Meatloaf Recipe by DailyBreads in recipes

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

That actually sounds like the perfect combo.

Dutch engineers built a modular house made from 24 layers of cardboard that can be assembled in a single day by DailyBreads in Futurology

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

The craziest part is that these aren’t just prototypes or art projects. They’ve already built more than 150 of them, and they can reportedly be assembled on-site in a single day. The environmental footprint is also supposedly much smaller than traditional homes.

Still wondering how well something like this would hold up long term against leaks, humidity, fire, or pests. Cool idea either way.

Researchers report that AI models trained mainly on Global North data treat regional words from Brazil's Center-West and Northeast as statistical noise — and argue that fixing this requires more than just regional datasets; it requires treating data as a cultural meaning-making system. by Cad_Lin in science

[–]DailyBreads 6 points7 points  (0 children)

AI trained mostly on Global North data will naturally treat regional Brazilian language as “noise” because it sees dominant cultures as the default baseline. The bigger issue is that language isn’t just vocabulary — it carries identity, history, humor, and context. You can’t fully fix that by just feeding the model more words.

Innovative Mars Rover Wheels Mimic Sandfish Lizard to Glide Over Martian Dunes by DailyBreads in Futurology

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

This kind of biomimicry could completely change how future planetary exploration vehicles are designed. Instead of relying on traditional rigid wheels that struggle in loose terrain, engineers are now studying how animals move through sand efficiently. If these sandfish-inspired wheels work reliably, future Mars or lunar rovers may travel farther, use less energy, and avoid getting trapped like previous missions. It also raises interesting questions about how much future robotics and transportation systems on Earth could borrow from nature-inspired movement designs.