coffee Coffee How much do y'all spend on coffee a month?
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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 1 week ago 66%

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  • til Today I Learned TIL about Sebastian Münster's 1540 map of the Americas, the first one to show that North and South America were connected by an isthmus and the first to call it 'The New World.'
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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 1 week ago 100%

    As it should be... Navigators could determine latitudes pretty accurately by using astronomy. It was the longitude that was a big problem (maybe that's part of the reason Japan is placed in the middle of the Pacific).

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  • unpopularopinion Unpopular Opinion The Floor Is Comfier Than Beds and Couches
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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 2 weeks ago 100%

    Some natural cushioning is needed to appreciate the comfort of the floor, I imagine. I'm too boney for that.

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  • asklemmy Ask Lemmy How many pairs of sunglasses do you think you've owned in your lifetime?
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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 2 weeks ago 100%

    I'm pretty sure I'm in my fourth pair now.

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  • tolkien Tolkien, Lord of the Rings (LotR), etc. What does everyone make of Tom Bombadil in the Rings of Power S02E04?
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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 2 weeks ago 71%

    How about no fucking spoilers in the title and thumbnail?

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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 2 weeks ago 100%

    That may be relativists (they would actually measure anything in units of mass, with everything else defined through G = c = 1). Astrophysicists commonly measure mass in solar masses, long distances in parsec (or kiloparsec, megaparsec), short distances in solar radii or AU, and time in whatever is relevant to their problem (could be seconds or gigayears)

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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 3 weeks ago 100%

    Well, peanuts are legumes, so beans basically.

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  • 196 196 Behold, the rule
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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 3 weeks ago 100%

    I'm sitting on an Aeron at work, it's good, but I can't in good conscience pay that much for a chair. I was recently on the market for a new office chair and extensively researched it. It really looks like it's a hit or miss with every chair in every price range, and I was very seriously considering replacing my Hyken with another Hyken. I decided to go with the IKEA Markus and have been sitting on it for about a month. I'm only moderately happy with it, may even return it before the year is up although I'd hate doing it.

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  • 196 196 Behold, the rule
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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 3 weeks ago 100%

    That is almost certainly Staples Hyken. Comfortable chair but cheaply made, mine started disintigrating in a couple of years.

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  • startrek Star Trek What's your favourite Star Trek theme?
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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 3 weeks ago 100%

    My top intro music shows: TNG, VOY, DS9, DIS, SNW, LD
    Honorable mention: ENT
    Top movie theme: First Contact

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  • nostupidquestions No Stupid Questions Why does trump try to alienate black voters than expect them to vote for the dickhead? And why use Kamala's race as even a talking point let alone even a thought?
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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 4 weeks ago 66%

    Playing 4D chess /s

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  • memes Memes Supein sama
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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 4 weeks ago 100%

    Rumania and Makedonia probability the closest to the country's native name.

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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 1 month ago 100%

    EM and gravitational waves are seen as analogous because as I wrote, they are produced by acceleration of charges and masses, respectively. The physics behind them is very different (described by Maxwell's equations for EM and Einstein field equations for GW), but all systems that have waves in them (including sound in the air, waves on the surface of water etc.) can be approximated as linear for small perturbations, which means that they satisfy the wave equation at that regime.

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  • map_enthusiasts Map Enthusiasts US/Canada time zones if they were not adjusted for political boundaries
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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 1 month ago 66%

    It's not me who didn't use a tool, it was the other guy.

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  • map_enthusiasts Map Enthusiasts US/Canada time zones if they were not adjusted for political boundaries
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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 1 month ago 100%

    Only because we are used to it.

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  • map_enthusiasts Map Enthusiasts US/Canada time zones if they were not adjusted for political boundaries
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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 1 month ago 89%

    I just had to coordinate an online meeting with some guy at a company, I had no idea where he's based but he suggested time slots in EST (I'm in Toronto). I asked him twice if he's sure, thinking he may be based outside of North America and doesn't know that Toronto currently follows EDT which is GMT-4h, and he just responded "Eastern Standard Time".

    And of course he actually meant EDT. Turns out he is based in North America, just dumb.

    Fuck timezones, but more than that fuck daylight saving time. You want an extra hour of sunshine after work in summer? Shift the work schedule, not the fucking clock!

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  • cartographyanarchy Cartography Anarchy Map of the A.S.U.
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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 1 month ago 100%

    It's a map of the AƧU

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  • lotrmemes Lord of the memes The hero of the story
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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 1 month ago 100%

    The balrog was already awake, but maybe wasn't paying attention 😜

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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 1 month ago 100%

    They are quite similar to electromagnetic waves, but also quite different. They are produced by masses accelerating (just like EM waves are produced by charges accelerating), and indeed cause orbital decay. But this orbital decay is only important in relativistic systems (so the Earth, which is orbiting the sun at 0.0001 the speed of light, is not going to fall into the sun because of gravitational waves).

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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 1 month ago 100%

    See my response below to Captain Aggravated about how dilute those large stars are.

    It's an interesting question whether anybody would actually feel spaghettification 😁 I actually don't know. You can use physics to calculate the proper time derivative of the tidal forces, but you need biology to define the start (and end...) of the process. My intuition says that it probably happens too fast, so once the tidal forces are strong enough to be perceptible, they grow strong enough to rip you apart before you realize (again, just a hunch).

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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 1 month ago 100%

    Yes, but red supergiants differ from the sun in that their photospheres are extremely dilute and don't have a sharp transition to the corona. I don't know the details of this particular star but take Betelgeuse as an example (it's probably not particularly large for this catrgory), it's radius is ~640 the sun's per Wikipedia, which gives a volume of ~260 million that of the sun. But it is only x15 times as massive as the sun, so on average ~20 million times less dense.

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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 1 month ago 100%

    Yep, you got it right. The accretion disk is actually really flat. Those images are produced in simulations that take into account the curved (and very complex) paths light takes in the vicinity of a black hole. These images really depend on the angle between the line of sight and the disk.

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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 1 month ago 75%

    In the case you are unlucky enough to encounter the black hole "heads on" and fall into it radially, the proper time timescale to spaghettification is the size of the event horizon divided by the speed of light. The most supermassive black holes will have a horizon of around one light day, so that's what we're working with, a matter of days. If you come in on the most tangential orbit possible though, I guess you're buying some time but I've never heard that it's supposed to take many years of proper time (I doubt that claim a little bit, but haven't calculated myself).

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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 1 month ago 100%

    Astrophysicist here. Yes, space is crazy, but interesting things to keep in mind:

    1. The size of a star is determined by something called the photosphere. With those extremely massive stars, you can be hundreds of millions of kilometres "inside" and not yet know it.
    2. Similar story with supermassive black holes, from the perspective of an astronaut falling in, they wouldn't really be able to tell when they cross the horizon because the tidal forces there are very small (they will inevitably fall towards the centre and get spaghettified at some point)
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  • asklemmy Ask Lemmy What keyboard layout do you use?
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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 1 month ago 100%

    QWERTY on a cheap Dell keyboard I've had for 12 years.

    I'm sure some of the alternatives are objectively superior, but with all due respect to enthusiasts, I'm simply not passionate about it and have yet to be convinced that the time and pain spent on getting used to a new layout would actually be worth it in the long run.

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  • lemmyshitpost Lemmy Shitpost Epoch fail!!!
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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 1 month ago 100%

    Haha, that's right. Immediate noticed that.

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  • science science Is there a scientific calendar which uses a different reference than Jesus?
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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 1 month ago 100%

    Interestingly, that is not the case. Month names can differ in different languages. I discovered the hard way that Ukrainian has completely different names for months when I had to connect to a Linux machine in Kyiv with Ukrainian locale (I can read Cyrillic, but the abbreviated month names meant nothing to me). The name for August is "serpen" by the way, and it is similar in some other Slavic languages. Also Arabic has its own month names based on Akkadian, August is "ab" but an Arabized version of the word August is also commonly used and understood. Finally, in Mandarin and presumably other Chinese languages, Gregorian months are only referred to by their number, so we are in "bayue" (lit. eight(th) month).

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  • science science Is there a scientific calendar which uses a different reference than Jesus?
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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 1 month ago 96%

    The start of the calendar has to be arbitrary, there's no way around that as it's not feasible to measure the time since the beginning of the universe with good enough accuracy.

    As others commented, the Julian Day is a time measure that is actually used in astronomy, and Unix time is a time stamp standard (not really a calendar, although it could be if we got used to it) that is mostly a way to store time points, not really to consume them before converting to a more readable form.

    But as a scientist who is wholly irreligious, I'm not overly bothered by using the Gregorian calendar, even though it has Christian (and a lot of pre-Christian) elements. Its annoyances (different numbers of days in each month, weeks not aligning with years, leap years etc.) are due to the fact that we decided to measure time in these arbitrary units. At least it's universal in the modern era (often in conjunction with another calendar), and everywhere you go people understand what "August 5, 2024" means (although August might have to be translated to the target language, since the names of the months are not universal).

    That's more than you can say about non-time units of measurement (I'm looking at you, imperial and US customary units!!)

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  • asklemmy Asklemmy Books - Do you prefer Paperback or Hardcover?
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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 2 months ago 57%

    Digital only. Who even has room for physical books.

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  • greentext Greentext Anon visits Canada
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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 2 months ago 100%

    He got at least partially Canadianized mid post switching from miles to kilometres.

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  • asklemmy Asklemmy Honest question, how many of you watch the autoplaying videos on websites ?
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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 2 months ago 100%

    Have autoplay disabled

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  • vintageads Vintage and Retro Ads, Promos, Fliers, Etc. "Married at 15 ?" - The Astonishing Mrs. Highfield - Rinso’s Soap - Australia, 1953
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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 2 months ago 64%

    Really doubt any of the information is true. I bet the ad was created by men with seriusly messed up assumptions.

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  • canada Canada Man arrested, charged after revving engine outside Winnipeg police HQ
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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 2 months ago 84%

    It's a way for the vehicle owner to broadcast to the world that they have a small dick.

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  • casualconversation
    I re-discovered a video library on an old laptop

    I turned on an old laptop and found a fairly sizable library of videos I accrued between 2013 and 2019. It contains 329 hours of content across 38 movies and 464 TV episodes (of 29 different shows), and that's even after removing 42 corrupted video files (about 14G). There are also 64 standalone videos, mostly stuff I downloaded off YouTube for the purpose of watching on the road (but that's just 10 hours of the content). I'm kinda wondering what I should do with that. It's 230G, so not really small, but I'm not short on storage space. A big chunk of the content is current events, like The Daily Show and Colbert Report (including an interview with Bill Cosby from 2014, yikes...) Would you re-watch that?

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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 2 months ago 100%

    I was a bit confused at first by car ride from the barbershop. I lived in 4 countries yet never more than 5 minutes walk from where I got my haircut.

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  • asklemmy Ask Lemmy Have you drank enough water today?
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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 2 months ago 100%

    Yes, I have a 14h reminder to drink 1L of water, which is my entire daily intake. I have this reminder because without it I may well drink nothing at all and not even realize.

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  • memes memes Double Standard
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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 2 months ago 100%

    This is a sign on the road to Budapesht near the border between Ukraine and Hungary. There's the weird insistence in Ukraine to do a one-to-one transliteration of Cyrillic to Latin without much thought, so Ш just becomes SH... Google Maps link: https://maps.app.goo.gl/YyzH7xx7gWNJCcqA6

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  • "Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearHO
    Home Improvement observantTrapezium 2 months ago 100%
    Floor-to-ceiling vertical blinds

    I'd like to hang vertical blinds on my floor-to-ceiling windows (272 cm in height). Ceiling is concrete and has a rail already mounted. The off the shelf solutions I see have mounts that are fixed to a wall, not to the ceiling. * Can I fix a mount to the white window frame shown in the picture? * If not, is it a good idea to remove the existing rail, and use the existing holes in the concrete to hang a mount for the vertical blinds mount? Perhaps with a right angle bracket?

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    opensource Open Source The Death of Decentralized Email
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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 2 months ago 95%

    You can't successfully use a home email server.

    Mostly true (server can be home but using the ISP network directly probably won't work)

    You can't successfully use an email server on a (cloud) VPS.

    Bullshit

    You can't successfully use an email server on a bare metal machine in your own datacenter.

    Bullshit

    As such, it is my distinct displeasure to declare the death of SMTP. The protocol is no longer usable. And as we can see, this devolution occurred organically.

    Bullshit

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  • tumblr tumblr Okay, let's try this again
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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 2 months ago 92%

    There's an argument to be made that "no binario" is the more correct. Latin has a neutral grammatical gender ("bīnārium") that has been mostly assimilated into the masculine gender in Spanish.

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  • science_memes Science Memes Children is bugs
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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 3 months ago 92%

    Wife should have Googled it, she's the buttface.

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  • memes memes I just need some space
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  • observantTrapezium observantTrapezium 3 months ago 100%

    Not all galaxies are spirals, and spiral galaxies may (kinda) stop spinning after galactic mergers make them into ellipticals with low net angular momentum.

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  • personalfinancecanada
    Question about interest calculation (mortgage)

    I don't seem to understand something regarding how interest is paid on a mortgage. Say the loan is for $100,000 at a 5% rate for 10 years, paid monthly. I would think that on the first month, the interest I have to pay $100,000 × (0.05 ÷ 12) = $416.67. However the [mortgage calculator](https://itools-ioutils.fcac-acfc.gc.ca/MC-CH/MCCalc-CHCalc-eng.aspx) says that the first payment is actually $412.39. While it's not a huge difference, it's a difference nonetheless and I can't really figure out where it comes from. My intuition is that it's somehow related to the fact that interest is compounded daily, but when I take r = 0.05 ÷ 365 and N = 365 × 10 payments (keeping leap years in mind for later), and calculate the first 30 days, I get $409.70, and the first 31 days give $423.32. I guess that the "actual" number is some kind of weighted average since the calculator doesn't ask at which month your loan starts. So where is this $412.39 coming from? In reality when paying a mortgage, do you see the interest fluctuating as it decreases, depending on the number of days every month?

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    startrek
    Star Trek observantTrapezium 6 months ago 90%
    Shatner's "do over" of the Veridian III death scene on Kimmel youtu.be

    I recommend watching the whole interview, it's hilarious.

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    cpp
    C++ observantTrapezium 1 year ago 100%
    Anybody at CppNorth this week?

    Pretty interesting talks, especially focusing on safety.

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    toronto
    Toronto observantTrapezium 1 year ago 94%
    Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Toronto episode

    The picture is from very early in the episode, I'm trying not to spoil it to anybody. The new Star Trek show "Strange New Worlds" just released an episode that mostly takes place in present-day (more-or-less) Toronto, with familiar city sites in almost every scene. It's a pretty good episode for Kurtzman-era Trek, although it's hard to concentrate on the plot as Torontonians.

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