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Unitree Robotics just unveiled its newest 4-legged machine. The robot is equipped with a “follow me “ mode and will be available for less than $10K. ‍ | Our audience: #engineers #djiglobal #uav #engineering #robots #djiinspire1 #quadcopter #miniquad #blackmirror #robotics #robot #aerialphotography #fpv #drones #hexacopter #roboticsclub #spacetravel #engineeringlife #arduino #blackmirror #drone #roboticscompetition #rcplane #spacex #sparkfun #bostondynamics #nasa #raspberrypi #mavicpro | Check out this year’s drone deals: www.tinyurl.com/DroneDeals2020 (at Mountain View, California)
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#engineers    #djiglobal    #engineering    #robots    #djiinspire1    #quadcopter    #miniquad    #blackmirror    #robotics    #aerialphotography    #drones    #hexacopter    #roboticsclub    #spacetravel    #engineeringlife    #arduino    #roboticscompetition    #rcplane    #spacex    #sparkfun    #bostondynamics    #raspberrypi    #mavicpro    

Welcome to the new Yahoo Engineering blog. Yahoo has always had a deep seated interest in various Open Source technologies. Many people do not know this, but Yahoo has supported many great Open Source tools over the years.

var thingsWeLike = [ 'Apache', 'MySQL', 'FreeBSD', 'Linux', 'PHP', 'OpenStack', 'NodeJS', 'and many more' ]; console.log(thingsWeLike); var thingsWeGiveAway = [ 'YUI', 'Mojito', 'Pure', 'Hadoop', 'Tons of Node modules', 'and many others' ]; console.log(thingsWeGiveAway); 

In addition to using these open technologies, Yahoo strives to give back to this community as much as we can.

Beginning now, this blog will be frequented by real Yahoo Engineers discussing and showing off the hard core way we use this technology. Our posts will range from CSS tips to down and dirty data on performance and debugging of tools in our production stack.

We hope that you enjoy them and maybe even learn a thing or two!

afutureworththinkingabout:

[This is a in-process pre-print of an as-yet-published paper, a version of which was presented at the Gender, Bodies, and Technology 2019 Conference.]

INTRODUCTION

The history of biotechnological intervention on the human body has always been tied to conceptual frameworks of disability and mental health, but certain biases and assumptions have forcibly altered and erased the public awareness of that understanding. As humans move into a future of climate catastrophe, space travel, and constantly shifting understanding s of our place in the world, we will be increasingly confronted with concerns over who will be used as research subjects, concerns over whose stakeholder positions will be acknowledged and preferenced, and concerns over the kinds of changes that human bodies will necessarily undergo as they adapt to their changing environments, be they terrestrial or interstellar. Who will be tested, and how, so that we can better understand what kinds of bodyminds will be “suitable” for our future modes of existence?[1] How will we test the effects of conditions like pregnancy and hormone replacement therapy (HRT) in space, and what will happen to our bodies and minds after extended exposure to low light, zero gravity, high-radiation environments, or the increasing warmth and wetness of our home planet?

During the June 2018 “Decolonizing Mars” event at the Library of Congress in Washington, DC, several attendees discussed the fact that the bodyminds of disabled folx might be better suited to space life, already being oriented to pushing off of surfaces and orienting themselves to the world in different ways, and that the integration of body and technology wouldn’t be anything new for many people with disabilities. In that context, I submit that cyborgs and space travel are, always have been, and will continue to be about disability and marginalization, but that Western society’s relationship to disabled people has created a situation in which many people do everything they can to conceal that fact from the popular historical narratives about what it means for humans to live and explore. In order to survive and thrive, into the future, humanity will have to carefully and intentionally take this history up, again, and consider the present-day lived experience of those beings—human and otherwise—whose lives are and have been most impacted by the socioethical contexts in which we talk about technology and space.

This paper explores some history and theories about cyborgs—humans with biotechnological interventions which allow them to regulate their own internal bodily process—and how those compare to the realities of how we treat and consider currently-living people who are physically enmeshed with technology. I’ll explore several ways in which the above-listed considerations have been alternately overlooked and taken up by various theorists, and some of the many different strategies and formulations for integrating these theories into what will likely become everyday concerns in the future. In fact, by exploring responses from disabilities studies scholars and artists who have interrogated and problematized the popular vision of cyborgs, the future, and life in space, I will demonstrate that our clearest path toward the future of living with biotechnologies is a reengagement with the everyday lives of disabled and other marginalized persons, today.


Read the rest of Heavenly Bodies: Why It Matters That Cyborgs Have Always Been About Disability, Mental Health, and MarginalizationatA Future Worth Thinking About

afutureworththinkingabout:

SoThe U.S. Transhumanist Party recently released some demographic info on their first 1,000 members, and while they seem to be missing some some rather crucial demographic markers, here, such as age and ethnicity, the gender breakdown is about what you’d expect.

I mention this because back at the end of June I attended the Decolonizing Mars Unconference, at the Library of Congress in D.C. It was the first time I had been in those buildings since I was a small child, and it was for such an amazing reason.

We discussed many topics, all in the interest of considering what it would really mean to travel through space to another planet, and to put humans and human interests there, longterm. Fundamentally, our concern was, is it even possible to do all of this without reproducing the worst elements of the colonialist projects we’ve seen on Earth, thus far, and if so, how do we do that?

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Read the rest of Recollections of Decolonizing MarsatA Future Worth Thinking About

Women@ESA -  attractive offers for a career in science and engineering  

7 holes in the space station

#engineering    

Filming A See-Through Engine In Super Slow Motion Is The Best Way To See How Internal Combustion Works

Chances are you’ve seen a diagram or an animation of how an internal combustion engine works. But seeing how a real one works at 4,000 FPS is seriously cool.

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#science    #technology    #slow motion    #engine    #engineering    
Will be finishing up the rest of the art prompts soon! This is what I’ve been up to on the side lateWill be finishing up the rest of the art prompts soon! This is what I’ve been up to on the side lateWill be finishing up the rest of the art prompts soon! This is what I’ve been up to on the side late

Will be finishing up the rest of the art prompts soon! This is what I’ve been up to on the side lately–binge watching ST TOS and sewing in the early hours of the morning.

I really liked the new uniforms that I wanted to cosplay Uhura in ST Beyond for Fanexpo Vancouver this year. I’m going to also be making a sciences uniform after and cosplay an alien complete with special FX makeup and latex prosthetics too! (And then I gotta make a TOS Kirk wrap and Spock ST Beyond uniform for the fiancé as well.)

These pictures have all been taken in different lighting, so that’s why the lighting is so different in each picture; the second one was in daylight. :) Almost done–just gotta attach everything together and hem the dress so it’s shorter now! And wait for my metal Starfleet badges to come in the mail! XD


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sindri42:ultrafacts:Source: [x] Click HERE for more facts!Imagine you’re 400 kilometres above th

sindri42:

ultrafacts:

Source: [x]

Click HERE for more facts!

Imagine you’re 400 kilometres above the ground, hurtling along at eight kilometres per second, you get a short break from your strict work schedule to call up your wife who you haven’t seen for months, and she hangs up on you.


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25.7.21

2/10 Days of Productivity

Well, turns out i was about to give up on the second day.

  • Solved a few maths problems

That’s it. I need to study more, i’m falling behind on my one(1) and only summer class.

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