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What's growing on, Beehaw?
  • First time here as well! Currently away on a trip and hoping that when I get back the sunflowers will be ready and the birds will have left some for me.

    I was just visiting New Mexico, and I enjoyed seeing all the wild sunflowers growing everywhere in the desert.

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    Mitosis in the Gray-Scott model : an introduction to writing shader-based chemical simulations
  • This is great! And thanks for the link to stuff about Lenia - that was new to me and looks freaking awesome. Next programming side project for sure.

    I've also been meaning to properly get into using Shadertoy, and I think this was a great introduction through an interesting use case.

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    What's growing on, Beehaw?
  • My experimental Loofa plants are starting to produce! They were strange - sent out female flowers way early in the season, then a run of only males, and now finally I'm getting a mix.

    I'd like to try making some biodegradable sponges out of them.

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    YubiKeys are vulnerable to cloning attacks thanks to newly discovered side channel
  • Physical anti-tamper, while important for this type of device, wouldn't have helped for this particular attack. It's an electromagnetic side channel, so they don't even have to be touching the the thing to collect data.

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    Tip rooting raspberries
  • Thinking about propagating some wild black raspberry I have in my yard - when would you recommend cutting canes, and should I root them before planting out? I've seen people store dormant canes over winter and plant out in the spring, what are the advantages/disadvantages there?

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    Reticulum Network - Potentially viable global mesh internet
  • That's probably a typo. From the site:

    Currently, the usable performance envelope is approximately 150 bits per second to 40 megabits per second

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    What's growing on, Beehaw? (Weekly Garden Chat)
  • It's been cool and wet enough recently (thank goodness) that some self-seeded lettuce and arugula from the plants that bolted at the end of spring have sprouted - I had been missing the fresh greens!

    I've also been enjoying seeing the joe-pye weed, goldenrod, and all the other summer wildflowers in full bloom!

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    What's growing on, Beehaw?
  • What other squash varieties are you growing? I have the pumpkins and butternut this year but I'm interested in trying some more next year.

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    What's growing on, Beehaw?
  • Those wildflowers look divine, my goal for next year is to have a patch like that!

    Here's what I've got -

    Sunflowers!

    Tomatoes have been doing great, especially the cherry variety I'm growing

    The vineborers got half my pumpkins but I've harvested a few good ones, as well as a healthy crop of butternut squash

    Bonus brood of wild turkeys from my living room window, there have been quite a few families with cute little fluff balls in the yard recently

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    Weekly “What are you playing” Thread || Week of August 4th
  • I've been playing the new Solium Infernum with a friend - the first playthrough I did not particularly enjoy (partially my fault for not playing the tutorial first) but once I learned the mechanics my second game was more fun. The UI is not very smooth to use and there are some mechanics I don't like, but overall pretty good.

    I also picked up Mindustry again last night - it's an open source Factorio + Tower Defense + RTS that is rather addicting... The new campaign they added a couple years ago is better than the original too.

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    What's growing on, Beehaw?
  • I missed seeing the weekly thread yesterday, thanks for posting it! Those cucumbers look great - mine are pretty much done here on the opposite side of the country (maybe I underwatered in July) but my tomatoes are doing great. Sunflowers are so close to blooming, which is super exciting.

    Here's the coolest thing I saw this week - a large caterpillar on my tomatoes studded with parasitic wasp eggs. What a crazy insect - it infects the host caterpillar with a virus that prevents it from molting!

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    What's growing on, Beehaw?
  • Tacked together some scrap wood to un-squash my squash arch - turns out 12 gauge wire fencing is not rigid enough to support full grown butternut squashes! I like how it looks with the wood, though.

    You can see my sunflowers too in the right of the image, just starting to form their flowers. I'm hoping they'll open in time for the visitors I have this weekend to see them.

    The cucumbers are slowing down now but it's the tomatoes' turn to go absolutely wild. I bet I could start harvesting some of these squash and pumpkins soon as well.

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    What's growing on, Beehaw?
  • Thank you! I'll give this a try. It makes sense, I haven't done any fertilizing since making this bed in the spring (compost/topsoil blend from a local supplier), and haven't been the most consistent on watering...

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    What's growing on, Beehaw?
  • Any idea what's happening to my tomatoes? Pretty much every one I've picked so far has looked like this on the bottom

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    It begins
  • I've only gotten two so far, but here's what I've been doing -

    • coin the zucchini, salt, let sit for 20min and pat off the water
    • dip pieces in flour, then egg, then a bread crumb, parmesan, and seasoning mixture Bake at 400, 10 minutes each side

    After 10 I'd definitely be looking into breads and cakes, especially stuff that might freeze well

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    What's growing on, Beehaw?
  • The garden is struggling a bit in the heat (mostly I need to water more) but I'm still getting a lot of good stuff! Six cucumbers, a zucchini, and my first tomatoes of the season today!

    Accidentally knocked off the green one, but it'll probably ripen on the shelf

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    What's growing on, Beehaw?
  • I'll jump on the raspberry bandwagon - here's the handful I got today off of the black raspberry bush by my shed - quite a few still ripening there as well!

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  • I'm always looking for things to add to my RSS reader! I loved the Hundred Rabbits site that was posted here recently and thought others might have some nice submissions.

    I recently found Sunshine and Seedlings which is substack, alas, but has some great content.

    I'm also a fan of Low-tech Magazine.

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