• How Deep Time Can Help You Handle Modern Times
    www.discovermagazine.com
    Humans, were not good with time. Let me qualify that: were good with short time, like how long until lunch or how long ago did the Mets win the World Series. Usually, if something happened within your lifetime, the conceptualization of that duration of time isnt too bad. Even when you get older and it seems like 1995 wasnt 30 years ago, you still can wrap your head around the fact that idea.Dive Back in TimeWhen time gets longer, things get harder. What was happening in your home town 100 years ago? That is only looking back to 1925. There are still people alive who were born before 1925. We had car, planes, vaccines all features of modern society. Things were different, but not unrecognizably so.How about 1,000 years ago? That would be 1025 CE. Any idea what was going on then? If youre like me in the American Midwest, people were living here, but they were very different than todays population. This would be close to the boundary (developed in modern times) between the late Woodland period and the late Prehistoric Period when people were building earthwork monuments like Serpent Mound (but were 1,000 after the Newark Earthworks). If youre in Cornwall, youre looking at Anglo-Saxon England before the Norman invasion with Cnut the Great in the throne. In China, were in the Liao Dynasty. The Holy Roman Empire is seeing the end of the longest ruling emperor, Basil II. The world was very different.What about 10,000 years ago? Were looking at ~8,000 BCE. Thats about 3,000-4,000 years after the last Ice Age. In parts of the Middle East, this is would be smack in the middle of the Neolithic Period, when stone tools were all the rage and pottery was being developed while Europe was closer to the Paleolithic thats the period that goes back to the first use of stone tools! There was likely fewer than 40 million people living on the planet, or roughly the population of Tokyo today. Even mammoths were still around in small pockets across the shrinking post-glacial northern latitudes.Jump back even further to 100,000 years ago. That might seem like a long time, but that is only 0.002% of the history of our planet. Were still in the most recent period of the geologic timescale (the Quaternary), but there arent any people (well, modern humans) in the Americas. Or Australia. Or most of Europe where youd run into Neaderthals rather than modern humans. The Earth was colder, bouncing between Ice Ages after just getting out of the last interglacial warm period about 120,000 years ago. Earth Before UsSpin back to 1,000,000 year ago. Thats got to be a long time ago, right? Well, were actually still in the Quaternary Period. Sure, our ancestors like homo habilis and homo erectus was showing up in Africa, but were still 800,000 years from homo sapiens. The planet is still in its icehouse period, with general cooler climates compared to today. All sorts of giant mammals existed across North America, like mastodons, sabre-toothed cats, giant sloths and more. If you showed up in downtown Cleveland, youd hardly recognize the place especially considering that the Great Lakes wouldnt show up until over 985,000 years later.10,000,000 years? Now were in the Neogene. The planets climate is likely pretty close to todays conditions. Our ancestors are deciding that maybe it would be cool to come down from the trees once in a while. North America was dominated by these megafauna, with rhinos and camel-like mammals roaming a Great Plains that looked a lot like African Savanna.Launching back even further, 100,000,000 years ago, still only 2.2% of the planets history, wed have dinosaurs ruling the planet instead of mammals. Birds have had about 50,000,000 years to evolve since the archaeopteryx, but wed be dodging triceratops, velociraptors and tyrannosaurs. Theyd still all have almost 35 million years to be in charge before the asteroid impacted in what is now the edge of the Gulf of Mexico.A Billion Is a LotPushing back even more, 1,000,000,000 years ago, youd like think you were on an alien planet. Earth is teeming with life, but youd need to bring your microscope to see a lot of it. Multicellular life exists including fungi and maybe lichen, but the first plants and animals as we know it are still hundreds of millions of years in the future. Thankfully, you could breathe the air thanks to all this tiny life adding oxygen to the atmosphere about a billion years before you got there. That far back, what would become Ohio would be somewhere in the southern hemisphere as part of a giant landmass called Rodinia. Still, were only about one-quarter of the way back to the start of the planet.Deep time is a hard thing to handle, much like deep space. Our brains arent designed to handle time that transcends one lifetime let alone one species or all species. The processes driving these changes like plate tectonics, (most) climate change and evolution happen on such long horizons of time that we need to unwrap them in a way that has meaning to those of us who dont dwell in deep time.Why You Need Deep TimeSo, why do you need to think about deep time? Two reasons. First, deep time allows for perspective. The world moves very fast too fast a lot of the time. Understanding that although many things can change in an instant, not everything can. Second, looking back across the deep time of the planet can create an appreciation of the resilient of life on Earth. This isnt to say we shouldnt be stewards for the planet, especially considering how many humans live here now. If anything, we should look at the Earths resilience as an inspiration for our own ability to persevere through our human-focussed short time. Yet, deep time is also a reminder than nothing is forever and change is the only thing on which we can be certain. Unless youre lichen.
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  • Meteorologists are wrong too oftentry this radar app with our unbeatable price
    www.popsci.com
    Stack CommerceShareWe may earn revenue from the products available on this page and participate in affiliate programs. Learn more While your phone has a default weather app with radar, it only shows you whats already happened. That isnt all that useful when youre trying to make plans or see if itll be safe to drive in an hour or two, so you may try Weather Hi-Def Radar Storm Watch Plus with future-generated radar images.Through March 30, you can save an additional 30 percent on a lifetime subscription to this weather radar app with code TAKE30 at checkout, dropping the price from $39.99 to $27.99. You wont find a better deal anywhere else.The meteorologist that gets the weather rightNo more weather predictions that leave you stuck in a blizzardor the chance for a disastrous pileup on your drive home. Use Weather Hi-Def to get daily and hourly weather forecasts so you can plan around the weather, like leaving work early to beat the snowfall.You can also save multiple locations, like travel destinations or cities you recently visited, along with your hometown, so you have easy access to those local weather predictions.Check out what else youll be able to customize on this weather app:Add overlays to your radar so youre notified of icy road conditions and winter storm warningsSet specific alerts for rain, lightning, hurricanes, tornados, and wildfires (perfect for traveling to or living somewhere that gets the brunt of hurricane or tornado season)This app even accurately monitors your local air pollution with its Air Quality Index feature. With all this helpful and potentially life-saving forecasting, its no surprise that Weather Hi-Def has earned praise on the App Store and Sensor Tower.Get your most accurate weather predictions with lifetime access to Weather Hi-Def Radar at the unbeatable price of $27.99 with code TAKE30 at checkout (reg. $39.99). This coupon expires on March 30 at 11:59 p.m. PT.StackSocial prices subject to change.Weather Hi-Def Radar Storm Watch Plus: Lifetime SubscriptionSee Deal
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  • Daily briefing: Scientists use AI to design life-like enzymes from scratch
    www.nature.com
    Nature, Published online: 14 February 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-00513-5What Robert F. Kennedy Jr might do with his newfound influence over US science. Plus, life-like enzymes designed from scratch can accelerate a four-step reaction.
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  • 'We don't feel stranded': Astronauts 'stuck' in space set the record straight
    www.livescience.com
    "I think both of us will be a little bit sad when that feeling of space sort of leaves us."
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  • Presidents day telescope deal: Celestron NexStar 130SLT with GoTo now 23% off at Amazon
    www.livescience.com
    Presidents day sale: Get the Celestron NexStar 130SLT computerized telescope for under $500 at Amazon that's the cheapest we've seen it since the start of the year.
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  • First model from scratch
    www.reddit.com
    What do you think? Have been learning Blender for about 30 hours or so. Thought I should make my own model from scratch to put theory in practice. Used ChatGPT and YT tutorials wherever physics were involved (curtains, bean bag, pillow, blanket). Thought about texturing and animating but unfortunately applied all modifiers already halfway there, so are there any solutions or fixes how can I undo that? Or maybe I dont have to? Idk, help? submitted by /u/-_-HE-_- [link] [comments]
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  • Our talented community continues to amaze us with captivating environments. This week, we'd like to highlight six exceptional projects by Graeme van R...
    x.com
    Our talented community continues to amaze us with captivating environments. This week, we'd like to highlight six exceptional projects by Graeme van Rensburg, Ben Marriner, Milena Meyer, Leo Li, Santiago P.G, Henry A. Nunez. Read more: https://80.lv/articles/80-level-weekly-highlights-6/
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  • x.com
    .@MakhamDev showcased a Tetris block-filling effect made with Pixel Composer, a node-based VFX editor for pixel art.Pixel Composer learning resources: https://80.lv/articles/retro-inspired-tetris-effect-made-in-pixel-composer/
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  • RT Curtis Holt : If anyone wants to learn more about the theory of semi-procedural tiling techniques (such as what we did with Hex Scatter), ...
    x.com
    RTCurtis Holt If anyone wants to learn more about the theory of semi-procedural tiling techniques (such as what we did with Hex Scatter), then Azzy has just released a great new tutorial: #b3d #blenderAzra Reyes | krisp.bsky.social:cool new voronoi texture scattering method just dropped
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  • x.com
    New NVIDIA Broadcast update! The latest NVIDIA Broadcast app release features two new AI effects Studio Voice and Virtual Key Light both currently in beta.Download today https://nvda.ws/3EiqSIv
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