the birth of the internet?
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@nixCraft APSR (always practice save routing)
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the birth of the internet?
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weirdly enough, that effect in biology is electrical
the egg rapidly changes electrical potential after one sperm enters. no more can enter
even weirder, the egg will emit a tiny flash of light
it's called a zinc spark
https://www.cbc.ca/news/science/sperm-egg-zinc-sparks-1.3553550
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the birth of the internet?
@nixCraft Conception of the Internet.
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the birth of the internet?
@nixCraft lol
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the birth of the internet?
@nixCraft
ABSO-LUTELY! -
weirdly enough, that effect in biology is electrical
the egg rapidly changes electrical potential after one sperm enters. no more can enter
even weirder, the egg will emit a tiny flash of light
it's called a zinc spark
https://www.cbc.ca/news/science/sperm-egg-zinc-sparks-1.3553550
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@adipoeserPursch @nixCraft First one across the finish line wins!
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the birth of the internet?
@nixCraft Rather: Attack on Zion by the Matrix
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the birth of the internet?
UTP came much later! I remember offices were coax cables where going from one workstation to another, now it's all collapsed backbone and non-blocking switches, then it was the real CSMA/CD at play.
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@SpaetzleGrab @nixCraft We retconning history now?
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weirdly enough, that effect in biology is electrical
the egg rapidly changes electrical potential after one sperm enters. no more can enter
even weirder, the egg will emit a tiny flash of light
it's called a zinc spark
https://www.cbc.ca/news/science/sperm-egg-zinc-sparks-1.3553550
Erasing a bit vs. conception
https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/PyChB935jjtmL5fbo/time-and-energy-costs-to-erase-a-bit
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weirdly enough, that effect in biology is electrical
the egg rapidly changes electrical potential after one sperm enters. no more can enter
even weirder, the egg will emit a tiny flash of light
it's called a zinc spark
https://www.cbc.ca/news/science/sperm-egg-zinc-sparks-1.3553550
Alas, not as luminous as it might at first appear: no light is emitted in-vitro.
From the article, "Upon fertilization, calcium increases and zinc is rapidly released. When this happens, the zinc joins itself to small, light-emitting molecule probes." The word "probe" here is important: it is an introduced chemical that emits the light when it combines with the zinc.
The paper can be read at https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4845039/
See Fluo-4-AM and FluoZin-3 dyes, within. -
Alas, not as luminous as it might at first appear: no light is emitted in-vitro.
From the article, "Upon fertilization, calcium increases and zinc is rapidly released. When this happens, the zinc joins itself to small, light-emitting molecule probes." The word "probe" here is important: it is an introduced chemical that emits the light when it combines with the zinc.
The paper can be read at https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4845039/
See Fluo-4-AM and FluoZin-3 dyes, within. -
Erasing a bit vs. conception
https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/PyChB935jjtmL5fbo/time-and-energy-costs-to-erase-a-bit
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Alas, not as luminous as it might at first appear: no light is emitted in-vitro.
From the article, "Upon fertilization, calcium increases and zinc is rapidly released. When this happens, the zinc joins itself to small, light-emitting molecule probes." The word "probe" here is important: it is an introduced chemical that emits the light when it combines with the zinc.
The paper can be read at https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4845039/
See Fluo-4-AM and FluoZin-3 dyes, within.@seachanged Those test tube babies have a lot to answer for - they've turned utero into vitro. I made the same error just yesterday. Glass uterus, anyone?
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