy to keep track of were the priority.

    Like in the Roman times, they only had 10 months in a year. Not because each month was longer, but simply because they didn’t bother to keep track of the time during the 2 winter months (it was unproductive anyways, and so there was no need to keep track of the time). I can definitely see the use of a system in which the first month of the year is just defined as “the moon cycle when you start planting seeds.” And any deviation is just swept under the rug as “winter month weirdness.”

    As a matter of fact, my impression has generally been that most (or all?) lunar calendars define their first month as the moon cycle that contains the spring equinox, likely for the exact reason that that’s when you start planting crops






  • Contramuffin@lemmy.worldtoScience Memes@mander.xyzMornings
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    7 days ago

    Is it alright to go around wiping the OS off of other people’s computers?

    • is what your comment reads like to me.

    To be clear: each machine generally needs a computer to be permanently plugged into it. Generally the computer belongs to the university. You’re not plugging in your own personal laptop into the machine. Saying to install Linux on these computers is essentially tampering with the university’s electronics and IT will be very unhappy that you did that.




  • Contramuffin@lemmy.worldtoScience Memes@mander.xyzLaunches
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    11 days ago

    That’s the thing - in space, orbits don’t decay. Orbital decay only happens if there’s dust or atmosphere that you bump into along your orbit to slow you down. But in interplanetary space, there’s no dust or atmosphere, and certainly not enough to decay your orbit fast enough to achieve results (otherwise, the Earth would have already decayed and melted in the Sun)

    You need to spend fuel to lower your orbit to hit the Sun, and you need to spend fuel to raise your orbit to escape the solar system. It turns out to be really freaking difficult to hit the sun because it simply requires so much fuel to lower your orbit enough to hit the Sun.





  • If there was something I give up on, it’s gun control. For several reasons:

    1. There’s basically no gun control anyways so it’s not like we’re giving up something.
    2. Compared to abortion rights (ie bodily autonomy) and climate change (ie existential crisis), not having gun control is the least bad. It’s still pretty crucial, to be fair, but comparing to actual existential crises like the other 2, not having gun control doesn’t seem that bad in comparison