ℛ𝒶𝓋ℯ𝓃

  • 0 Posts
  • 263 Comments
Joined 2 years ago
cake
Cake day: June 11th, 2023

help-circle

  • Okay but like, the human body does in fact suck in many ways, one of those being that we’re naturally filthy as fuck.

    It’s worth noting that the above is, of course, an opinion. I find human stench repulsive. Many do. Some don’t. But regardless, I don’t think less of a person or culture for not using or having access to the typical hot water + exfoliating + soap + deodorant + scent + moisturizer method that western culture holds so dear. I couldn’t do without it. And yes I’m slightly grossed out as a natural reaction when people don’t use it. But I don’t think "that uncultured savage pig doesn’t bathe* in that situation, that would just be horrible. Unfortunately many do think that way, and I agree that that kind of hostile, accusatory thinking is likely partially due to western marketing.

    I personally am a transhumanist in philosophy. I think that if we can make a way to make the human body some radiant vessel that would have been worshipped as a goddess across most of human history, that such an endeavor is worth while. But many look down on others when such standards become normalized. That is the key difference: another main tenant of transhuman philosophy is the idea of bodily autonomy. You inhabit the vessel you want, whether bathed or not.

    And I agree that marketing has, in fact, been instrumental in pushing that “your body is fucking disgusting” idea onto others so heavily. Capitalism capitalizes best on making people feel lower or less important without a product.

















  • I could see LoRa radio nodes making deep-forest IoT sensors possible. Have a solar station with starlink provide internet access, then use it as a LoRa (or other packet radio) modem for a couple-mile radius of sensors. Each sensor package could be a fairly cheap box with sensor, solar power and a radio. Would be super easy to deploy hundreds of those, all served by the same completely autonomous satellite station, and cheap to replace failing hardware (just see which nodes stop talking and send replacements when a bunch fail).


  • Yes, you can! All telescope data like this is available on the Mikulski Archive for Space Telescopes (MAST), and there are a few online guides out there for processing the imagery. The colors seen in infrared images are chosen to represent relative wavelength, but a big part of it is choosing colors that show details and finer structures. A lot of what’s released to the public is designed with aesthetics in mind, often the raw data can be more valuable for scientific analysis. You can absolutely import images from both visible and NIR light to create a composite, in fact many of the IR images you see are already composites from various instruments.