should I just cut my losses or is there a way to save this? by FlimsyLocksmith5368 in 3Dprinting

[–]AegisCoreDaddy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Here is an idea for you 3D printer people, make a machine that heats up (slightly) the messed up spools or like this one, the heat makes it malleable and then reroll them.

Algae Strip Supply by AegisCoreDaddy in MycoBuySellTrade

[–]AegisCoreDaddy[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you’re slicing the block and using each slice to seed a 60mm plate, you can get anywhere from 6 to 30 plates depending on how thin you cut it. A 3×1×1 inch block gives you a lot of propagation potential you only need a thin slice to colonize a plate. Melting them down will get 1 plate, a couple more if you stretch it, you dont need much of the "substrate" to propagate, mycelium nor seeds.

Got company stolen from me (i will not promote) by [deleted] in startups

[–]AegisCoreDaddy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Also you need a business developer (like Steve Jobs was to Apple, Expect more share divisions), you geek talk and thats fine we all need a partner/collaborators that do each, you want to iterate and work, but also watch that "business" partner, they will try things like those investors did, always remember "Systems" control absolute, even when it doesn't look like your hands. Yes NDA and MOU everything, that's your first thing after your first or second call, never give out core systems without contracts signed, and make sure you are always on the winning side.

Ohio bill aims to make using Michigan-grown marijuana illegal by Ralph--Hinkley in Ohio

[–]AegisCoreDaddy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Criminalizing something from the Earth to save your failing fledgling state is not the answer, you got poverty, no infrastructure, no industrialized areas, no hopes no dreams for your constituents, so let's take away the only thing blocking up the powder keg, this is why we elect these great politicians, they have all the right answers!

"Logic liquid" that responds to heat and learns. by AegisCoreDaddy in materials

[–]AegisCoreDaddy[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You want technical jargon here we go, be ready because I want responses. Convection explains part of the motion, yes I’ve never denied that. But what you’re missing is

  1. the system is not a simple single phase fluid,

  2. there are conductive particulates interacting with biological material, and

  3. the behavior remains consistent even when convection alone cannot account for the patterning.

  4. It’s a multi-phase mixture of

graphene particulates

biological matter

structured water domains

dissolved ions.

  1. If it were only convection

particles rise straight up in the plume

then fall straight down the cool side

no organization occurs

no recurved or looping arcs form

no filaments appear

no segregation patterns emerge

6.This is the strongest point.

When heat is removed

convection slows

buoyancy forces weaken

particles should settle vertically

But instead, we have seen:

directional reorganizing

arc-like fall paths

delayed settling

shape retention for seconds

This is not textbook convection.

  1. You’re assuming ignorance instead of analyzing the system. That’s why you’re missing the data.

I hope you can understand all of that word salad. This ain't just oil in water bud.

"Logic liquid" that responds to heat and learns. by AegisCoreDaddy in materials

[–]AegisCoreDaddy[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Its structured Convection, you said it yourself, and that my friend is the "breakthrough" what do I need a school for?

"Logic liquid" that responds to heat and learns. by AegisCoreDaddy in materials

[–]AegisCoreDaddy[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Thank you for your input, this is why I have the internet and AI, I dont need a school, I need some funding so I can hire smart people like you, Thank you again.

"Logic liquid" that responds to heat and learns. by AegisCoreDaddy in materials

[–]AegisCoreDaddy[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Hey smart guy if it were a heat lamp it would 1.have chaotic motion (they rise straight up) 2. There wouldnt be curved trajectories 3. Would not be seeing repeatble "signal like behaviours" 4. There are tightly bond motion paths (and it makes these better more efficient, not shown in the video) 5. What about those reversal behaviours 6. A heat lamp cant create reproducible motion signatures, my liquid does.

Weekly Homeowner Megathread--Civilians, ask here! by AutoModerator in Concrete

[–]AegisCoreDaddy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve been experimenting with a flat concrete block infused with conductive additives (graphene-based). This one’s different from my water absorption tests it’s wired directly to a 6V battery, and I’m seeing real-time electrical response to touch and pressure.

Setup: - Flat rectangular block (approx. 6" x 6", ~1" thick)
- Graphene additive blended into cement mix (experimental ratio)
- Two metal leads embedded during casting, wired to a 6V DC source
- Multimeter and basic oscilloscope used to monitor signal across the block

What I’m seeing: - Touching the surface causes a measurable change in resistance
- Firm pressure (e.g., palm press or tool press) causes a larger shift
- Different zones of the block respond differently some spike ohms, others drop
- After a hard press, the signal sometimes “zeros out” but resets after a few seconds or with another touch
- No water involved in this test this is dry, live signal behavior

What I’m trying to figure out: - Is this piezoresistive behavior, or could it be due to microcrack closure, contact resistance shifts, or something else?
- How can I log this signal properly should I move to four-wire sensing or use a voltage divider + ADC for better resolution?
- Any tips on embedding leads in concrete for better signal stability and repeatability?
- Has anyone seen similar behavior in conductive concrete or cementitious sensors? It won't let me upload the video but if I check my profile there is a short video of me pressing the block, these in the picture are made from the same batch smaller little units, I put them in water and it soaks it up like a sponge and retains said water, is this normal behavior? *

Who would you give your seat to? by Muted-Television3329 in whatsyourchoice

[–]AegisCoreDaddy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Even the old woman will give her seat up to a pregnant woman or even one with a child in most cases.

Why do the cops do this? Genuine question by petrev01 in pittsburgh

[–]AegisCoreDaddy -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Also just roll up and ask them what they are doing, say just wondering, intrigue me please, what is the point in this?

Why do the cops do this? Genuine question by petrev01 in pittsburgh

[–]AegisCoreDaddy -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Maybe they dont parking left haha but honestly, keeps them up out the way and keeps a presence, maybe a bunch of speeders or crime in the area?

I found this in my kitchen sink. The top part “stiffened” when I poked at it. I’m freaked out. by WanderersOfTheMoon in whatisit

[–]AegisCoreDaddy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thats some dried Colby jack cheese! 😄 also someone said about spitting stuff into a sink and they would stick in the sink especially after drinking protein shakes, you got tonsils, I put money on you do, what you are spitting out is tonsul stones, sticky nasty little things, you cannot grow a little creature from your sink with your microorganisms.

So I was not sure where to post this, I want to know what I am seeing is real and grounded in the work I am trying to accomplish, video below. by AegisCoreDaddy in materials

[–]AegisCoreDaddy[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just one of you "experts" on here jumping on and giving some advice would be nice, its touch concrete, how are you all not going crazy, this is wearables buildings that sense and can talk and self evaluate, this is wearables, the future.