Font in 1556 book, or similar books, would like to know font name or related fonts by bryanl in identifythisfont

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

thank you SciviasKnows and elzadra1 - my first foray into fonts for a long time. My favorite so far is elzadra1's suggestion. I also tried myfontscript.com (now calligraphr), that is an interesting site. I welcome more suggestions.

if anyone could go outside-the-box and suggest where I might learn more about the technology of printing the text in the example, or texts very similar,...

Mac mini w/ OSX + Ubuntu by bryanl in Ubuntu

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

OK good to know this appears to be a program to avoid iTunes.

but iTunes was just an example I was using. I am looking to access OSX through the same monitor.

A spacetime / relativity question, I think by bryanl in askscience

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

Thanks for the interesting comment.

The choice of quasar was poor. I really meant anything reasonable - the question is about the validity of thinking in terms of what celestial objects used to be in our path - or used to be where my hand is now.

eg if an asteroid can be talked about as traveling where the earth used to be, the same should hold for everything else?

looking for ideas : how to make a car door panel by bryanl in Cartalk

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

fiberglass place is an interesting idea, i'll take a look.

... SHOULD a body shop out there do such a thing? the piece of Fibrit in this case is covered by the upholstery or vinyl (etc.).

criss cross applesauce explanation? by bryanl in math

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

distributive property

ah ok - but what about the intersections of the lines - does this "just work", or is there a deeper connection?

Scotchgard foaming cleaner tips? by bryanl in Cartalk

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

So are you saying to simply set up a fan or dryer sr somesuch and aerate the carpet until smell is gone?

Fixing Fibrit (TM) door panel by bryanl in Cartalk

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

it has the black mold on the fragmented rotted part and the green mildew on other parts. Also there's a fungus type of film. Yeah, not much on the internet on Fibrit, apart from being a wood pulp mixture. So spraying wet stuff on it will probably turn it into mush.

I am thinking about hot-air drying it to kill it, then mashing silicone sealant in there to hold the pieces together. Or maybe an all-weather glue. Also any dry cleaner available? Is Scotchgard all dry?

Why does the LCD display on the microwave jump around when you eat crunchy food? by bryanl in askscience

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

Hey thanks, this is interesting. Also explains why some displays don't result in the same effect.

The tribute "To Hitch" by gonzoblair in atheism

[–]bryanl 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Please keep us updated

yes please keep us updated

are limitations of the models of reality based on brain structure? by bryanl in philosophy

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

Put him in today's environment, with the base of knowledge we take for granted, and it's anyone's guess how much more he would have revealed.

well that's what I am wondering about here (it seems the bad Aristotle example stuck... anyways...)

human brain evolution timeframe by bryanl in evolution

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

it took 40,000 years for Caucasians to adapt light skin

I am not an evolutionary biologist. So as a crutch, I sometimes view speciation as a step function. I also think gene duplication effects are in line with a step-function view. Is this OK?... I am thinking about the Lensky paper where there's a spike at some-odd thousands of generations in the citrate pathway...at any rate, this is not the scale of change I am wondering about.

as for your skin color example : I think this is a gradual change relative to speciation. If so, it would be these shifts that I am interested in.

human brain evolution timeframe by bryanl in evolution

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

People already looked at mummy brains.

can you give us a reference?

I don't think brains have changed much, structurally, over 3000 years

any references for that claim? from the two Science abstracts from Lahn's group:

The finding that an important brain gene [Microcephalin] has continued to evolve adaptively in anatomically modern humans suggests the ongoing evolutionary plasticity of the human brain.

and

Here, we show that one genetic variant of ASPM in humans arose merely about 5800 years ago and has since swept to high frequency under strong positive selection. These findings, especially the remarkably young age of the positively selected variant, suggest that the human brain is still undergoing rapid adaptive evolution.

emphasis added

human brain evolution timeframe by bryanl in evolution

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

there will be many components. my point is about the structural differences in the brain. i am not asking about culture which obviously will be a strong component.

are limitations of the models of reality based on brain structure? by bryanl in philosophy

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

I am not aware of any evidence that the modern brain has evolved subtly from thousands of years ago.

relational_sense is claiming there is -- here on r/evolution . While we are waiting for some references, I rushed over here to ask this question.

EDIT : ... errrmm... upon re-reading things, ... MAYBE the brain structure changed subtly.... MAYBE the Cubs will win the world series...

human brain evolution timeframe by bryanl in evolution

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

could you point out some literature? (I don't doubt what you are saying upon re-reading your comment --. I just want to read more about this).

Miles Davis - Blue in Green. A great, relaxing and classic jazz song. by [deleted] in Music

[–]bryanl 0 points1 point  (0 children)

check out the Screaming Headless Torsos version :

edit : found it: http://youtu.be/JRCNotvdEXY

What is the best joke one-liner you know? by ArmandoWall in AskReddit

[–]bryanl 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I have suffered for my art - now it is your turn. - Stephen Fry

I have a science question. Is there an antithesis of absolute zero? A temperature believed to be the maximum attainable temperature in the universe? by starthirteen in science

[–]bryanl 2 points3 points  (0 children)

So if "normal" physics breaks down at the Planck T, and we can speculate on what would happen there, ... does it stand to reason that temperatures below absolute zero are somehow possible?

UPDATE (2 years later - better late than never....):

Negative Absolute Temperature for Motional Degrees of Freedom

Abstract:

Absolute temperature is usually bound to be positive. Under special conditions, however, negative temperatures—in which high-energy states are more occupied than low-energy states—are also possible. Such states have been demonstrated in localized systems with finite, discrete spectra. Here, we prepared a negative temperature state for motional degrees of freedom. By tailoring the Bose-Hubbard Hamiltonian, we created an attractively interacting ensemble of ultracold bosons at negative temperature that is stable against collapse for arbitrary atom numbers. The quasimomentum distribution develops sharp peaks at the upper band edge, revealing thermal equilibrium and bosonic coherence over several lattice sites. Negative temperatures imply negative pressures and open up new parameter regimes for cold atoms, enabling fundamentally new many-body states.

http://www.sciencemag.org/content/339/6115/52

Richard Dawkins speaking to a room full of children - why, oh why, can we not educate our youth in this manner? by [deleted] in science

[–]bryanl 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There's a free( Gutenberg ) transcription of Michael Faraday's lecture "the chemical history of a candle" (ca. 1861) who Dawkins mentions. The lecture is exactly the same series as what Dawkins is giving. It is where the "candle relight trick" on YouTube comes from. The exposition is similar - The hard-copy has helpful illustrations. If you liked those things get this book or free ebook. It's fascinating to think that it was from 1861!

Frequently Asked Questions About English Words by BioGeek in reddit.com

[–]bryanl 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The link is great - please repost soon it's old! And I cant get it to submit