Yuyan Li

@yuyanli
21 Followers
89 Following
212 Posts
Stuff
My empty websitehttps://www.yuyanli.dev
So TIL that you can highlight an icon in the App Switcher and tap Q to quit the app without ever foregrounding it… 🤦🏻‍♀️🤯
Thank goodness you’re here!
7/10
Very simple 2 hour game with hilarious moments and a great art style
Birth
6/10
Point and click adventure game with a really nice art style
Indiana Jones and the Great Circle
7/10
Full RT mode looks great, but it has common TAA issues like ghosting. Some of the internal settings are too aggressive and causes frequent texture pop-ins.
The gameplay is not as polished as an AAA game should be.Movement is janky, melee combat lacks depth and guns are pretty much useless.
The actors all did a great job, especially Tory Baker as Indy. I think it would be a much better experience if it was more linear instead of the semi-open world.
#gaming
Harold Halibut
6/10
This game has the potential to be great, but sadly it is not.
There is virtually no gameplay other than walking around the same places over and over again. Most of the cutscenes are people talking to each other while standing still. And it failed to make me care about the story and characters.
#gaming

We are pretty lucky that most fires burn within our visible light spectrum, but there was this one time at NASA. Apparently, hydrogen is very pale when it burns and can't be seen by most people, not only that, but it burns very cleanly and with little ambient heat. The scientists had to walk around with brooms in front of them, and if the broom caught fire they'd know where the fire was, they called this The Broom Method.

https://shop.minimuseum.com/blogs/cool-things/the-broom-method?srsltid=AfmBOordQRxmUUxMvh3jV2XN7K7vUapiG87WCIQ5a_35TTj99CH5v0gy

The Broom Method

A NASA worker demonstrating the broom method of detecting a hydrogen flame, which are invisible during the day. (Source: NASA) In order to fuel its rockets, NASA scientists must take two of the most basic elements, hydrogen and oxygen, and cool them down hundreds of degrees into their liquid states. In this more efficient form, a rocket’s tank volume can be maximized, providing the needed fuel to achieve lift. This process is a potentially dangerous one, as hydrogen is highly combustible. If at any point during storage, fueling, or flight the liquid form evaporates back into gas, a leak could mean a massive explosion. NASA has had a long history of contending with this issue. Hydrogen leaks were a persistent thorn in the side of the Space Shuttle program, grounding the entire fleet for six months while engineers searched for an elusive leak during the “Summer of Hydrogen”. Because of its efficiency as a fuel source, hydrogen continues to be used by many space agencies, as opposed to other alternatives. The Endeavour orbiter returning from space after STS-118. This mission was the first to deploy hydrogen tape, which luckily caught a leak before takeoff. (Source: NASA) In spite of the dangers of hydrogen, NASA lacked a comprehensive system for detecting a leak for much of its career. Part of hydrogen's danger is that it gives off low radiant heat, meaning its flame is invisible in daylight. NASA came up with a rather creative solution for the issue. During the Apollo missions, scientists and engineers would simply walk through the facilities with a long broom held out in front of them. When the broom touched the invisible burning hydrogen, the end would suddenly combust and they could mark another area which had dangerous gas within it. It was low-tech — but it worked. During the Space Shuttle years, NASA made use of more complex sensors to detect leaks and ultraviolet cameras to spot flames already burning. These measures, while more effective than just waving a broom around, still did not provide an immediate visual indicator of a leak to those on the ground. The agency needed a new technology to spot leaks, one that could be precise and immediate. Commercial hydrogen tape being used to detect a leak, one of many technologies developed by NASA and now available to the public. (Source: ASI Magazine) Working in conjunction with the Florida Solar Energy Center, and making use of a preexisting Japanese patent, scientists at NASA developed a chemochromic tape that changes color in the presence of hydrogen. Hydrogen reacts with the compounds suspended in the outer layer of the tape, indicating a leak. It was first used in 2007 during an Endeavour shuttle flight and has since found a variety of industrial uses in the private sector. Hydrogen leaks continue to be a concern. The second attempted launch of the recent Artemis 1 mission was aborted when a persistent leak could not be shut off. Although systems for detection and management have advanced, NASA faces the same dilemma it did during the Apollo days: the most efficient fuel is also the most dangerous and the easiest to leak. As NASA and the other space agencies ready more missions in the coming years, special attention will have to be paid to this old problem. In this case, it really is rocket science. Want to learn more about NASA's space shuttles? Head over to the shop where you can purchase specimens from the program. Read More! Klebanoff L. Hydrogen Storage Technology: Materials and Applications. CRC Press; 2012. doi:10.1201/b13685

Mini Museum
I love it when I press ⌘R in an "app” and the whole thing reloads. Electron slop is everywhere
US lawyers will reportedly try to force Google to sell Chrome and unbundle Android

The Department of Justice will recommend that Google be made to sell Chrome, unbundle Android from products like the Play Store, and create AI opt-outs, writes Bloomberg.

The Verge
Air fryers are simpler than you think, but still pretty neat

YouTube
Why does Amazon send out order dispatched emails but doesn’t include the name or photo of the item? Do people at Amazon even buy things on it