Do you like chemistry? FINALLY!

dilbert firestorm's Avatar
No. He's actually dead, you moron. Originally Posted by eccieuser9500
you missed the point.
eccieuser9500's Avatar

you missed the point. Originally Posted by dilbert firestorm
Over a month later? And no, I didn't miss the point. It wasn't even worthy of a scoff.

winnie the poo dixie was just being an oxymoron. Neither very funny. Little wiki kid would have been, at least, chuckle-wortky.











eccieuser9500's Avatar
The new light-based quantum computer Jiuzhang has achieved quantum supremacy


https://www.sciencenews.org/article/...hang-supremacy


While Google was the first to break the quantum supremacy barrier, the milestone is “not a single-shot achievement,” says study coauthor and quantum physicist Chao-Yang Lu of the University of Science and Technology of China in Hefei. “It’s a continuous competition between constantly improved quantum hardware and constantly improved classical simulation.” After Google’s quantum supremacy claim, for example, IBM proposed a type of calculation that might allow a supercomputer to perform the task Google’s computer completed, at least theoretically.










eccieuser9500's Avatar
Noam Chomsky on the Future of Deep Learning


https://towardsdatascience.com/noam-...g-2beb37815a3e



Ultimately there is nothing magical about the human brain. It is simply a physical structure composed of atoms and therefore it is entirely rational to believe that at some point in the future we may be able to create an artificial version that is capable of general intelligence. With that said, current ANNs offer only a simulacrum of this kind of cognition and by Chomsky’s logic, we won’t reach this next frontier without first improving our understanding of how organic neural networks operate.









Organic versus artificial.

Even I can understand that.
eccieuser9500's Avatar
‘The jury’s out’: China’s quantum supremacy claims questioned


https://www.afr.com/technology/the-j...0201207-p56lb1


Professor Martinis said a useful quantum computer could be 20 or 30 years away, and that some physicists believe it might never happen. But if the incredible speed of quantum computing could be harnessed on scale it could open possibilities in pharmaceutical development, finance, engineering and artificial intelligence.

Professor Simmons, a former Australian of the Year, said “pretty much every Australian university” now had a quantum team in a physics, electrical engineering or maths department.









eccieuser9500's Avatar
China claims fastest quantum computer in the world


https://www.livescience.com/china-qu...supremacy.html


Success is measured in terms of number of photons detected. Jiuzhang, which itself is an optical circuit, detected a maximum of 76 photons in one test and an average of 43 across several tests. Its calculation time to produce the list of numbers for each experimental run was about 200 seconds, while the fastest Chinese supercomputer, TaihuLight, would have taken 2.5 billion years to arrive at the same result. That suggests the quantum computer can do GBS 100 trillion times faster than a classical supercomputer.









dilbert firestorm's Avatar
China claims fastest quantum computer in the world

https://www.livescience.com/china-qu...supremacy.html

Originally Posted by eccieuser9500
ya think china's claim is horsehit???

they prolly stole somebody's work and claimed it as their own... "looky here... we got it, we got it!!!!"
eccieuser9500's Avatar
Physicists solve 150-year-old mystery of equation governing sandcastle physics


https://arstechnica.com/science/2020...rom%20%251%24s


Using X-ray microtomography, they took 3D images of wet glass beads of similar shape and size as grains of sand. When they added liquid to dry beads, they observed liquid "capillary bridges" forming between individual beads. Adding more liquid caused the bridges to grow larger, and as that happened, the bead surfaces came into contact with more water, further increasing the binding effect. However, the increased binding effect was canceled out by a corresponding decrease of the capillary forces as the bridge structures grew bigger.









eccieuser9500's Avatar
'Salute': How the basketball world reacted to Becky Hammon making history with the Spurs


https://www.mysanantonio.com/sports/...mon-215009.php


Her groundbreaking achievement won plaudits from current and former Spurs, superstars on other NBA teams, and even a future U.S. vice president.

For her part, Hammon was focused on the task at hand.
First the Rooney rule. Now Pop make me proud to yell "Go Spurs GO!"











Women, sports . . .

and music.
dilbert firestorm's Avatar
'Salute': How the basketball world reacted to Becky Hammon making history with the Spurs

https://www.mysanantonio.com/sports/...mon-215009.php

First the Rooney rule. Now Pop make me proud to yell "Go Spurs GO!"

Women, sports . . .

and music. Originally Posted by eccieuser9500
you can thank the asshole Popovich. he couldn't keep his fucking mouth shut and got thrown out of the game.
dilbert firestorm's Avatar
https://www.zmescience.com/science/g...awater-043432/

Why Roman concrete is stronger than it ever was, while modern concrete decays

Concrete in some Roman piers is not only still viable today but stronger than it ever was. Its secret sauce? Seawater.

portland cement is crap. lol.
dilbert firestorm's Avatar
https://gizmodo.com/space-station-sp...hou-1845851520

Space Station Spiders Found a Hack to Build Webs Without Gravity

Spiders are capable of building typical webs in microgravity, so long as they have access to a light source, according to new research published in Science of Nature. In the absence of gravity, and hence a sense of up and down, a light source provides a frame of reference for the spiders.
who knew. lol.
eccieuser9500's Avatar
https://www.zmescience.com/science/g...awater-043432/

Why Roman concrete is stronger than it ever was, while modern concrete decays




portland cement is crap. lol. Originally Posted by dilbert firestorm

Thank you for your contribution sir. Maybe they should have made the cement in Portsmith, England.


Phillipsite and Al-tobermorite mineral cements produced through low-temperature water-rock reactions in Roman marine concrete


https://pubs.geoscienceworld.org/amm...kup/102/7/1435


The mineral fabrics provide a geoarchaeological prototype for developing cementitious processes through low-temperature rock-fluid interactions, subsequent to an initial phase of reaction with lime that defines the activity of natural pozzolans. These processes have relevance to carbonation reactions in storage reservoirs for CO2 in pyroclastic rocks, production of alkali-activated mineral cements in maritime concretes, and regenerative cementitious resilience in waste encapsulations using natural volcanic pozzolans.



The crystals bind a vitric matrix, consolidate interfacial zones of pumiceous clasts, and fill relict pores and pumice vesicles; alkali feldspar crystal fragments partially dissolved and also produced zeolite textures (Figs. 1b–d). The authigenic minerals in alkali-rich trachytic to phonolitic Campi Flegrei deposits selected by Roman engineers for marine concrete are mainly zeolites (de Gennaro et al. 2000; Jackson 2014).














The article was easier to understand.

The study was too much. Gave it a try though.
eccieuser9500's Avatar
https://gizmodo.com/space-station-sp...hou-1845851520

Space Station Spiders Found a Hack to Build Webs Without Gravity



who knew. lol. Originally Posted by dilbert firestorm

'tis the whole point of expanding your mind. Sir!


Spiders in space—orb-web-related behaviour in zero gravity



The orientation of spiders waiting for prey on the hub of their web in zero gravity was quite variable, whereas spiders in normal gravity always oriented themselves downwards (median < 5° from vertically downwards, Fig. 4). Closer analysis revealed that spiders in zero gravity tended to orient themselves downwards when the lights were on (median = 15° from vertically downwards) but showed no tendency to face in any particular direction when the lights were off (median near horizontally; Fig. 4). It is noteworthy that the spiders retained their previous orientation for as much as 1 h after the lights had been turned on or off, respectively (Fig. 5).





















Keep sharing the knowledge.

Astronauts need to clean better.
dilbert firestorm's Avatar
yeah... I got more. just have to find it in my email. lol.