CSIRO hastening the trend in culture by explicitly making us a nation of fart huffers.
she's living up to the paramedic tradition of being completely awesome and down to earth.
The sluiced fragments (some of) hairtie for scale.
Not practical, but I want a tiny 3d printed chest of gem rough so for now I'm collecting it all.
Uh tiny fragments of zircon and saph I haven't sorted yet. A single flec of gold and a metric tonne of magnetite.
Gonna dry the cons and strip out the magnetite and look for more gold, it's not an area where you expect it though. This was the sand from classifying a few buckets for sapphire. Photo of sieve finds attached, the sluice found similar stuff but smaller.
well it's all reprap although prusa'a i3 design has been the foundation of bedslingers since it. I was there when the old magic was written and we were trying to find ways to print wires for motors haha.
you don't often have a car driving through your bedroom or whatever. I'm not saying you should put as much effort into filtering the exhaust from a 3d printer chamber as nation states should to removing car dependence. I'm saying if you're spending 300 euros on a printer spend 10 on cleaning it's pollutants.
Or not, take whatever risks you like it's your body.
Pretty much, also I'm pretty sure prusa are still all open hardware so you can do your own thing if you enjoy suffering.
I will say you should probably not run a fdm machine in the same room as you without filtration. I would recommend enclosing them for myriad reasons, and in the enclosure run a fan that forces air through a filter and activated carbon. No reason to increase exposure to VOCs and microplastics.
If you get a fdm that can dual material fiddly prints become a lot easier as you can use a support material you can dissolve off. That starts getting expensive.
Also consider material running cost. Resin is expensive (but minis don't use much), plastic is cheaper but not that much cheaper buying quality, adding in supports, and dealing with failed prints.
cloudflare uses a wall of lavalamps because it's a fun project that looks cool and gets free advertising.
There are so many sources of noise, lavalamps are probably one of the most expensive in set up and running costs.
It's a pretty cool wall though, hence the free advertising.
I'm not actually sure what the mechanism behind the patches is. Whether they are microneedle or if they use an oily adhesive that modifies skin permiability.
I will note it is extremely slow, like it takes hours to reach steady state slow.
Again, if you are capable of aerasolising a substance such that you can reliably coat someone in it, and you are willing to break chemical weapons treaties, and you love warcrimes you can just use something more effective.
It is absolutely trivial to block the action of an opiate, they're just not effective indiscriminate murder drugs.
wtf? This isn't real. Fent, despite the cop panic, doesn't cross the skin. If you're already shooting it into someone or aerasolising it you can just use more effective things like nerve agents. You're breaking the same treaties and doing the same warcrimes either way.
As an outsider who enjoys parts of hexbear I just want to say that while obviously there is criticism to be made based on the user reaction it was something that I thought came from a good place and didn't really warrant a lot of the backlash. Evidently my views aren't the majority hexbear userbase ones but basically I just want to say that moderating and administrating is awful and largely thankless and that there are people who see this and feel empathy for the mods and admins trying to create a positive culture.
Without litigating terminology it is true that there are not like single receptor effects, or that there is a potentially fatal rebound. However it does mess with homeostasis in ways that can make it difficult to stop. Sudden cessation can cause difficult sleeping, anxiety, nightmares, appetite suppression, restlessness, and low mood. It's relatively easy to deal with compared to stuff that messes with gaba, opiod receptors, or dopamine but it's still much harder than changing what you eat or whatever.
I agree, part of keeping trust in collective health measures is trusting people when they say they are hurt by them and trying to help.
These people did a prosocial and sensible thing, they got hurt in freak accidents, they deserve respect and compassion.