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                          比较好的付费ssr节点
                          Date: [ShadowsocksR] SSR功能详细介绍&使用教程 – 软体猫:APP喵:2021-2-27 · SSR windows 双击红色小飞机(4.0是64位,2.0是32位) 日常用到两种方式: 剪贴板批量导入ssr://链接 如果你的 SSR 供应商有提供批量 SSR 服务器配置链接,你就可众复制之后通过这里导入。服务器订阅 add网址
                          Subject: 免费Vpn/免费ssr SSTap使用教程 | Hash:2021-1-8 · 登录网站后:只需要在节点 信息里面复制链接一键加入(适合新手 模式选择不伕理中国IP即可 这里是新的链接链接 ... 很遗憾现在服务质量不佳很卡 建议各位自己购买SS/SSR C csw1103 New member CS:GO External Dec 17, 2021 5 0 50 Dec 19, 2021 #7 b ...
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                          Location:United States, California, San Francisco
                          Mood:比较好的付费ssr节点
                          Music:Dead Can Dance
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                          You can now view my blog (including the posts that remain here) at http://visualizingscience.ryanwyatt.net免费SSR分享网站 | 贝贝吧:2021-6-13 · 节点每日更新,如有失效,请更换其他节点。请正确使用SSR,本站节点均为网络收集,本站不提供节点服务。请大家请遵守中华人民共和国法律,众及本站相关协议 禁止使用本站服务进行任何违法恶意活动。使用任何节点,需遵循节点所属国家的相关法律众及
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                          比较好的付费ssr节点
                          Date: Saturday, October 11th, 2008, at 16:32
                          Subject: 酸酸乳ssr节点
                          Security: Public
                          Location:San Francisco, California
                          Music:Michael Stearns
                          Tags:animation, cosmology, student work, website
                          I stumbled across a site called “The Desk of One Astronomer” recently, and it’s… Cute.

                          I like the overall design of the site, although it reminds me a bit of a mid-90s CD-ROM, and the videos featured (one on “Island Universes” and another on “The Cepheids”) charmed me in spite of their rudimentary design. The content strikes me as rather ambitious, but I admire the way it’s organized: you can locate the same information via multiple entry points, and the interface is consistently visual and inviting.

                          And I must admit that I’ve never seen a cat used to explain parallax. Adorable.

                          Evidently, the website sprung from work out of the SciVi group at California State University Los Angeles, which “trains undergraduate and graduate students from three different disciplines—Art, Physics and Astronomy and Computer Science—to develop accurate and effective scientific visualizations of topics in Cosmology and implement their public dissemination.” Interesting. Should be worth watching in the future.
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                          ssr节点购买网址
                          ssr节点购买 Saturday, October 4th, 2008, at 12:17
                          Subject: MyArtinScience
                          Security: Public
                          Location:ssr节点购买
                          Music:!!!
                          Tags:aesthetics, chromatogram, false color, my art in science, website


                          No, not “Martian Science.” ”My Art in Science,” new website that presents scientific imagery from an aesthetic perspective.

                          求助!小火箭ssr节点(如不妥请删):2021-6-1 · 请问组里有没有也购买使用这个服务的好心er,求分享给我最新网址可众吗?我买了一年服务,结果上个月开始跑路了?(源 ... have a high-falootin’ tone, but I generally find myself nodding in agreement as I read the page. It seems like a good idea to provide a forum for researchers to share work they find visually compelling, and who knows what interest it might spark. I have to admit that I stumble over sentences such as, “This beauty is not manufactured by the scientists or the engineers directly, but appears and shows up in their work, as a side effect of their work,” since I think there is some manufacturing going on, but… More power to ’em!

                          A representative image appears above. Its caption reads: “This is an image of a comprehensive two-dimensional gas chromatogram of crude oil. The image shows peaks representing the heavy alkane, sterane, and hopane molecules in the oil.” Um, okay. I know as much about gas chromatography as I know about animal husbandry, but basically, I think we’re looking at a false-color image that depicts concentrations of various molecules (I think one dimension is spatial and the other temporal, but I don’t get where the repetitive structures come from). It’s a rather pretty image.

                          Why is it pretty? Well, the physical results of the experiment provide a certain structure to the image. And the colors are rather pleasant, but of course, the scientist had to choose the color scheme, unless it was some default setting on the software used for analysis. So the “art” in the image results, I believe, from the combination of the natural world and the human touch. A side effect of the work? I guess so.

                          Anyway, go take a look at the site. In theory, scientists will be adding new images on a regular basis.
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                          酸酸乳ssr节点
                          Date: Thursday, September 25th, 2008, at 11:25
                          Subject: Visualization Challenge
                          Security: Public
                          购买ssr节点服务San Francisco, California
                          Music:Rufus Wainwright
                          Tags:aaas, ssr节点更新, color, nsf, photography, science magazine, squid, visualization challenge


                          Another year, another NSF/AAAS Science and Engineering Visualization Challenge. With the opening of my institution mere days away (tonight’s the gala), I’ll limit my comments to short and snarky.

                          As usual, the quick and dirty way of catching up on the challenge winners is to enjoy the Science magazine interactive thingie: you can browse the images, listen to the podcast, etc. The one thing you can’t do unless you subscribe to the magazine is actually read the article. Bummer. The NSF provides a fairly thorough description of the winners with plenty of links, so you can still get a good sense of who did what.

                          Most of the winners are truly impressive, and thus unworthy of comment (except I’ll note that I quite enjoyed the “Smarter than the Worm” video). Instead, I’ll of course mention the one I didn’t much care for… The “squidsuckers” image above. We’re looking at tiny suction cups (each less than half a millimeter in diameter, with chitin “fangs”) on the arm of a Loligo pealei squid.

                          First off, I find the garish colors a bit of a turn-off, and the mediocre alignment of the color to the underlying image doesn’t help. Jessica Schiffman, the doctoral student at Drexel University who created the picture, claims that the film Little Shop of Horrors inspired the color scheme (presumably the Frank Oz version, not the original black-and-white movie). That’s cute and all, but I wonder if a novice viewer would interpret these tiny little maws as individual Audrey Juniors, waiting to consume the squid’s prey rather than simply latch onto it.
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                          ryanwyatt
                          Date: Thursday, July 24th, 2008, at 08:09
                          Subject: Polarized Colo(u)r
                          ssr节点更新 Public
                          Location:San Francisco, California
                          Music:ssr节点购买
                          Tags:diagram, polarization, quasar, visual language


                          Long time, no write, except for that silly link last week. I’m still working on that little project in San Francisco, which consumes an extraordinary amount of time.

                          At any rate, I saw the above image, which accompanies 2021年最新VULTR一键搭建SS/SSR脚本,小白看了也会!:2021-3-28 · 四、搭建SSR服务器 此处注意:SS服务器和SSR服务器只需要搭一个。 1.等到第一步连接VPS出现 root@host ~ 字样后,执行命伖:, and I figured I could express my thoughts quickly enough not to feel too guilty about taking the time to write.

                          The press release bears the title “Accretion Discs Show Their True Colours,” which describes the different appearance of quasars in polarized light. The press release describes the research well: “‘The crucial observational difficulty here has been that the disc is surrounded by a much larger torus containing hot dust, whose light partly outshines that of the disc,’ says Kishimoto. ‘Because the light coming from the disc is scattered in the disc vicinity and thus polarised, by observing only polarised light from the quasars, one can uncover the buried light from the disc.’”

                          The image does pretty well, too, except I have some nagging issues with it. Of course, the little circles with vertical lines suggest polarization to the initiated (although they also remind me of those glasses Chris Lowe wore back in the late 80s that I wanted so much), but I fear that visual shorthand is lost on a large percentage of the audience. And even if you get it, why does the little circle moving over the image change the color of the entire image? It would be much better if only the part inside the circle changed color. A little Photoshop work would make this image much, much clearer.

                          So how’s that for succinct?

                          (BTW, in nosing around for a link to “polarized light,” I ran across 比较好的付费ssr节点, which suggests to me that there really is a website for just about everything.)

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                          ryanwyatt
                          ssr节点购买网址 Thursday, July 17th, 2008, at 19:59
                          Subject: ssr节点吧
                          Security: Public
                          Location:San Francisco, California
                          Music:Stevie Nicks
                          Tags:cap journal, ssr节点吧, satire, the onion


                          I’ll break my silence with a simple link… To The Onion article “Hubble Kaleidoscope Finds Evidence Of Space Looking All Crazy” that appears in this week’s issue. I don’t know how long that link will stay active but bwa-ha-ha-ha! Dang funny.

                          And there’s some truth to it, too. I’m inspired to round out my next column for the Communicating Astronomy with the Public Journal.
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                          Date: Monday, May 5th, 2008, at 16:50
                          Subject: La viande robotique
                          Security: Public
                          Location:San Francisco, California
                          Music:office noise
                          Tags:photograph, robotic


                          Just an unusual image I ran across in the Journal of the Centre Nationale de Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), in an article entitled “The Robot Butcher” (I can’t make these things up).

                          Why have a robot cut meat? Efficiency, it seems: the do-dad above can prep 250 kilograms of meat per hour versus the 100 kilograms per hour by its human competitor. And it does so with a smaller margin of error. No way to get a little extra from the butcher anymore. No special cut. And no one to flirt with, either (I’m thinking of Alice on the Brady Bunch here).

                          The oddness of the image, however, lies in the striking contrast between the mechanized butcher and the all-too fleshy substance of the meat. Somehow, it seems unfair to the cow, and moreover, seems like an intrusion of the mechanical into an utterly animalistic behavior—namely the consumption of one critter by another.

                          Hrm. Anyway…

                          There’s a kinda interesting diagram of the Sun, too, but I found the robot butcher more engaging, for whatever reason.
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                          购买ssr节点服务
                          ssr节点购买 Sunday, May 4th, 2008, at 11:59
                          Subject: Clan Apis
                          Security: Public
                          Location:San Francisco, California
                          Music:Paul Dresher
                          Tags:andy yang, 比较好的付费ssr节点, clan apis, comics, drawing, jay hosler, small science collective


                          I just ran across Jay Hosler’s Clan Apis comic book. I’m not a bio kind of guy, so I can’t comment on the accuracy of either the drawings or the science embedded in the story, but both seem spot on. Hosler’s artwork treats the bees with loving detail, while maintaining a pleasant and readable style that hints at manga. The book follows the life of a single bee, Nyuki, touching on her life cycle and the structure of the hive as a whole. A story brilliantly told, with an admirable blend of science and humor.

                          Clan Apis also receives extensive treatment on Hosler’s website, including a section-by section treatment of the story and the science. Really nice stuff.

                          This also reminds me of the nascent work of the Small Science Collective, a group of folks (some of whom I happen to know) who create downloadable “mini-zines” with science stories. The idea here is much more of a guerilla tactic: make the comics available for free! (Much like the reprehensible Chick tracts that litter far too many of our nation’s public transportation systems.

                          As a long-time reader of comics and comic books, I love seeing them used like this!
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                          ssr节点更新
                          Date: Wednesday, April 30th, 2008, at 21:41
                          Subject: Ionosphere in 4D
                          Security: Public
                          ssr节点购买San Francisco, California
                          Music:Portishead
                          Tags:google earth, ionosphere, space weather
                          购买ssr节点服务

                          Space Environment Technologies’ Communication Alert and Prediction System has announced Earth Space 4-D, a collection of layers in Google Earth.

                          Unfortunately, the ES4D site offers basically no information about the layers themselves. For that, you need to go to the press release from which I learned about the whole thing: “ ‘Colors represent electron content,’ Tobiska explains. “Bright red is high density; that’s where radio communications are restricted to few or no frequencies. Blue is low density; no problem there.’ ” Okay, not bad, but why can’t we link to come kind of explanatory text on the page that serves up the data layers?

                          Another gripe. The ionosphere extends up to about 200 kilometers, but the KML layer seems to hover above that. It just seems like you could represent the electron density and such at its actual altitude.

                          And another. Unfortunately, you evidently need to download new KML files from the aforementioned site every time you want to take a look at the data. Hrm. Less than elegant. Isn’t there a way to offer KML layer that update automatically…?

                          So, I dunno. I guess this is a good start, but I think the offering could make better use of the available tools and technologies, the data should be represented to scale, and for heaven’s sake, we should be told what we’re looking at.
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                          ryanwyatt
                          Date: Tuesday, April 29th, 2008, at 08:28
                          Subject: Seeing Red
                          酸酸乳ssr节点 Public
                          Location:San Francisco, California
                          Music:808 State
                          Tags:color blindness, physiology of seeing


                          A personal post today… I’m color blind, and admitting to that often results in people asking how a color blind person can be a “science visualizer” or (as is the case now) a “director of science visualization.” My reply usually has to do with experiencing the subjectivity of seeing early on and blah, blah, blah. I won’t subject you to that right now.

                          Instead I simply want to quote a couple of sentences from an interview with Arno Motulsky that appears in today’s Science Times: “Our laboratory found that one-half of males with normal color vision had the amino acid alanine in their red pigment, while the other half all carried the amino acid serine, at the same site. This finding means that the same exact red color is perceived as a different type of red, depending on a person’s genetic makeup.”

                          Ha! So there, you “color seeing” people! You “normal color vision” types! You don’t see an absolute “red” any more than I do.

                          (Thanks, BTW, to Declan McCullagh, who doesn’t know I cribbed his image above. I need to write and ask him for permission…)
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                          ryanwyatt
                          Date: Wednesday, April 9th, 2008, at 09:49
                          Subject: Phobos in Stereo
                          Security: Public
                          Location:San Francisco, California
                          购买ssr节点服务!!!
                          Tags:mars, ssr节点吧, mro, phobos, stereoscopic


                          Sometimes I just want to post a kewl image, and this qualifies! The above image of Mars’s moon Phobos stopped me in my tracks this morning, for a multitude of reasons’

                          First off, it’s color. I don’t recall any earlier color images of Phobos, although I’m too lazy to go check.

                          Secondly, it’s available in stereo! Which is to say, stereoscopic, not stereophonic. What the rest of the world calls “3D.” This happens to be on my mind, since I’m involved with 免费Vpn/免费ssr SSTap使用教程 | Hash:2021-1-8 · 登录网站后:只需要在节点 信息里面复制链接一键加入(适合新手 模式选择不伕理中国IP即可 这里是新的链接链接 ... 很遗憾现在服务质量不佳很卡 建议各位自己购买SS/SSR C csw1103 New member CS:GO External Dec 17, 2021 5 0 50 Dec 19, 2021 #7 b ..., which will eventually house a gorgeous planetarium (of course) as well as a stereoscopic theater. I’m keenly interested in finding content for it, particularly real-world content that isn’t computer-generated. (If you want to watch a video of me from the recent CineGrid conference, you can learn more about my vision for media in the new California Academy of Sciences.)

                          But lastly, I was especially surprised because the image was taken by the HiRISE camera aboard [ShadowsocksR] SSR功能详细介绍&使用教程 – 软体猫:APP喵:2021-2-27 · SSR windows 双击红色小飞机(4.0是64位,2.0是32位) 日常用到两种方式: 剪贴板批量导入ssr://链接 如果你的 SSR 供应商有提供批量 SSR 服务器配置链接,你就可众复制之后通过这里导入。服务器订阅 add网址. HiRISE has taken all kinds of spiffy images of the surface of Mars, but I can only attribute it to a lack of imagination on my part that HiRISE snapping a picture of one of Mars’s moons never occurred to me.
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                          ryanwyatt
                          Date: 自己搭建ss/ssr服务器教程(适合初学者,不怕被封ip)-筑爱 ...:2021-5-5 · 购买vps服务器后,ip有了,通过部署,端口、密码、加密方式、协议和混淆也有了,最后将这些信息填入SSR客户端就可众翻墙啦。 有了账号后,打开SSR客户端,填上信息,这里众windows版的SSR客户端为例子:
                          Subject: Visualizing Subjectivity
                          购买ssr节点服务 Public
                          Location:San Francisco, California
                          Music:ssr节点更新
                          Tags:art, charles bonnet syndrome, frontotemporal dementia, neurology, ssr节点吧
                          ssr节点更新

                          An article in today’s Science Times describes the artwork of Anne Adams, who suffered from frontotemporal dementia (FTD), which effectively rewires the brain in a way that can produce compulsive behaviors ranging from shoplifting to increased creativity. Adams, as you may guess, exhibited signs of the latter, increasing her output (and some might say her innovativeness) as an artist.

                          Some of her drawings and paintings appear on a web page from the UCSF Medical Center (“UCSF” refers to the University of California, San Francisco, BTW, so this is a shout out to my new homies) as part of the Patient Art Gallery of their Memory and Aging Center. The title of the above image is “Migrane,” which got me to thinking…

                          While it might be a little overblown to equate Adams’s drawings with a totally different condition, I nonetheless immediately thought of the effects of Charles Bonnet syndrome, when a person’s increasing blindness can occasionally result in vivid hallucinations—resulting from brain stimuli “bleeding over” into the visual cortex, if I can be forgiven for such a slapdash description.

                          I first read about Charles Bonnet syndrome in V S Ramachandran’s brilliant ssr节点购买网址, which has much to recommend it if you’re at all interested in brain physiology—hateful as it is to think of one’s grey matter as, well, matter. As I recall, Ramachandran suggests that some of James Thurber’s later drawings may have been partly inspired by the hallucinations he experienced. Of course, I read the book about nine years ago (and it currently sits, unpacked and unavailable for review, in a box until I get my new office), so my recollection may have suffered.

                          The folks at Damn Interesting had a damn interesting entry about the syndrome earlier this year.

                          At any rate, I often like to talk about the subjectivity of science visualization, but these examples take subjectivity to the ultimate level: the completely subjective experience of an individual’s brain state.

                          (Oh, and happy birthday, Mom!)
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