March 2012
45 posts
4 tags
WatchWatch
Music: “Pattern 3” by Moritz Von Oswald Trio Mathematica code: Animate[ Graphics[ Line[ Table[{-.99^n*Sin[n*a], .99^n*Cos[n*a]}, {n, 0, 1000}]], PlotRange -> 0.0918], {a, 3.18, 2.96}]
Mar 1st
12 notes
February 2012
22 posts
5 tags
WatchWatch
Music: “Rained the Whole Time” by Shlohmo Mathematica code: Animate[ Graphics[ Line[ Table[{-Sin[n*a], Cos[n*a]}, {n, 0, 350}]], PlotRange -> .672], {a, 3.2, 3.215}]
Feb 29th
42 notes
3 tags
Feb 28th
165 notes
4 tags
Feb 27th
230 notes
3 tags
Feb 27th
185 notes
3 tags
Feb 26th
214 notes
2 tags
Feb 25th
26 notes
2 tags
Feb 24th
189 notes
3 tags
Feb 23rd
511 notes
2 tags
I will be giving Dhamma service for the next 10 days, and will be away from the internet during that time. I am excited to have the opportunity to practice in a newly constructed pagoda with private meditation cells.  Please be patient with me until then if you are expecting a reply to messages. I’ve prepared a little queue of patterns including GIFs and videos similar to previous...
Feb 23rd
14 notes
3 tags
Feb 22nd
404 notes
6 tags
Feb 21st
97 notes
2 tags
Feb 21st
178 notes
3 tags
If for some reason the existential risks mentioned in the last post made you feel insignificant in anyway, let the following serve as consolation and reason to feel significant (and quite literally “central”) to the universe as human beings existing in this period of time. From a temporal perspective of the evolution of the universe, we live close to a point in time where the universe...
Feb 17th
28 notes
2 tags
Some notable dates in the far future
Compiled below is a selection of estimated dates for some events given certain assumptions in the evolution of Earth, the Solar System, and the Universe. Most events are of an astronomical and cosmological nature though some are geological. A more complete list from which the ones included here were taken can be found on Wikipedia. In 10,000 years -  The end of humanity, according to Brandon...
Feb 13th
663 notes
4 tags
"Whether or not God plays dice, I do" →
A $100,000 offer is being made by quantum computing/complexity theory researcher Scott Aaronson to whomever can disprove the possibility of scalable quantum computation. Although very primitive, small-scale quantum computers have been developed and realized in the field, the question of whether or not a large-scale quantum computer can exist to handle arbitrarily large computations is the focus...
Feb 10th
27 notes
3 tags
Feb 10th
1,782 notes
5 tags
Feb 9th
626 notes
2 tags
Feb 6th
24 notes
5 tags
Feb 6th
24 notes
3 tags
Anonymous asked: Could you please tag your gifs with an epilepsy warning?
Feb 6th
15 notes
6 tags
Feb 6th
139 notes