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NCC lowered ice thickness standard to push Rideau Canal Skateway open in February | CTV
  • Posting this one despite not being a resident of Ottawa. Because I'm somewhat of an ice guru, having been involved in the construction of many ice roads, runways, etc.

    There is a rule of thumb in ice safety engineering called "Gold's Equation". Expressed in metric, it goes: w=4h² where h is the thickness in cm, and w is the weight it can sustain in kg.

    The equation has been used safely for decades, but there are several variations on it.

    (1) It assumes that your measurements are made manually, and that there is some statistical variation that are not captured by the exact locations of your measurements. If you have something that can do continuous measurements (like a GPR), you can use 7 as your factor instead of 4, as you've got better info about the thinnest spots.

    (2) It assumes the ice is clear ice (also called blue ice). White ice is treated as only contributing half to thickness because it is weaker.

    (3) It assumes the load isn't static. If a load is parked on the ice for 12 or more hours, you treat that load as weighing twice as much.

    With all of this in mind, what usually happens is: you go measure the ice. If it passes w=4h² at the outset for your required load, you kind of just accept and move on. But if it doesn't pass, you start looking for ways to get your load approved -- hire a GPR and scan, or spray water on the surface to build more white ice faster, etc.

    30cm, as per the article, will handle loads of up to 3600kg. Which is a lot, particularly when compared to skaters. But a Zamboni full of water or a snowplow or something could be risky. Bring out a GPR and truly find your thinnest spots and maybe you can get 4200kg approved. Etc.

    This is likely a non-story, for those of use versed in ice safety. But it was worth my time to type it out :)

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  • ottawa.ctvnews.ca NCC lowered ice thickness standard to push Rideau Canal Skateway open in February

    Internal documents show the National Capital Commission took what it called a 'manageable risk' to lower the standard for what qualifies as thick enough ice in order to squeeze a few more skating days into the Rideau Canal Skateway season.

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    This is why y'all need Jesus.
  • One of those two would enjoy that more than the other.

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    Would this even work?
  • Technically getting one surface flat is easy. Hell, it's one of the first thing you learn in measurement science (three plates and perfect smoothness). However a mirror isn't just about being flat, it is also about light reflection. And that makes it more interesting. In a perfect vacuum, you could do a silver mirror without the glass and have it be perfectly flat and not worry about oxidation. But the reality of making that mirror stay perfectly reflective means that glass or similar is usually involved. And then you move away from the perfect flatness problem (relatively easy) to perfectly parallel planes (significantly harder).

    Furthermore, keeping a plane or surface perfectly.flat after manufacture requires uniform temperatures, which are rarely present in amateur telescopes.

    The end result is almost always the introduction of additional error.

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    This is why y'all need Jesus.
  • Looks like a chick tract

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    Lions mane! Found in Oak Ridge, E. TN
  • I don't think I've ever seen it wild. Very cool

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    A distraction from the election: The case for employee-owned companies
  • Personal anecdote. I run a small business with a business partner (co-owner) and we have no employees. We need an employee. I'm personally a huge fan of employee-owned companies.

    But from a hiring perspective, it is mind bogglingly risky for us to hire someone and just automatically stake them. Like, what if it's the wrong person? How do we claw back control? Do we risk dilution sending the company in another direction?

    It's just so much easier just to pay someone and not have to deal with the complexity. And therein lies the rub.

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    NATO pumpkin
  • Probably should be launched with a trebuchet

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    I've got a spicy take, but desperately want to get it off my chest
  • Hot take. But put it in the context of the year it was aired, not today. Star Trek (and sci fi in general) was suffering from being perceived as "blue babes and laser guns".

    This episode was thoughtful if taken as standalone. And TNG really was about taking the episodes more or less independently. The season long story arcs and such didn't exist. People weren't binge watching. So the world building was less important than the specific hypothetical moral quandary of the week. Like, they are almost like Asimov short stories with a shared cast.

    It wasn't until a few years later that serialized TV even really became a thing -- Twin Peaks probably was the first here, but Babylon 5 would have a good claim (and DS9, Buffy, and others were coming together then too). So the style of storytelling on TNG S2 is different.

    Divorce the story from Star Trek and the setting and evaluate it as a sci fi ethical quandary. And in that framework, it is a remarkable episode.

    Also, Brent Spiner played it well :)

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    Would this even work?
  • Every interface (mirror or lens surface) adds error, and that error is multiplicative. The question is whether that error is worth the convenience in form factor, and that isn't something that can be easily answered. Sometimes you need to build it and use it :)

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    carrot.py
  • Depending on the carrot, the skin can be significantly more bitter. And sometimes peeling can be quicker than trying to scrub dirt out of particular lumpy carrots.

    YMMV

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    It’s been 30 years since Intel’s infamous Pentium FDIV bug reared its ugly head – a math bug caused Intel’s first CPU recall
  • Had one of these CPUs. At least it didn't Halt and Catch Fire ;)

    See also F00F

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    Do Not Disturb
  • I want to take the little one on the right and put it in a teacup.

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    A QA engineer walks into a bar...
  • def bathroom(customer): return False

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    I like winter. Snow is great.
  • Unpopular opinion (largely discredited in anthropology circles): cold weather encourages resourceful behaviour and improves human cooperation. In climates where you can survive winter outdoors, homelessness is not as detrimental to continued existence. Three walls and no roof is fine in a slum in Florida, but harder to pull off in Minneapolis.

    This societal coordination which is required to survive winter leads to more orderly and more socialist civilizations. Because hairless apes have no business being in that climate. So it is human ingenuity that is selected for -- and that includes development of systems of cooperation.

    If I extrapolate, our space faring descendants will face much bigger hurdles, but ideally will develop even better systems to deal with it.

    Bonus picture. Me doing arctic exploration.

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    If Trump wins the election thru fraud how can the democrats refute it and prove they won? Or will it just be like another Jan 6 and four years of whining like Trump?
  • The premise here is that Trump loses but refuses to back down, attempting to forcibly claim victory. If Trump legitimately wins, there is a different path. Then...

    Assuming multiple systematic failures occur simultaneously, including any of: actual voter fraud, fraudulent electors, congress refusing to certify, a captured supreme court acting in favour of Trump, or actual insurrection on or before Jan 6th.

    I actually expect the US Military to step in. Every member is sworn to uphold the constitution. But if the constitution has been discarded, then I'd expect them to step in to restore it.

    Failing that, the US likely fractures and we leave the Republic phase.

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    TERRANOMICON
  • The premise is ridiculous, so I wonder: how serious does the book play out, or is it self-aware enough to lampshade things?

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    DPRK test-fires new ICBM Hwasongpho-19
  • 1000 km and 5000 seconds. Doesn't seem very capable of hitting much, unless it flew intentionally a very high arc.

    Love the solid rocket exhaust aesthetics though. Too bad it is produced as a weapon.

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    Alan Wake 2 still hasn't quite made its money back, according to Remedy's latest financials
  • Considering how well received this game was, perhaps it is more about marketing or misunderstanding the genre appeal?

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    www.tsn.ca Jessica Campbell the centre of attention in first season behind Seattle Kraken bench | TSN

    Seattle Kraken assistant coach Jessica Campbell has found herself as the centre of attention so far this season. From holding her own media availabilities to having a little girl in Dallas throw her friendship bracelets over the glass, Campbell has had a whirlwind journey so far in this young season...

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    imgur.com No, I don't think so.

    Discover the magic of the internet at Imgur, a community powered entertainment destination. Lift your spirits with funny jokes, trending memes, entertaining gifs, inspiring stories, viral videos, and so much more from users.

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    We maintain a small fleet of RTK GPS systems (Emlid Reach RS+ units or similar). But sometimes they sit too long on the shelf and parasitic drain kicks in. The manufacturer recommends recharging every three months, but ooops, this one went too long. If the batteries are too low, the battery management system (BMS) won't charge the batteries at all when you attach the USB charger cable. In this case, the batteries were testing at 0.9V rather than the desired 3.4V.

    Solution: open the device, expose a tiny bit of conductor on the battery harness, and attach 3V worth of alkaline batteries for a short period. Once the lithium batteries are up a little, you can then charge with the normal USB charger again.

    !

    The manufacturer does not recommend opening the sealed unit, as it voids the IP67 rating. And this is not a best practice. But it works. The above photos were taken in April and the unit has been trucking along ever since. Saved a few thousand dollars :)

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    [OC] Irrigation canal and Fall Colours, Whiteshell, Manitoba

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    Instrument is a Geonics EM16 VLF receiver, using in the mineral exploration industry to find buried linear conductors.

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    Beer

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