Random Articles (Page 6)
Have a deep view into what people are curious about.
π L-System
An L-system or Lindenmayer system is a parallel rewriting system and a type of formal grammar. An L-system consists of an alphabet of symbols that can be used to make strings, a collection of production rules that expand each symbol into some larger string of symbols, an initial "axiom" string from which to begin construction, and a mechanism for translating the generated strings into geometric structures. L-systems were introduced and developed in 1968 by Aristid Lindenmayer, a Hungarian theoretical biologist and botanist at the University of Utrecht. Lindenmayer used L-systems to describe the behaviour of plant cells and to model the growth processes of plant development. L-systems have also been used to model the morphology of a variety of organisms and can be used to generate self-similar fractals.
Discussed on
- "L-System" | 2020-12-17 | 112 Upvotes 17 Comments
π Stratton Oakmont, Inc. vs. Prodigy before Section 230
Stratton Oakmont, Inc. v. Prodigy Services Co., 23 Media L. Rep. 1794 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1995), is a 1995 U.S. New York Supreme Court decision holding that online service providers could be held liable for the speech of their users. The ruling caused controversy among early supporters of the Internet, including some lawmakers, leading to the passage of Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act in 1996.
Discussed on
- "Stratton Oakmont, Inc. vs. Prodigy before Section 230" | 2023-02-26 | 11 Upvotes 2 Comments
π Shibori
Shibori (γγΌγ / η΅γ) is a Japanese manual resist dyeing technique, which produces a number of different patterns on fabric.
Discussed on
- "Shibori" | 2020-03-20 | 129 Upvotes 20 Comments
π Gall's Law
John Gall (September 18, 1925 β December 15, 2014) was an American author and retired pediatrician. Gall is known for his 1975 book General systemantics: an essay on how systems work, and especially how they fail..., a critique of systems theory. One of the statements from this book has become known as Gall's law.
Discussed on
- "Gall's Law" | 2019-03-19 | 329 Upvotes 101 Comments
π Railway Time
Railway time was the standardised time arrangement first applied by the Great Western Railway in England in November 1840, the first recorded occasion when different local mean times were synchronised and a single standard time applied. The key goals behind introducing railway time were to overcome the confusion caused by having non-uniform local times in each town and station stop along the expanding railway network and to reduce the incidence of accidents and near misses, which were becoming more frequent as the number of train journeys increased.
Railway time was progressively taken up by all railway companies in Great Britain over the following seven years. The schedules by which trains were organised and the time station clocks displayed were brought in line with the local mean time for London or "London Time", the time set at Greenwich by the Royal Observatory, which was already widely known as Greenwich Mean Time (GMT).
The development of railway networks in North America in the 1850s, India in around 1860, and in Europe, prompted the introduction of standard time influenced by geography, industrial development, and political governance.
The railway companies sometimes faced concerted resistance from local people who refused to adjust their public clocks to bring them into line with London Time. As a consequence, two different times would be displayed in the town and in use, with the station clocks and the times published in train timetables differing by several minutes from that on other clocks. Despite this early reluctance, railway time rapidly became adopted as the default time across the whole of Great Britain, although it took until 1880 for the government to legislate on the establishment of a single standard time and a single time zone for the country.
Some contemporary commentators referred to the influence of railway time on encouraging greater precision in daily tasks and the demand for punctuality.
Discussed on
- "Railway Time" | 2023-10-07 | 94 Upvotes 45 Comments
π Timeline of the far future
While the future can never be predicted with absolute certainty, present understanding in various scientific fields allows for the prediction of some far-future events, if only in the broadest outline. These fields include astrophysics, which has revealed how planets and stars form, interact, and die; particle physics, which has revealed how matter behaves at the smallest scales; evolutionary biology, which predicts how life will evolve over time; and plate tectonics, which shows how continents shift over millennia.
All projections of the future of Earth, the Solar System, and the universe must account for the second law of thermodynamics, which states that entropy, or a loss of the energy available to do work, must rise over time. Stars will eventually exhaust their supply of hydrogen fuel and burn out. Close encounters between astronomical objects gravitationally fling planets from their star systems, and star systems from galaxies.
Physicists expect that matter itself will eventually come under the influence of radioactive decay, as even the most stable materials break apart into subatomic particles. Current data suggest that the universe has a flat geometry (or very close to flat), and thus will not collapse in on itself after a finite time, and the infinite future allows for the occurrence of a number of massively improbable events, such as the formation of Boltzmann brains.
The timelines displayed here cover events from the beginning of the 11th millennium to the furthest reaches of future time. A number of alternative future events are listed to account for questions still unresolved, such as whether humans will become extinct, whether protons decay, and whether the Earth survives when the Sun expands to become a red giant.
Discussed on
- "Timeline of the Far Future" | 2025-05-12 | 15 Upvotes 3 Comments
- "Timeline of the Far Future" | 2024-01-14 | 16 Upvotes 1 Comments
- "Timeline of the Far Future" | 2020-05-17 | 168 Upvotes 112 Comments
- "Timeline of the far future" | 2018-07-18 | 696 Upvotes 258 Comments
- "Timeline of the far future" | 2012-05-06 | 294 Upvotes 88 Comments
π Just Room Enough Island
Just Room Enough Island, also known as Hub Island, is an island located in the Thousand Islands chain, belonging to New York, United States. The island is known for being the smallest inhabited island, which appears to be around 3,300 square feet (310Β m2), or about one-thirteenth of an acre. Purchased by the Sizeland family in the 1950s, the island has a house, a tree, shrubs, and a small beach.
Discussed on
- "Just Room Enough Island" | 2020-05-16 | 39 Upvotes 9 Comments
π Diffractive Solar Sail
A diffractive solar sail, or diffractive lightsail, is a type of solar sail which relies on diffraction instead of reflection for its propulsion. Current diffractive sail designs use thin metamaterial films, containing micrometer-size gratings based on polarization or subwavelength refractive structures, causing light to spread out (i.e. diffract) and thereby exert radiation pressure when it passes through them.
Discussed on
- "Diffractive Solar Sail" | 2023-11-03 | 45 Upvotes 16 Comments
π Hallucinogenic Plants in Chinese Herbals
For over two millennia, texts in Chinese herbology and traditional Chinese medicine have recorded medicinal plants that are also hallucinogens and psychedelics. Some are familiar psychoactive plants in Western herbal medicine (e.g., Chinese: θ¨θͺ; pinyin: lΓ ngdΓ ng, i.e. Hyoscyamus niger), but several Chinese plants have not been noted as hallucinogens in modern works (e.g.,Chinese: ι²ε―¦; pinyin: yΓΊnshΓ; lit. 'cloud seed', i.e. Caesalpinia decapetala). Chinese herbals are an important resource for the history of botany, for instance, Zhang Hua's c. 290 Bowuzhi is the earliest record of the psilocybin mushroom xiΓ ojΓΉn η¬θ (lit. "laughing mushroom", i.e. Gymnopilus junonius).
Discussed on
- "Hallucinogenic Plants in Chinese Herbals" | 2023-07-24 | 49 Upvotes 6 Comments
π User:82.148.97.69 β This is the IP address for the entire nation of Qatar
Discussed on
- "User:82.148.97.69 β This is the IP address for the entire nation of Qatar" | 2015-08-11 | 20 Upvotes 4 Comments