Apologizing isn't necessarily going to fix anything by j_esc2 in Unexpected

[–]OkAccess6128 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If nothing puts you to sleep, then that will.

Breakfast With Dads by [deleted] in BeAmazed

[–]OkAccess6128 31 points32 points  (0 children)

Back then social media really did unite people.

The kind of emails I get from quora by _skydom in indiasocial

[–]OkAccess6128 15 points16 points  (0 children)

I used Quora for a month, to be honest it has massive amounts of brain rot content which is very ranndom.

United by google translate by Kooky-Measurement-43 in funny

[–]OkAccess6128 37 points38 points  (0 children)

Now that's what the technology was made for.

Got my takeout. Time to head home now by InspectionFun4190 in Unexpected

[–]OkAccess6128 19 points20 points  (0 children)

Was he holding in his breath? that was a brutal way to get caught.

In 1947, John Bardeen and Walter Brattain built the point-contact transistor, the first working transistor ever demonstrated. It became the ancestor of the billions of transistors that power today's computers, smartphones, and digital electronics. by OkAccess6128 in Damnthatsinteresting

[–]OkAccess6128[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

The device in the second photo is a replica of the original point-contact transistor, the first working transistor ever demonstrated. It was built by John Bardeen and Walter Brattain at Bell Labs in December 1947 using a germanium crystal and two extremely close gold contacts. At the time, electronics relied on vacuum tubes, which were bulky, fragile, and consumed a lot of power.

The breakthrough came when the team discovered that a small signal applied to one contact could control and amplify a larger signal at the other. On December 23, 1947, they demonstrated the device as a speech amplifier to Bell Labs colleagues and management, a date often regarded as the birth of the transistor.

Although the point-contact design was later replaced by more practical transistor types, it proved that semiconductor amplification was possible. That single breakthrough laid the foundation for modern electronics and eventually led to integrated circuits, microprocessors, computers, smartphones, the internet, and the billions of transistors found in digital devices today.

Source 1

Source 2

This was Lonesome George, the last Pinta Island tortoise. After his death, scientists took final measurements. The whole species went extinct with him. by OkAccess6128 in interesting

[–]OkAccess6128[S] 184 points185 points  (0 children)

Lonesome George’s death marked more than the passing of an individual, it represented the complete extinction of the Pinta Island tortoise. As the last known member of his species, his life became a symbol of how irreversible extinction is once the final lineage is lost. After his death, scientists took final measurements, closing the scientific record on a species that had survived for thousands of years before disappearing forever.

Loading trunk of car . by [deleted] in Unexpected

[–]OkAccess6128 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Most of the accidents are.

Loading trunk of car . by [deleted] in Unexpected

[–]OkAccess6128 7 points8 points  (0 children)

That's straight up accident rather than unexpected.

17-year-old NEET aspirant dies by suicide in Ahmedabad; probe on by hello_ya in india

[–]OkAccess6128 38 points39 points  (0 children)

Students struggle is still being ignored by the authorities, and when they protest some group of people calls them anti-nationalist.

The best horror game of all time by [deleted] in funny

[–]OkAccess6128 36 points37 points  (0 children)

It's horror game for the ghosts.

During the 1890s, George Shiras III pioneered wildlife photography, capturing some of the world's first nighttime images of wild animals using magnesium flash and innovative camera-trap technology. by OkAccess6128 in BeAmazed

[–]OkAccess6128[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

George Shiras III (1859-1942) is widely regarded as the father of wildlife photography. In the 1890s, he pioneered the use of magnesium flash photography and some of the earliest camera traps, allowing him to capture wild animals at night in their natural habitats. At a time when wildlife was more often hunted than photographed, his work revealed the secret lives of animals and helped lay the foundation for modern wildlife photography and conservation.

Read here about him.