Agnew Hawk 

@agnew_hawk
49 Followers
200 Following
481 Posts
Mod for SariaSlays @ Twitch /
I tinker a lot.
I change interest focus more often than socks.
I once left a friend request on read for 6 years
Now geeking aboutCoffee, statistical analysis, Rust and self-hosting
Unhealthily familiar withExcel
Pronounshe/him

@CinnamonCatYurilover

You may be entitled to financial compensation

@catsalad

@mosssupply
We will have bulky DIY RAM kits bolted to the side of the chassis, that make weird noises, wired in by whatever cabling was available + some copper salvaged from old phone lines for good measure.

No-one will know how it will work, but if the RAM purrs, then the RAM is happy

@catsalad
all, pls

@catsalad

ROCK AND STONE ⛏️

Cats and dragons are just different form factors of the same critter.

https://m.ai6yr.org/@exador23/116050618727339401

So when wild animals have #privacy practices and use #e2ee to shelter themselves from predators, it's cool, but when us people (still wild animals) try have a bit of privacy, it suddenly "needs backdoors" and "totes safe verification systems" to "protect the children", only used by "the good guys" to "catch criminals" as if the real predators weren't the big corporations all along.

#rant

Hippy Steve (@[email protected])

Say what now?!? When a predator like a lion walks through the grasslands, it makes its presence known by roaring, which can be heard miles away. Since the lion is at the top of the food chain, it doesn’t particularly require privacy. But for animals like deer, making loud sounds isn’t exactly the safest way to communicate. So, to get noticed, deer mark areas with rubs and scrapes, known as signposts. Now, a new study in Ecology and Evolution reports that these signposts hold a hidden glow, and other deer can see it. https://newatlas.com/biology/forests-glow-uv-light-deer-communication/ To investigate how the environment might glow in response to animal behaviors, the lead author of the study, Daniel DeRose-Broeckert, and his colleagues surveyed an 800-acre area in the Whitehall Forest and located white-tailed deer’s (Odocoileus virginianus) active signposts. The team marked those signposts with flagging tapes and GPS points. From the sites, they analyzed 109 antler rubs, 37 scrapes, and 20 urinated spots. The light measurements revealed that these markers emit light in wavelengths that stand out against the surrounding environment when exposed to ultraviolet (UV) rays. In an interview DeRose-Broeckert told us that deer are more sensitive to blue wavelengths and UV light than humans. A deer’s eye sensitivity picks up the wavelengths emitted by the glow, i.e., 450-460 nm and 537 nm ranges. Also, deer are most active at dawn and dusk, when the sunlight is low and visible light fades, making ultraviolet wavelengths more prominent.

AI6YR's Mastodon
@yschaeff
This is the beginning of a great-ish 90's flick about hollywood hackers

@Monsieur_Lepetit

Send the AWAs to counter the UwUs

@SecurityWriter

@catsalad

Shitposting