Random Articles (Page 6)
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π Walking Stewart
John "Walking" Stewart (19 February 1747 β 20 February 1822) was an English philosopher and traveller. Stewart developed a unique system of materialistic pantheism.
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- "Walking Stewart" | 2019-07-09 | 55 Upvotes 21 Comments
π Prawo Jazdy (Alleged Criminal)
"Prawo Jazdy" was a supposed Polish national who was listed by the Garda SΓochΓ‘na in a police criminal database as having committed more than 50 traffic violations in Ireland. A 2007 memorandum stated that an investigation revealed prawo jazdy [Λpra.vΙ Λjaz.dΙ¨] to be Polish for 'driving licence', with the error arising due to officers mistaking the phrase, printed on Polish driving licenses, to be a personal name while issuing traffic tickets.
π The Cuckoo's Egg
The Cuckoo's Egg: Tracking a Spy Through the Maze of Computer Espionage is a 1989 book written by Clifford Stoll. It is his first-person account of the hunt for a computer hacker who broke into a computer at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL).
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- "The Cuckoo's Egg" | 2019-01-29 | 14 Upvotes 10 Comments
π Kimchi Refrigerator
A kimchi refrigerator is a refrigerator designed specifically to meet the storage requirements of kimchi and facilitate different fermentation processes. The kimchi refrigerator aims to be colder, with more consistent temperature, more humidity, and less moving air than a conventional refrigerator, providing the ideal environment for fermentation of kimchi. Some models may include features such as a UV Sterilizer.
In a consumer survey aimed at South Korean homemakers conducted by a top-ranking Korean media agency in 2004, the kimchi refrigerator was ranked first for most wanted household appliance.
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- "Kimchi Refrigerator" | 2025-01-07 | 83 Upvotes 46 Comments
π Timsort: Fastest Sorting algorithm
Timsort is a hybrid stable sorting algorithm, derived from merge sort and insertion sort, designed to perform well on many kinds of real-world data. It was implemented by Tim Peters in 2002 for use in the Python programming language. The algorithm finds subsequences of the data that are already ordered (runs) and uses them to sort the remainder more efficiently. This is done by merging runs until certain criteria are fulfilled. Timsort has been Python's standard sorting algorithm since version 2.3. It is also used to sort arrays of non-primitive type in Java SE 7, on the Android platform, in GNU Octave, on V8, and Swift.
It uses techniques from Peter McIlroy's 1993 paper "Optimistic Sorting and Information Theoretic Complexity".
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- "Timsort: Fastest Sorting algorithm" | 2018-10-24 | 10 Upvotes 1 Comments
- "Timsort" | 2011-11-09 | 189 Upvotes 27 Comments
π Norwegian butter crisis (2011)
The Norwegian butter crisis began in late 2011 with an acute shortage of butter and inflation of its price across markets in Norway. The shortage caused soaring prices and stores' stocks of butter ran out within minutes of deliveries. According to the Danish tabloid B.T., Norway was gripped by smΓΈr-panik ("butter panic") as a result of the butter shortage.
Discussed on
- "Norwegian butter crisis" | 2022-04-20 | 15 Upvotes 2 Comments
- "Norwegian butter crisis (2011)" | 2015-05-20 | 176 Upvotes 111 Comments
π Ariel School UFO Incident
On September 16, 1994, there was a UFO sighting outside Ruwa, Zimbabwe. 62 students at the Ariel School aged between six and twelve claimed that they saw one or more silver craft descend from the sky and land on a field near their school. One or more creatures dressed all in black then approached the children and telepathically communicated to them a message with an environmental theme.
The Fortean writer Jerome Clark has called the incident the βmost remarkable close encounter of the third kind of the 1990sβ. Skeptics have described the incident as one of mass hysteria. Not all the children at the school that day claimed that they saw something. Several of those that did maintain that their account of the incident is true.
π Wikipedia: Articles for deletion/Year 2038 problem
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- "Wikipedia: Articles for deletion/Year 2038 problem" | 2022-05-03 | 17 Upvotes 11 Comments
π CorsiβRosenthal Box
The CorsiβRosenthal Box, also called a CorsiβRosenthal Cube or a Comparetto Cube, is a design for a do-it-yourself air purifier that can be built comparatively inexpensively. It was designed during the COVID-19 pandemic with the goal of reducing the levels of airborne viral particles in indoor settings.
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- "CorsiβRosenthal Box" | 2022-05-19 | 81 Upvotes 21 Comments
π Value of life
The value of life is an economic value used to quantify the benefit of avoiding a fatality. It is also referred to as the cost of life, value of preventing a fatality (VPF), implied cost of averting a fatality (ICAF), and value of a statistical life (VSL). In social and political sciences, it is the marginal cost of death prevention in a certain class of circumstances. In many studies the value also includes the quality of life, the expected life time remaining, as well as the earning potential of a given person especially for an after-the-fact payment in a wrongful death claim lawsuit.
As such, it is a statistical term, the cost of reducing the average number of deaths by one. It is an important issue in a wide range of disciplines including economics, health care, adoption, political economy, insurance, worker safety, environmental impact assessment, globalization, and process safety.
The motivation for placing a monetary value on life is to enable policy and regulatory analysts to allocate the limited supply of resources, infrastructure, labor, and tax revenue. Estimates for the value of a life are used to compare the life-saving and risk-reduction benefits of new policies, regulations, and projects against a variety of other factors, often using a cost-benefit analysis.
Estimates for the statistical value of life are published and used in practice by various government agencies. In Western countries and other liberal democracies, estimates for the value of a statistical life typically range from US$1 millionβUS$10 million; for example, the United States FEMA estimated the value of a statistical life at US$7.5 million in 2020.
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- "Value of life" | 2024-01-08 | 74 Upvotes 92 Comments