DanYHKim
DanYHKim t1_jebrpkc wrote
Reply to comment by SingularityCentral in Antarctic ocean currents heading for collapse by mvanigan
More like an avalanche. The first few rocks are falling right now, but they will be followed by an inescapable tide of debris coming down.
I think this is supposed to make the Antarctic region colder, because the cold dense water will not be making its way to the tropics. Which also implies that the tropic and equatorial regions will remain warm or become warmer. The juxtaposition of extremes should result in more violent storms for everybody in the temperate zones.
It's horrifying to think about, but in truth it would be fascinating to watch it happen.
DanYHKim t1_jebhme8 wrote
Reply to TIL in order to prevent certain legal instruments from operating in perpetuity, a Royal Lives Clause may be written into a contract which provides a definite but extended period of time usually tied to twenty-one years past the death of last living descendent of the current British monarch. by AudibleNod
#longlivelilibet
DanYHKim t1_jeaxptq wrote
Reply to Active shooter reported at Forsyth Tech Community College in North Carolina, authorities say by JM2845
Someday, there will be an announcement like this and all the "good guys with guns" will be out hunting for the active shooter. One will see another armed guy and shoot at him. Everyone will converge to the sound of the gunfire, and then there will be a war zone
DanYHKim t1_jeax72f wrote
Reply to TIL in 1990 a printer for the U.S. Naval Academy put the word “navel” on the graduates’ diplomas. by Fleegle1834
"He's a Naval Surgeon."
"My . . . so specialized!"
DanYHKim t1_jeawrtd wrote
Reply to My coffee foam looks like Totoro by bythedewpond
That doesn't look like Toronto at all!
DanYHKim t1_je2jriy wrote
Reply to comment by kudzubug in Water is trapped in glass beads on the moon's surface, lunar samples show by SaraShane
True. They are, I think, basically glass beads with pores to sequester adsorbed water, and so are largely chemically inert.
DanYHKim t1_je0x3w2 wrote
>The theory proposed by this latest research is that these glass beads, formed in ancient times, can be imbued with water when they’re hit with solar winds, which carry hydrogen and oxygen from the sun’s atmosphere across the solar system. In fact, it could be how more than 270 trillion kilograms (600 trillion pounds) of water is stored across the moon.
So they are collecting hydrogen and oxygen from the solar wind, which recombines into water in situ? Does this mean that energy is released as the hydrogen is oxidized?
Also, is this like silica gel desiccant? I mean, people shouldn't eat it, right?
DanYHKim t1_je0bwda wrote
Reply to TIL that in Chinese Folk Religion, a mortal human being could ascend into godhood not through the decisions of a clergy/church, but by the sheer number of people who believe that their extraordinary achievements led to apotheosis, which forced Confucian/Taoists clerics to canonize a person as a God. by Khysamgathys
Colonel Sanders is well on his way
DanYHKim t1_jdjnelo wrote
Reply to comment by Secure_SeaLab in A study shows that patients with the most serious health issues who thought that continuing the treatment would result in destitution only had an estimated 24% chance of continuing treatment, while those thinking paying fees would not negatively affect their financial situations had a 95% likelihood by nmhhg8
Yes. Usually when I read something like this, the subject country is the United States.
DanYHKim t1_jdhn9jh wrote
Reply to A study shows that patients with the most serious health issues who thought that continuing the treatment would result in destitution only had an estimated 24% chance of continuing treatment, while those thinking paying fees would not negatively affect their financial situations had a 95% likelihood by nmhhg8
What surprises me of that this study was done in Vietnam, not the U.S.
DanYHKim t1_jd8uy77 wrote
There had better be some damn pockets inside all that!
DanYHKim t1_jd8r9ug wrote
Reply to TIL that on April 1st, 1906, American newspapers ran prank articles reporting that Chicago had been "invaded by hordes of prehistoric monsters dealing death and destruction", illustrated with doctored photos showing dinosaurs attacking the Windy City. by TJ_Fox
TIL that the plural of pterodactyl is pterodactyli
DanYHKim t1_jd07xzv wrote
Reply to Fallen Astronaut statue and a name plaque left on the surface of the Moon by the crew of Apollo 15 by AlbaneseGummies327
Dahlquist!
Who will answer the muster for him?
DanYHKim t1_jcr8lka wrote
Reply to TIL that in WW2, a Marine Corps Corsair pilot used his propeller to chew off the tail of an enemy aircraft after his guns jammed, while under fire from the enemy plane's tailgunner. The enemy plane crashed but the Corsair pilot made it back to base, receiving the Navy Cross for his actions. by hipster_deckard
I've really only seen this in cartoons!
DanYHKim t1_jbt3mzk wrote
Reply to What exactly is going on when a protein (or other molecule) binds with a receptor? by Eat-A-Torus
Static cling is part of it
Amino acids are arranged in a 3d matrix that creates a patch or a pocket with a particular pattern of positive and negative charges that complement a pattern of charges on the other molecule (the ligand). There's are also interactions involving hydrophobic vs hydrophilic molecular affinities, as well as overall physical shape.
When binding occurs, the interactions can induce changes in the overall shape of the binding site, as these different charges are "neutralized" against each other, or the two molecules adjust themselves for a better fit. This can sometimes result in the exposure of and otherwise hidden amino acid that can cause some further interaction to occur. There are also ways in which an amino acid nearby in the structure might pull electrons away from some part of the ligand, changing the properties of the molecule in a way that might cause it to break a bond. Breaking the amino acid chain in the ligand can then cause the other interactions holding it to the receptor to change, making the two parts no longer compatible with the receptor, allowing it to release .
I am leaving a whole lot of stuff out, but this is an idea that I find to be easier to visualize .
There are some types of locks which use and arrangement of magnets. The north and south poles of the different magnets are set up in a pattern that is complementary to the arrangement in the magnetic key. And so when you put the key next to the lock it can open, but if you put the wrong key next to the lock it will not be able to bind correctly. This is actually not a bad way to look at the interaction of receptors and their ligands or enzymes and their substrates.
DanYHKim t1_jahaq8a wrote
This website has totally shit ads
DanYHKim t1_ja7s2jy wrote
Reply to TIL: The concept of steganography which is the hiding of messages in plain sight. For example, Phyllis Latour Doyle (British spy) parachuted into France to spy on Nazis before D-day. She used knitting to record messages. by Geek_Nan
Shortly after the 9-11 attack, I read that intelligence services were concerned that secret messages were being concealed within pornographic images. The article started that the investigators had not yet found such messages, but they were committed to redoubling their efforts by downloading and analyzing even more porno to find them.
I so wish I had downloaded the article!
DanYHKim t1_ja7qs4f wrote
Reply to TIL: The concept of steganography which is the hiding of messages in plain sight. For example, Phyllis Latour Doyle (British spy) parachuted into France to spy on Nazis before D-day. She used knitting to record messages. by Geek_Nan
171228_Madame-DeFarge_Weaving-a-Revolution.txt
"Vanity Fair Admits Video Telling Hillary Clinton To Take Up Knitting “Missed The Mark”" National Memo. December 28, 2017
With a screenshot of Madame DeFarge, I wrote:
"It's an un-hackable database of political criminality, after all!"
=== to further explain, I wrote:
It's a picture of Madame DeFarge, from the 1935 adaptation of Charles Dickens' "A Tale of Two Cities".
DeFarge is a woman bent on revenge against the aristocrats, particularly those of one family that destroyed her own. As part of the French Revolutionaries, she knits, and her knitting secretly encodes the names of people to be killed. Thus, as she sits and witnesses the crimes of the French Aristocracy, she bitterly knits the names and crimes into a tapestry, to be used against them after the revolution.
=== to elaborate, I wrote:
There is much symbolism surrounding DeFarge, since the three Fates of Classical mythology are women who spin the thread of life, and cut it when a mortal life is at its end. In another way, she is a type of Penelope, the wife of Odysseus, who weaves a tapestry shroud for her father-in-law in order to hold off the petitions of her suitors, who claim her husband must be dead after so long at sea. Penelope famously unravels the tapestry every night, so she is never finished with it, putting off the suitors for an indefinite time.
The act of weaving the tapestry shroud is supposed to be her last act as a daughter-in-law and member of Odysseus' family and household. The burden of the shroud is symbolic of her duty as a married woman, and its cultural importance makes the labor inviolate in the face of her suitors and their demands, as well as the demands of her clan. Being a woman, Penelope has no authority of her own by which she can choose to remarry or wait for her husband's return, and so she cleverly uses her weaving as a way to use the rigid gender rules of her society in her favor.
Similarly, perhaps, DeFarge conceals her important role in the Revolution behind a different kind of tapestry. The domestic labor of knitting cannot be suspected to be 'political' or 'revolutionary', since it is a 'woman's work'. Thus, the death list of the Revolution is never revealed to the Aristocratic forces.
In a final parallel, though, we have seen this year a third act of fabric-making as a concealed act of empowerment. Millions of women marched in cities, towns, lonely roads, and isolated fields around the world in protest against Donald Trump's inauguration as President. On their heads were the pink knitted hats, pointedly named after the object of one of Trump's many transgressions against human decency. While the sight of multitudes of protesters crowding streets and parks and plazas worldwide was powerful in itself, the "pussy hat" provided a colorful punctuation to the crowd, making a statement as straightforward as an upraised fist: 'Donald Trump is the enemy, and I will oppose him'.
03/28/2020
And now, we have yet another act of fabric craft, largely by women, as a consequence of this horrifying election. Because of short-sighted mismanagement, petty vindictiveness, and now-familiar stupidity, medical protective equipment must be hand-crafted in homes across the country. The cloth mask is a public and visible sign of the failure of the Republican-dominated government to accomplish even the most basic of functions in an emergency.
Wear yours proudly in public. It is the "Phrygian cap" of American resistance against incompetent kakistocracy.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/25/business/coronavirus-masks-sewers.html "A Sewing Army, Making Masks for America"
DanYHKim t1_j9xv3yh wrote
DanYHKim t1_j9xtw8n wrote
None of them should have been unvaccinated!
Look, a restaurant can refuse entry and service to people who 'exercise their right' to go without shoes or shirts. No lawsuit will stand. A university can similarly require full vaccination of students.
DanYHKim t1_j9qd1qy wrote
Reply to Approaching Nine Months Since Tennessee’s Abortion Ban, DCS Remains in Disarray by SnarkOff
"Child Services in Disarray"
Tennessee: "Abolish the inadequate DCS! Give the money to churches!"
It's part of the plan
DanYHKim t1_j9i31n2 wrote
Reply to comment by PermanentTrainDamage in Today I learned that there is enough evidence to suggest that orca are actually an occasional predator of moose, due to the fact that moose can dive up to 20' for vegetation underwater in killer whale territories. by Uranusspinssideways
But you spoil the ritual when you do that!
. . . uh, so I've heard.
DanYHKim t1_j9haigd wrote
Reply to Today I learned that there is enough evidence to suggest that orca are actually an occasional predator of moose, due to the fact that moose can dive up to 20' for vegetation underwater in killer whale territories. by Uranusspinssideways
It's been hours! I can't believe I have to post this link! Are you guys all asleep?
https://www.boredpanda.com/underwater-moose-aquatic-vegetation-pet-foolery/
DanYHKim t1_j9ha6hy wrote
Reply to comment by the-magnificunt in Today I learned that there is enough evidence to suggest that orca are actually an occasional predator of moose, due to the fact that moose can dive up to 20' for vegetation underwater in killer whale territories. by Uranusspinssideways
Hey! People do that with chickens before they chop their heads off
DanYHKim t1_jeecass wrote
Reply to I knew labs shed their winter coat, but WOW by sev092
If they didn't waste all that protein, you'd only need to feed them half of what they normally eat