@SexyAlphaLooksmaxxChad A pronounced dip in the geoid under the Indian Ocean—called the Indian Ocean geoid low (IOGL)—is the planet’s most prominent gravitational anomaly
Oh more crazy conspiracy stuff.
Checks wikipedia
Shit another rabbit hole. See you guys in a few weeks!
3d ago The Hub
3d ago The Hub
TRP and the Matrix
To test if human tissue could be used to perform computations, Kobayashi had participants supply biomechanical data by bending their wrists at various angles and taking ultrasound images of the subsequent muscle deformation in their arms. These data were then used to create a "biophysical reservoir" for data processing.
"An ideal reservoir possesses both complexity and memory," explains Kobayashi. "Since the mechanical responses of soft tissue inherently demonstrate stress–strain nonlinearity and viscoelasticity, muscular tissue easily satisfies these criteria."
In a series of benchmark tests involving solving complicated nonlinear equations, Kobayashi compared the performance of his human tissue model with that of standard linear regression. He found that the model using the biophysical reservoir was consistently more accurate by an order of magnitude.
Read More4d ago The Hub
@woodsmoke I thought the most shocking thing I have ever seen on here was a story of mentorph bumping into typo on the Bahamas, spending whole night together on a beach in a moonlight but since returning home having that PolPot vs Hitrer argument. Like some sort of couple.
But seriously. What a fucked up story.
Your kidneys better?
4d ago The Hub
Read Morethe sea level of the Indian Ocean over the hole is a whopping 106 meters lower than the global average,
A pronounced dip in the geoid under the Indian Ocean—called the Indian Ocean geoid low (IOGL)—is the planet’s most prominent gravitational anomaly
Since Earth’s magnetic field is created by its moving, molten iron core, its poles aren’t stationary and they wander independently of one another. In fact, since its first formal discovery in 1831, the north magnetic pole has travelled over 1,240 miles (2,000 km) from the Boothia Peninsula in the far north of Canada to high in the Arctic Sea. This wandering has generally been quite slow, around 9km (6 mi) a year, allowing scientists to easily keep track of its position. But since the turn of the century, this speed has increased to 30 miles (50 km) a year. The south magnetic pole is also moving, though at a much slower rate (6-9 miles, or 10-15 km a year).
However, with reports that the magnetic north pole has started moving swiftly at 50km (31 miles) per year – and may soon be over Siberia
4d ago TheRedPill
No swearwords in nicknames
@goodmensayfuckyou (monkey looks left)
No looser names
@land_of_the_loosers (Monkey looks right)
4d ago TheRedPill
I can never understand why Rina Stone bash this experiment and I have never came across the podcast where he fully addresses it.
The only major difference I can see between the mice and the people is we are unlikely go extinct as our ecosystem is way bigger and more diverse. Meaning that at some point Hutu, Goatfuckers, and people from remote island by Indian coast will repopulate the earth. The West will only live in genes of the raped women.
4d ago The Hub
Unlikely.
I have listened to Clarey a few weeks back and he was noticing less people contributing. He wasnt making any theories, genuinely you could hear him thinking aloud.
Sure the 'old' space might be drying up and the people might be going to agitating podcasts.
But he reports the other people also say they didnt get a tip of more than $_ for a big while then there is something going on.
'G' compromises revenue for whatever reason. A big tell. Reaction to Trump winning? Terrorist ???? list consequences?