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Florida Meteorologist: ‘I Have Never Observed So Many of Earth’s Vital Signs Blinking Red'
  • ... and with unwanted or simply too many refugees comes conflict, both at home and abroad. Those who are slow to join the Great Climate Migration toward less- or differently-affected areas will struggle more over time, and there will be increasing wealth inequality as a result. It's a difficult picture of a future to which unfortunately many people seem oblivious.

  • Businesses can discriminate against their customers? Alright then...
  • Well... it's worth noting that (IIRC) a record number of people voted in the 2020 election, overall and for each major-party candidate. Are those who chose to vote for Trump not to be counted among "Trump supporters"? It was approximately (but decidedly not quite) half of voters.

  • Chad Linux user
  • lol, no. Being able to do what I want with it is what I have appreciated. It's like having a computer without that obnoxious glue in the screws so you can take it apart if you want to.

  • lemm.ee just got faster! (infra upgrades)
  • I joined this instance after reading this post. My inclination is to operate my own instance; but it seems best to wait until some of the dust settles and some of the bugs get discovered and fixed, first. The admins here seem capable of doing just that, while providing a stable platform.

  • Can I use my Lemmy account with Mastodon?
  • It seems to me that you can interact with posts from Mastodon with a Lemmy account, but can only log in to your home server with it. So your view if the world will be Lemmy-like. Probably you could make an account on a Mastodon server and use a Mastodon app with it to interact with Lemmy posts in a Mastodon-flavored way. There's also kbin, that does both reddit-style posts with an OP, a title, and comments; and also Twitter-style status message posts with comments but no title ("microblogs").

    I don't know how to see the microblogs posted to a community from Lemmy, but presumably they could exist if a Mastodon-wielder put then there.

  • science @lemm.ee cuantar @lemm.ee
    Introductory post at !science@lemm.ee

    Greetings fellow scientists and interested others,

    In the interest of furthering this instance's /c/science, am starting this post for people to interact with.

    Who are you? What's your interest?

    I'm a particle astrophysicist with a strong computational background. Overspecialization seems unwise, so I do a bit of everything inside the theory-experiment-compute space.

    Decentralization has some advantages so let's make a good science community here at !science@lemm.ee .

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    www.nature.com Giant gravitational waves: why scientists are so excited

    Astrophysicists describe what galaxy-wide gravitational waves could mean for our understanding of black holes and the history of the cosmos.

    Giant gravitational waves: why scientists are so excited
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    space @lemm.ee cuantar @lemm.ee
    www.nature.com Giant gravitational waves: why scientists are so excited

    Astrophysicists describe what galaxy-wide gravitational waves could mean for our understanding of black holes and the history of the cosmos.

    Giant gravitational waves: why scientists are so excited
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    physics @lemm.ee cuantar @lemm.ee
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    science @lemm.ee cuantar @lemm.ee
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    physics @lemm.ee cuantar @lemm.ee
    ipta4gw.org The IPTA’s Search for Nanohertz Gravitational Waves

    Detection of the radio emission from the astronomical object in 1930+ by Karl Jansky started an era of Radio Astronomy followed by many discoveries enriching our understanding of the Universe we live in. Similarly, we are on the verge of opening a new window (ultra-low frequencies) in Gravitational ...

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    space @lemm.ee cuantar @lemm.ee
    ipta4gw.org The IPTA’s Search for Nanohertz Gravitational Waves

    Detection of the radio emission from the astronomical object in 1930+ by Karl Jansky started an era of Radio Astronomy followed by many discoveries enriching our understanding of the Universe we live in. Similarly, we are on the verge of opening a new window (ultra-low frequencies) in Gravitational ...

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    science @lemm.ee cuantar @lemm.ee
    arstechnica.com NANOGrav hears “hum” of gravitational wave background, louder than expected

    Exotic stars called millisecond pulsars serve as celestial metronomes.

    NANOGrav hears “hum” of gravitational wave background, louder than expected
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    InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)CU
    cuantar @lemm.ee
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