Interesting reads
-
@rocky-rockbottom I've read a couple of his other articles. They were pretty good. Not saying i agreed with everything he had to say, but certainly made me think about why i didn't agree.
-
-
@antipodean I was working at a place that was playing his interviews on the radio every week or so. Seemed like a top bloke, good to read the full story .
-
-
@jegga said in Interesting reads:
@Stockcar86 have you seen this?
https://mobile.nytimes.com/2018/02/05/science/mutant-crayfish-clones-europe.html?referer=https://longform.org/Thanks for that - really interesting
Cloning works well, but not forever - ask the Asgardians in the Stargate universe...
-
@stockcar86 said in Interesting reads:
@jegga said in Interesting reads:
@Stockcar86 have you seen this?
https://mobile.nytimes.com/2018/02/05/science/mutant-crayfish-clones-europe.html?referer=https://longform.org/Thanks for that - really interesting
Cloning works well, but not forever - ask the Asgardians in the Stargate universe...
One virus and they’re gone? I was wondering if someone was working on one if they are plaguing waterways.
Sharks are capable of reproducing asexually as well, they’d be clone too wouldn’t they?
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/10/081010173054.htm -
This weeks podcast by Nature magazine has a section on these crayfish (10 minutes 36 seconds in)
https://www.nature.com/nature/podcast/index-2018-02-08.html
I like their podcasts because they segment them, and also link to the relevant research papers and summary articles from the mag
Reading the research abstract I got to learn about Mullers Rachet - the effects of deleterious genetic mutations incurred in a population over time
Also, the value in this related to cancer research:
Our results unambiguously demonstrate the clonality of the marbled crayfish genome, consistent with the proposed mode of reproduction by apomictic parthenogenesis. The generation of genetic diversity will be shaped by a complex set of factors, including the intrinsic mutability of the genome, environmental mutagens, genetic drift and selective pressure. All these factors are known to play an important role in the evolution of tumour genomes. The analysis of mutations in marbled crayfish populations provides an opportunity to detect the generation, fixation and elimination of genetic changes with particularly high sensitivity and robustness and could therefore disentangle the specific contributions of individual factors. As such, it will be interesting to further explore marbled crayfish as a model system for clonal genome evolution in cancer
-
@stockcar86 also if you can catch 150 of the things in a couple of hours the question needs to be asked “ what do they taste like?”
I’d imagine prawn farms would love to have an animal like that continually reproduces itself in huge numbers .Btw cheers for the link, I’ll listen to those on the way home.
-
Interesting take on Hillary and New Zealand
https://www.sbnation.com/features/2018/2/6/16978350/edmund-hillary-10-year-anniversary-mt-everest
-
@crucial Yeah - one certain commenter was random as fuck... after I had a few beers and got myself into a sympathetic-mind-fuck, I could see what they were trying to say, and how they got there - but in a way where I can understand flat-earth lunatics. There's a logic, but a fucking amazing-to-watch fucked up logic, there.
-
@kruse said in Interesting reads:
@crucial Yeah - one certain commenter was random as fuck... after I had a few beers and got myself into a sympathetic-mind-fuck, I could see what they were trying to say, and how they got there - but in a way where I can understand flat-earth lunatics. There's a logic, but a fucking amazing-to-watch fucked up logic, there.
It would be amazing if the world was flat the way they describe with the ice wall all around us. I can see why some people want to believe that.
-
@jegga said in Interesting reads:
Interesting take on Hillary and New Zealand
https://www.sbnation.com/features/2018/2/6/16978350/edmund-hillary-10-year-anniversary-mt-everest
Great read
-
@jegga said in Interesting reads:
@kruse said in Interesting reads:
@crucial Yeah - one certain commenter was random as fuck... after I had a few beers and got myself into a sympathetic-mind-fuck, I could see what they were trying to say, and how they got there - but in a way where I can understand flat-earth lunatics. There's a logic, but a fucking amazing-to-watch fucked up logic, there.
It would be amazing if the world was flat the way they describe with the ice wall all around us. I can see why some people want to believe that.
@jegga I think you've misunderstood the "logic". Sherpas are poor. Therefore sherpas have to lift things which is an unrewarding and unimportant job, when they should be doing rewarding and important jobs like running a blog, a lecturer in intersectional studies or suchlike. This is exploitative. All exploitation is done by white people, as everybody knows, because of white privilege, which is a fact proven by several autoethnographic studies. If Japanese people are having sherpas carry their gear up a hill that's because white people created the market.
Frankly I'm surprised that in this day and age everybody doesn't know this, if you don't its because you're white. Or a person of colour with internalised racism. Either way you're a disgrace.
-
@jc oh Christ . Do you have a suitable hashtag I can virtue signal myself this away with? Thanks for the woke heads up btw.
I heard this is a really doco, haven’t had a chance to see it yet myself though.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sherpa_(film) -
@jegga You're welcome. It was an insight I gained through identifying as a woman since last Wednesday. You'd be surprised how much wiser I've become. You should try it. Next week I'm going to identify as a person of colour, then I'll know everything.
I'll check out the doc if I can find it. To be honest I wouldn't want their lives, but I'll bet they thank fuck for the mountains every day or the Maoists would have turned it into the Asian Venezuela by now.