AI Uncovers The Hidden Patterns In Numbers

Wait... there’s a pattern? Besides the usual patterns in numbers that we see (ie. in multiples of twos or threes, odd or even numbers, the fibonacci sequence), this new AI ‘mathematician’ can potentially reveal hidden relationships and patterns between numbers. But how? The AI, known as the Ramanujan Machine, consists of algorithms that seek out mathematical conclusions that have not been proved: 

The set of algorithms is named after Indian mathematician Srinivasa Ramanujan. Born in 1887 to a store clerk and a homemaker, Ramanujan was a child prodigy who came up with many mathematical conjectures, proofs and solutions to equations that had never before been solved. In 1918, two years before his early death from disease, he was elected as a Fellow of The Royal Society London, becoming only the second Indian man to be inducted after marine engineer Ardaseer Cursetjee in 1841. 
Ramanujan had an innate feel for numbers and an eye for patterns that eluded other people, said physicist Yaron Hadad, vice president of AI and data science at the medical device company Medtronic and one of the developers of the new Ramanujan Machine. The new AI mathematician is designed to pull out promising mathematical patterns from large sets of potential equations, Hadad told Live Science, making Ramanujan a fitting namesake. 

Image via Live Science


Man Raises A Parakeet After Rescuing An Egg

This man shared his story of how he tried to raise a baby parakeet after it hatched from a small egg the man found on the floor of a cage at a pet store. There was no way that the egg was going to survive, if it wasn’t for the man’s split decision to take care of it, as the female parakeet in the cage was already sold. The Animal Rescue Site has more details: 

As he explained, he figured that if he could incubate it himself, then he might be able to save it and give it a chance. He stated, “Its mother had just been sold. This meant the egg would have no chance without me giving it a try.”
He took on the challenge whole-heartedly, but it wasn’t without some nerves. He was a little worried about his ability to raise the tiny bird if the egg survived. Still, he knew he had to try.
Once the egg hatched and a little male bird emerged, his fears dissipated and were replaced with tender, loving care towards the small creature.
Caring for the baby bird meant that he took on the big responsibility of feeding the little parakeet 8 times per day in order to help it grow.

Image via The Animal Rescue Site 


Before There Were Snowplows, There Were Snow Rollers

Core 77 introduces us to the snow roller, an old piece of technology that was used to clear roads before diesel-powered snowplows roamed the streets, hunting for powdery prey. Snow rollers were often weighted with stones to pack down the snow. This particular images dates to 1930 in Maine, so such machines exist within living memory.

A fully-functional one still exists, thanks to the restoration work of craftsmen associated with the Bartlett Historical Society in New Hampshire. You can find process photos and descriptions of this amazing reconstruction here.


Explaining an mRNA Vaccine with Star Wars

There’s nothing as relatable as a Star Wars analogy to explain something totally unrelated. Randall Munroe goes back to the original Star Wars movie (now called A New Hope) to show how the newfangled COVID-19 vaccines work, at xkcd.

The various parts of the analogy are broken down at Explain xkcd. You’ll learn even more in the discussion at Metafilter.

(ImageCredit: Randall Munroe/xkcd/CC BY-NC 2.5)


City Guesser

The game City Guesser has the same premise of GeoGuessr in that you are to guess where in the world you are. But City Guesser gives you clues in the form of video instead of a still picture. I tried the US only version, and was presented with quite a few towns that I’d never been to. The best strategy in that case is to look for clues like street signs, area codes, and native plants. They aren’t all big cities, either. But it’s a lot of fun! It’s not a competitive game, and I don’t think you are judged on how long you let the video play. The answer key tells you how many miles off you are, which is embarrassing when it’s thousands of miles, but if I got within 100 miles, I considered that a win. I did a lot better after I realized the map you use to guess has a zoom feature! Try it out yourself- you may become addicted to City Guesser.

When you feel you’re pretty good at the game, you can step up to versions at the bottom of the main page that limit your movement and your time, or even a multiplayer version.   -via Kottke


11 Songs Inspired by J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings

JRR Tolkien’s trilogy The Lord of the Rings was published in the 1950s, which made it the perfect fantasy fodder for young Baby Boomers. Some of them went on to become songwriters and entertainers who used the world of Middle Earth for inspiration. It wasn’t just Led Zeppelin, although a list of 11 songs could be dominated by the group. No, this list only features one song per artist, and for Zep, that one song is “Ramble On.”

   “’T was in the darkest depths of Mordor
    I met a girl so fair
    But Gollum, and the evil one
    Crept up and slipped away with her.”

If Plant’s Middle-earth references in “Ramble On” seem a bit too blatant, he has a ready-made defense: “I just want to hold up my hand and say, ‘OK, I was 21 when I wrote that,’” he told the Santa Barbara Independent in 2013. Plant has also expressed some regret that he didn’t leverage his rocker chops for important causes more often during the band’s heyday. “My peer group were writing substantial pieces of social commentary, and I was willowing along the Welsh borders thinking about Gollum,” he told Planet Rock Magazine in 2019. He still likes “Stairway to Heaven,” though.

The list has songs from Joni Mitchell, Rush, Megadeth, and more, all with music videos. You’ll find it at Mental Floss.


The Green Claymation



How many pop culture characters can you portray in claymation (stop-motion with clay) if you only have green clay? Filmmaker Trent Shy shows us eight of them. After the short animation, we get a fast-moving version that shows the work he put into it. But what if you only had blue clay? That video was his next project.



There are 14 blue characters! Do you know them all? -via Laughing Squid


Skating Through the Ice

 

The Dutch, for whom ice skating is both a tradition and a weapon, know their craft well. This video from Amsterdam shows a man skating over too-thin ice and crashing into the cold water below. He's one of many Dutchmen enjoying perfect urban skating weather right now.

Breaking through the ice is no big deal. I suspect that he actually intended to crash (since he's in a swimsuit) and views crawling out of the wintery waters as, at most, an annoyance rather than a life-threatening emergency. His bow, at the end, shows perfect aplomb.

-via Aaron Starmer


Carved Coffee Beans

Yes, that's Thanos. His entire head fits neatly on a coffee bean carved by Valeriano Fatica.

Fatica lives in Oratino, a small town in central Italy where he was born and raised. He worked in his family restaurant and began exploring art by carving watermelons for the buffet. This led to a food sculpture career that includes cheese, truffles, fruits, and, recently coffee beans. You'll recognize many characters from Fatica's favorite comic books.

-via Born in Space


Zip On Bike Tire Treads

This morning, I greeted the dense blanket of snow in Texas with a bike ride. The snow did not make for easy travel. Perhaps this product called reTyre might help. The company of the same name, which is based in Norway, makes snow treads that zip onto bike tires.

You start with a base tire which has half of the zipper. Then you can add one of three different treads for ice, snow, and, I think, mud.

-via Toxel


A Sink Made Just For Vomiting

It's in a bar in Germany, but, having worked a public libraries, I wish that this appliance was more widely available outside of German bars. Andrew Bulkeley, a journalist who has spent a lot of time in Germany, explains that you use a speibecken as a hygienic place to vomit. He learned this while getting drunk at a particular bar in Germany:

“It’s for when you drink too much and you have to puke,” he announced, as if every bar in the world had a Speibecken. The entire bar looked at me with great sympathy, wondering with their eyes if this was the first bar I’d ever been in.
This must happen to every ex-pat every now and then – you stumble into something the natives think is part of the human condition but isn’t. It’s that weird moment where Germany doesn’t know it’s doing something strange and you have to be the one to break the bad news.

The handle on the left side is an excellent feature, given that users may feel unbalanced while using the speibecken.

-via Core 77 | Photo: jingjangjones


Did You Know About This Pokemon Red And Pokemon Blue Secret?

Twenty-five years after the release of the classic Nintendo Game Boy games, one user has revealed on Reddit that you can get some free items after a certain event in the games. According to the Reddit user, in order to get the five free Pokeballs from Professor Oak, the player needs to have won the rival fight next to Viridian City, you can’t have the Boulder Badge, and you can’t have any Pokeballs yet. The player needs to not buy or find any Pokeballs: 

What does this mean? Well, as the Reddit user further notes, this means that not only do you have to beat the second Rival fight with just your starter Pokemon (which would require a fair bit of grinding), but you need to do all of this and then think to head back to Pallet Town to talk to Professor Oak. And if you played either game, you'll know there's zero reason to do this. That said, if you do all of this, you will get five free Pokeballs for your troubles.

Image via wikipedia


A Degu Looking For Love

Even rodents need love. A degu called Greg is still searching for a companion. This small rodent entered the Blue Cross rehoming center in Burford, Oxfordshire, last November together with its fellow Charlie. But because of significant dental issues, the veterinarian had to put Charlie to sleep. Since then, Greg has been alone.

"We’re now hoping to find him a female friend, but he so far hasn’t had any interest. We hope that he finds love before Valentine’s Day.
"Degus really don’t cope well on their own, so we really want to find Greg a new best friend as soon as possible."

Well, I hope he will find a great companion pretty soon.

(Image Credit: PA/ Independent)


The Magnetic Fields of Venus Flytraps

The Venus Flytrap is a carnivorous plant that can be found on the East Coast of the US. It was used as a sample for an experiment about the magnetic signals on plants. Though magnetic fields on plants are weak, scientists discovered that there is a tool which can measure its magnetics impulses.

"We have been able to demonstrate that action potentials in a multicellular plant system produce measurable magnetic fields, something that had never been confirmed before," said Anne Fabricant, a graduate candidate in Professor Dmitry Budker's research group at Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz (JGU) and the Helmholtz Institute Mainz (HIM).
Living organisms are known to generate magnetic fields, and at least one scientist has even suggested that some people can sense magnetic fields. But there's still a lot we don't know about magnetic fields in plants. In this research, the scientists used sensitive atomic magnetometers instead of bulky superconducting-quantum-interference-device (SQUID) magnetometers that are typically used in plant studies.
The atomic magnetometers showed that the flytraps were producing magnetic signals that have maximum amplitudes of 0.5 picotesla (a level that is millions of times lower than our planet's magnetic field). "The signal magnitude recorded is similar to what is observed during surface measurements of nerve impulses in animals," said Fabricant.

(Image Credit: Pixabay)


Astronauts Could Reach Mars Faster Using Nuclear-Powered Spacecraft

Ultra Safe Nuclear Technologies, a Seattle-based company, suggested using nuclear thermal propulsion (NTP) engines to fly the astronauts from Earth to Mars. The proposal is said to potentially transport humans to Mars in three months' time. That is much faster than the current engine design that would take almost nine months for a crewed mission to reach the red planet.

Michael Eades, director of engineering at USNC-Tech, says that nuclear-powered rockets would be more powerful and twice as efficient as the chemical engines used today, meaning they could travel further and faster, while burning less fuel.
"Nuclear technology will expand humanity's reach beyond low Earth orbit, and into deep space," he tells CNN.
As well as enabling human space travel, it could open up space for galactic business opportunities, he says.

Though this might be a good plan, there are still some questions about safety which need further study.

(Image Credit: USNC-TECH/ CNN)


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