Auteur Sujet: vtyc How G枚del Saved Mark Changizi from Physics  (Lu 44 fois)

JeaoneKef

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Messages: 3739
vtyc How G枚del Saved Mark Changizi from Physics
« le: Décembre 13, 2024, 10:04:01 pm »
Rrnk HP Made a 3D Scanner You Can Actually Afford (Updated)
 For years, scientists have been puzzled by a strange feature of mole anatomy. It appears to be an extra thumb, and it makes moles super stanley tumblers -powered burrowers. But is the mole   extra thumb all that it seems      Apparently not. When shaking hands within the animal kingdom, you generally have to deal with a maximum of five fingers. Some animals have three digits per appendage. Others have four. Humans have five, including a thumb. No animal consistently seems to manage more than that. The mole was, for a long time, considered an exception to this rule. Moles, which spend most of their day di stanley cup website gging through the dirt, benefit from having as many scooping digits as possible. Scientists noticed that their hand came with six digits; four fingers, a thumb, and an extra thumb ; with limited movement. Recently, though, scientists took a closer look at that extra thumb. Specifically, they looked at the way it wiggled, but couldn 821 stanley tumbler 7;t be bent by the mole. It widened the paw of the mole, but was useless in manipulating objects the way a regular thumb would. Having satisfied themselves that the thumb didn ;t act the way thumbs should, scientists looked at whether it developed the way they should. A certain gene switches on bone growth. In embryonic moles, the gene switched on early for five of the fingers, but didn ;t kick in on the extra thumb until it was dying down in the rest of the digits. The thumb isn ;t a thumb. It   a wrist bone. Over time, as  Lvqm Those Motherf*cking Piranhas Can Talk to Each Other
 It can ;t recommend the ideal cut of beef for your next backyard BBQ, but thanks to a laser scanner that   able to generate a 3D model,  cups stanley Nantsune   Libra 165C robo-butcher will quickly cut up a piece of meat into perfect fixed-weight slices. Previous automated methods involved weighing every single slice as they came off the blade, but that can be time consuming, particularly in a factory setting where speed equals profit. So the Libra 165C first laser scans and creates a 3D model of a piece of meat to gauge its shape and calculate the varying thicknesses of slices so they all weigh, and can be priced, exactl stanley mug y the same. It   capable of churning out 100 slices every minute, and when it   available in late June, it will have an equally impressive price tag of around $160,000. [DigInfo TV]        stanley vaso                                                  FoodGadgetsRobots