• Jentu@lemmy.ml
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    14 minutes ago

    You know how geese fly in a “v” shaped pattern in the sky? One side of the “v” is usually longer than the other. The reason for that is that there’s more geese on that side.

  • memfree@piefed.social
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    28 minutes ago

    The entomology book Life on a Little Known Planet taught me that bebugs mate via “traumatic insemination”. The female has no opening, so the male pierces the exoskeleton and the wound later heals over – all of which allows entomologoists to count the number of times a female has mated by the number of scars on their abdomen.

  • DominusOfMegadeus@sh.itjust.works
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    3 hours ago

    Bedsheet thread counts have been artificially inflated for years by the shifty linen companies counting individual fibers that the threads consist of as threads themselves. It’s become a meaningless number, since there is zero regulation. If you want a nice thick heavy cloth, GSM is the number you want, but most companies won’t share this (looking at you, The Company Store) because they obviously don’t want you to know how thin and flimsy their products really are before you buy them.

  • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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    3 hours ago

    The Leatherman Skeletool is currently available in several varieties, including the long-running standard model with an unfinished stainless steel body, a chunk of aluminum in the handle, and a 420HC semi-serrated blade, and the Skeletool CX variant with…whatever the black coating is made of, a carbon fiber chunk in the handle, and a 154CM plain blade.

    When the model was first introduced, the base model had a plain blade, and the CX had a semi-serrated blade. This was swapped, as they realized first time knife buyers were more likely to see the semi-serration as a value-add, while more serious knife guys would prefer a plain blade. So you might find a very old Skeletool with a plain 420HC blade, or an old CX with a semi-serrated 154CM blade.

  • monovergent 🛠️@lemmy.ml
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    3 hours ago

    Several popular graphing calculators from Texas Instruments, including the TI-83 and TI-84, have a display resolution of 96*64, but only 95*63 pixels are used for graphing.

    However, the earlier TI-81 did use all 96*64 pixels. The rationale for this change was to establish a central row and column for the axes and a central pixel for the origin. The cursor could only move pixel-by-pixel, and since the axes and origin would end up “between” pixels on the TI-81, they were inaccessible by the cursor.

    • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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      2 hours ago

      The Ti-83 Plus Silver Edition and early models of the Ti-84 Plus Silver Edition had 128K of RAM, upgraded from the typical 28 or 48 that the 83 Plus or 84 Plus had. But the additional RAM was impossible to use as the OS had not been altered to address it.

  • minnow@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    Diamonds aren’t stable and will eventually, over billions of years, decompose from their cubic molecular structure to carbon’s more stable form, graphite, which has a hexagonal molecular structure.

    Oh, here’s another good gemstone related one!

    Amethyst and citrine are both quartz varieties, and if the color source happens to be from traces of iron in the crystal lattice, one can be turned into the other. Heating amethyst can make citrine, and irradiating citrine can turn it into amethyst. This is because the only actual difference between the two is the valiance level of a specific election in the iron atom giving the stone its color.

    • toynbee@lemmy.world
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      46 minutes ago

      hexagonal molecular structure

      You know, I think I’ve heard something about hexagons on the internet before …

  • Suck_on_my_Presence@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    Living at high altitude for long periods of time can cause a disease that is otherwise most associated with cocaine and meth.

    Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension has some weird causes, but it seems that high altitude and having to work for enough oxygen can cause the body to revolt.

    • scytale@piefed.zip
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      58 minutes ago

      Did Sherpas develop a defense against this? Or are they more susceptible because of their exposure to higher altitudes?

  • NKBTN@feddit.uk
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    5 hours ago

    I just touched my nose. Until I posted this, I was the only person who knew this fact.

    • DagwoodIII@piefed.social
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      3 hours ago

      Naw. Steve, the FBI agent assigned to you, and Dave, my roomie, were just discussing it.

      I think Steve kinda likes you…

    • NKBTN@feddit.uk
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      5 hours ago

      But I’ll give you one of my favourite obscure-ish fact instead: baby sloths are so inept, they sometimes mistake their own limbs for tree branches, grab hold of them with one limb, let go of the actual branch, and fall out of the tree

  • fulcrummed@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    The tiniest park in the USA is located on a city street corner in Portland, Oregon. Mill Ends Park

    Edit: I fell down a rabbit hole. Corrected myself having posted it originally as “world’s smallest park” which is how I knew it - apparently it carried that distinction until Feb this year when a tiny space on a Japanese street (which was created in 1988) formally applied for, and was awarded the Guinness book of records title of World’s Smallest Park.

    Also this one just popped into my head - the Guinness Book of Records was originally conceived as a means of settling arguments by compiling factual “records”. The original argument related to a shooting trip in England in which the Managing Director of Guinness Breweries partook, where a missed shot led to a disagreement about the fastest game bird. The realisation that arguments such as this would be commonplace, and that no resource existed to settle such matters - the niche for capturing these types of facts was identified and the book was born.