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Tag Archives: Pure

Joyce Carol Oates’ Twitter Account: The Last Pure Haven in the Chaos of Social Media | Culture

Posted on March 10, 2025 by Igor Mitreski
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a
The skeleton is at the center of the T. So, that’s because of Joyce Carroll Oates’s online infamy. In 2021, the award-winning novelist provided her most important contribution to literature: Diabolical
Tweet anti-minating about existentialism in Halloween.

(You can always recognize places where no one feels or feels sad for the lost loved one and death, the one who dies, and the person who likes to break down into bones is just a joke.) https://t.co/1OuMqgw550

– Joyce Carol Oates (@joycecaroloates) October 1, 2021


For beginners, the 86-year-old five-time Pulitzer finalist used the platform on X (formerly Twitter) to share photos of impressive American-style Halloween ornaments featuring dozens of plastic skeletons climbing the front of the house. “You can always recognize a place where no one has experienced much grief for a lost loved one,” she wrote. “Everyone who likes to break it down into bones is kidding.”


This unique take on Halloween tradition was filled with some kind of confused online glee. In an increasingly polarized political world, we rarely encounter such injustice and strong opinions. There is no culture war, nor popular discourse,
Just a thought From Zeus’ forehead it turned like Athena. Or a creepy ghost who pops out at you in a haunted house – you shouldn’t be kidding about it.

emojis are poetry for the non-literate. 🔜🔚 https://t.co/Jp8zq3Ty9C

– Joyce Carol Oates (@JoyceCarolOates) October 15, 2024


However, this is not just a one-off phenomenon. In fact, this is one example of a bewildering array of classic Joyce Carroll Oats tweets. This makes another addition to her trophy shelf an attractive case. Winner of the Poet Award on Social Media. I’m not mean here. I really love her tweets and they are one of the only things that bring joy to me on the Nazi awarded platforms rapidly. As Twitter user Kaitlin Ruiz puts, “She doesn’t need to answer specialization. Oracles don’t see consistency.”

It is important to understand that Joyce Carroll Oates has definitive opinions on trance rights (good!) and dinosaur poaching (bad!), skeletons (worrisome!). She doesn’t need to answer any specialties. Oracles are not consistent.

– Kaitlin Ruiz (@kaitlin_m_ruiz) February 21, 2023


Oates is a prolific writer in all aspects of her life. She published 58 novels, and more importantly, she wrote 170k tweets. Her targets are wide and abundant. There’s a political view: dozens of tweets a day
Harris v Trump and
Israel’s war with Gaza. She was one day outright about trans rights and wrote about it
JD Vance’s other small eyes – But she is also not afraid to challenge a whimsical world.
Her cat is pondering the problem with the trolley.

The point is that she posts frequently without agenda to sell anything and has seemingly embarrassing honesty. In an interview, she rejected the medium
“It was short-lived and quickly forgotten.”. However, she feels her relationship with the platform is pure. How to use Twitter.

The unexamined premise of the “trolley problem” is that individuals, as we know, do not have any kind of subjective tendencies, including the Catnip’s drunkenness, the philosophers who have lived in the past, not subjective preferences/unconscious motives/free philosophers. You kill the poor… https://t.co/gze1kcjzyw

– Joyce Carol Oats (@joycecaroloates) May 27, 2024


All thoughts come directly from her huge creative brain, from the online farm to the table. “What we’ve heard about ISIS is pure and punitive. Is there anything fun to celebrate?”
She asked in 2015. “Are there any examples of women getting obsessed with historical events?”
She meditated in 2023. Then there was a time when she posted a really conflicting photo of her
Infected feet online.

www.theguardian.com
Posted in Technology | Tagged account, carol, chaos, culture, haven, Joyce, media, Oates, Pure, social, twitter | Leave a reply

Meme coin boom following President Trump’s election waves the flag of pure gambling in cryptocurrency markets

Posted on December 12, 2024 by Igor Mitreski
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The attention economy can be likened to a phenomenon involving a social media-created celebrity named “hawk tua girl” Hayley Welch. She played a pivotal role in the launch of a cryptocurrency asset named Hawk Memecoin, which quickly gained enormous traction before facing backlash.

Initially valued at $490 million (£385 million) on December 4, the Hawk Memecoin has now exceeded its market capitalization and is valued at $17 million. Welch, a Tennessee native, rose to fame after responding to provocative interview questions but faced criticism for allegedly deceiving her social media followers.

Critics like cryptocurrency commentator Steven Findeisen, also known as Coffeezilla, labeled Hawk’s launch as a “rug pull,” which involves hyping a crypto project for short-term gains and then abandoning it. Despite the controversy, Hawk Memecoin is still being traded, with Welch stating that her team has not sold any tokens.

The rise of meme coins like Hawk reflects the growing trend within the cryptocurrency market, with meme coins collectively valued at $118 billion compared to $20 billion at the start of the year. These coins flood the market, with platforms issuing thousands of tokens daily.

Experts argue that meme coins lack fundamental value and are merely tied to digital trends. Memecoins blend the essence of memes and cryptocurrencies, leveraging social media attention to drive speculation and investment.

Meme coin trading often revolves around internet trends and influencer endorsements, creating a speculative environment with unpredictable outcomes. Participants acknowledge the speculative nature of memecoins, likening their trading to gambling but with the potential for significant returns.




Bitcoin’s value surpassed $100,000 for the first time a month after President Trump’s victory. Photo: Kevin Wurm/Reuters

Source: www.theguardian.com

Posted in Technology | Tagged boom, Coin, cryptocurrency, election, flag, gambling, markets, Meme, president, Pure, Trumps, waves | Leave a reply

Ultra-smooth method achieves 99.9% pure separation of oil and water

Posted on November 7, 2024 by Igor Mitreski
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Difficult to separate oil and water without leaving behind impurities

Abaka Press/Alamy

A mixture of oil and water can be efficiently separated by pumping it through narrow channels between semipermeable membranes, paving the way for a cheaper and cleaner way to treat industrial waste. Experimental prototypes successfully recovered both oil and water with purity greater than 99.9 percent.

Various methods already exist for dividing such mixtures into their constituent parts, including spinning the mixture in a centrifuge, mechanically removing oil from the surface, and allowing some substances to pass through but These include dividing mixtures using chemicals, electrical charges, or semipermeable membranes that do not allow other substances to pass through. Membranes are the simplest method, but are currently incomplete and leave behind a stubborn mixture of oily water or watery oil.

now, Yang Haochen researchers from China's Zhejiang University have developed a more efficient method that uses two membranes – a hydrophobic layer to allow oil to pass through and a hydrophilic layer to allow water to pass through – to cleanly separate both. .

Yang said the idea has been tried before, but with less than impressive results. This is because when oil and water are removed from the mixture, the concentration of the components changes and the efficiency of the membrane decreases.

To overcome this, the research team injected the mixture into a narrow channel between the two layers. In this confined space, oil droplets are more likely to collide and accumulate. This means that oil droplets can be removed more efficiently by the hydrophobic membrane. This increases the proportion of water in the mixture, creating a beneficial feedback loop that ensures both clean oil and water are continuously removed.

“When you apply a membrane, [close] When you put them together, they influence each other and the process continues,” says Yang. “There is feedback between the two processes.”

In their tests, researchers found that as the channel width narrowed from 125 millimeters to 4 millimeters, total oil recovery increased from just 5% to 97%, and water recovery increased from 19% to 75%. I discovered it. The purity of the recovered oil and water is more than 99.9%, and only a small amount of waste remains, Yang said.

The team is in talks with industry, and Yang believes the process is so simple that it could be easily scaled up to a suitable level within a few years.

topic:

Source: www.newscientist.com

Posted in Science | Tagged achieves, method, oil, Pure, separation, Ultrasmooth, water | Leave a reply

League of Legends finals: A showcase of unmatched talent and pure joy captured in a button push

Posted on November 7, 2024 by Igor Mitreski
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GGiven the influx of bad news from the gaming industry over the past 10 months, it’s no surprise that this weekend, sitting in a crowd of 20,000 happy and passionate fans, the biggest event on the esports calendar, The League Being able to watch the Of Legends World Championship was somewhat reassuring. Finals. The event, held at London’s O2 Arena, was the culmination of a five-week global competition to discover the world’s best teams. Having never been to one before, I had no idea what to expect, mainly because the finals are usually held in Asia, where the best players usually gather. Can we track what’s going on? Would you care? The answers to these questions were “fairly well” and “well, yeah.”

The Guardian’s journalism is independent. If you buy something through an affiliate link, we may earn a commission. learn more.


For the uninitiated, League of Legends is a multiplayer online battle arena game (Moba for short) in which two teams of five players choose a warrior from a pool of 170 warriors to destroy their opponent’s home base. Fight to control the fantasy-themed map. . The arena is divided into three lanes, with an area known as the jungle in the middle, and similar to traditional team sports, each team member patrols their own specific section. Adding to the complexity is the fact that every champion character has unique skills, weapons, and magical attacks, and throughout the game you must defeat monsters and dragons to earn experience points that make you more powerful. Masu. It’s both a deep strategy game and a tremendous riot of stomping warriors, galloping horsemen, and hovering wizards.

This year’s final was between experienced Korean team T1 and Chinese newcomer team Bilibili Gaming (abbreviated as BLG). The latter had gained momentum by defeating local rival Weibo Gaming in the semi-finals, but T1 was the firm favorite to win the tournament having already won four times. They were almost eliminated from the competition early on, but they seem to have a habit of getting back into it the moment everyone quits. At the arena, I managed to get a seat next to James Lynch of the esports news site dexerto volunteer to tell me about the action. He describes T1 as the League of Legends equivalent of the 1974 Netherlands World Cup team. Free-spirited, unconventional, and full of neurotic genius. Lee “Faker” Sang-hyuk is widely considered to be the greatest player in league history, and at the center of it all is the master Johan Cruyff. “His movements are very strange and unpredictable,” Lynch says. “It’s very difficult to kill him.”




South Korea’s T1 team celebrates their victory over China’s Bilibili Gaming in the League of Legends world finals. Photo: Benjamin Kremer/AFP/Getty Images

Before the finals begin, there will be a 10-minute mini-concert featuring American rappers Ashnikko and Linkin Park, complete with fireworks, giant LED displays and incredible art direction from dozens of dancers. The whole thing has the feel of a major sporting event mixed with live K-Pop, a riot of color, passion, and performing arts. In the hours leading up to the finals, fans flocked to the venue to purchase original merchandise, meet friends from the community and, of course, dress up as their favorite League of Legends characters.

It turns out I was extremely lucky that this was my debut watching League of Legends. It’s an exciting encounter. Once the showdown begins, the best-of-five format is pushed to its limits, with the two teams taking turns killing each other for the first four games. Throughout the finals, Faker is a formidable playmaker, continually jumping into skirmishes, taking out opponents, and managing to escape with only a millimeter of health left. In the arena, 10 young players can be seen competing on a giant screen suspended above the stage. These displays draw us in rather than taking us out of the game. The crowd of mostly 20 fans loudly applauds the smart move and chants as their team gains the upper hand.

The showdown was a deliberate affair, with warriors gingerly roaming the map, poking and prodding at each other. Eventually, the whole thing explodes into a massive clash, making the battle between the Bastards look like a mini-brawl outside a kebab shop.




During the battle between Bilibili Gaming and T1. Photo: Benjamin Kremer/AFP/Getty Images

T1 was victorious, but it was also a victory for the entire concept of esports. The scene has struggled to live up to its 2010s hype, at least financially. At the time, the team’s overestimated global value attracted large investors and sponsors, which led to a bloated team organization and soaring salaries for star players. Last year saw many organizations, events, and tournaments shut down, including Activision Blizzard’s much-hyped Overwatch League. But this weekend’s event drew a peak audience of 6.94 million viewers, most of whom watched from home on streaming platforms like Twitch and YouTube, setting a new record for esports.

It’s easy to think of video games as an industry rather than a culture that brings joy to people. Sometimes it’s more than just sales or viewership, it’s about sitting in an arena with 20,000 adoring fans. Outside the O2 Megaplex, I spoke to Morgan, an attendee perfectly dressed as Aphelios (or, more accurately, in his Heartsteel costume). He explained the appeal as follows: But he’s very friendly. Also, there are so many different communities in the league, and it’s great to see them come together and bond over something they have in common and one thing they’re really passionate about. That’s what’s really beautiful about this work.

Source: www.theguardian.com

Posted in Technology | Tagged button, captured, finals, Joy, league, Legends, Pure, push, showcase, talent, unmatched | Leave a reply

Review of Thank Goodness You’re Here!: A blend of pure vibrancy and dark charm

Posted on July 31, 2024 by Igor Mitreski
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IIt’s a classic British comedy setup: an unknown young salesman from a major company is sent on a seemingly mundane trip to an eccentric town, and chaos ensues. This excellent game from small studio Coal Supper makes it clear from the start that it intends to stuff this setting with as much slapstick and surrealism as possible. Leaving the opening sequence set in a 10-storey office, the player is forced to climb out of a window, his fall prevented by the bus he must board for the rest of the journey.

When you arrive in the fictional northern English town of Barnsworth, a sort of gloomy reincarnation of early 1980s Barnsley, you’re supposed to meet the Mayor, but he’s busy, so you go out into the city. Here you encounter a bevy of odd characters, drawn in eerily bright colors and a deceptively childlike style. They usually greet you with a “nice to see you” and gather you together to deal with an absurd crisis. This might be a fat gentleman with his arm stuck in a drain, a fries shop owner whose fryer has broken, or an aging admiral who asks you to gather up some seagulls. But wherever you go, through the market, across the rooftops, down the lanes, you’ll encounter eccentrics doing odd jobs. The strange logic and spiraling…

A seemingly childish style…Thank you for having you here! Photo: Cole Sapper

As for comedic influences, the creators name-drop Reeves and Mortimer and The Mighty Boosh, but the interplay of slapstick, surrealism, and pop art also brings to mind Monty Python, Yellow Submarine, and the slightly subversive 1980s comics Whoopi and Wither and Chips. But don’t worry, you don’t need to know any of that to enjoy the game’s sheer exuberance and dark charm.

What might help is a little knowledge of northern working-class stereotypes: the number of shops with rhyming names (Doug’s Rugs, Nick’s Bricks and, my favorite, Raj’s Chargers, a mobile phone market stall), the unhealthy food offerings (fast food trucks selling Porky Nobbers, carts selling “Oily Bops”) and the almost psychotic competition between pie bakers.

An almost psychotic rivalry between pie makers…I’m so glad you’re here! Photo: Coal Supper/Panic Inc

But overlook these and plenty of other jokes emerge as you find keys and hammers, get a shy boy to beg for milk, or just enjoy the contributions of Matt Berry’s voice actor, who brings these eccentrics to life alongside the rest of the talented cast. In between the main quests, which build on top of each other like dominoes like the puzzles in Codemasters’ old Dizzy games, there are downright bizarre sequences that have you exploring the surface of a steak or collecting bubbles on a spirit level.

There’s also some light satire towards the games industry: graffiti on a wall depicts a man urinating on the word “Ludnarrative,” and in a filthy sewer area between the two locations is a sign that reads “Liminal spaces may not be as appealing as they seem.” Indeed, the game as a whole, with its relentless string of fetching tasks, could be interpreted as pasting the tedious conventions of open-world side quests.

The game’s three-hour runtime is packed with so many ideas, visual gags, wordplay, plants and rewards that you’ll need to play a few more times to take it all in. It’s great fun to play such a completely uncompromisingly silly game, but like a lot of the most ridiculous British humor, there’s also a quiet undertone of angst and despair in this one. The pie seller, the town drunk, the milk-scared child – they’re all trapped in their own quiet personal hells that just happen to be funny to the rest of us.

In the future, when the topic of the funniest comedy games of all time comes up, the usual names will likely pop up: Monkey Island, The Stanley Parable, Death Stranding (just kidding), etc. But now a new game will join them: Coal Supper has created perhaps the 21st century’s first fantastic abstract cartoon puzzle game set in Yorkshire. Thank goodness.

Source: www.theguardian.com

Posted in Technology | Tagged blend, charm, dark, goodness, Pure, review, vibrancy, Youre | Leave a reply

Pure sulfur discovered on Mars by Curiosity

Posted on July 22, 2024 by Igor Mitreski
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Yellow crystals Elemental Sulfur According to the Curiosity team, the discoveries were made when NASA's Curiosity rover accidentally drove over a rock on May 30, 2024, breaking it apart.

Yellow crystals of elemental sulfur on Mars. Image courtesy of NASA.

Although sulfur may remind you of the smell of rotten eggs, elemental sulfur is odorless.

It forms only under a narrow range of conditions that scientists have not linked to the history of the place.

Curiosity then discovered lots of bright chunks of rock that looked similar to the rock the rover had crushed.

“Finding a rock block made of pure sulfur is like finding an oasis in the desert,” said Dr. Ashwin Vasavada, Curiosity project scientist and a research scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

“It can't be there, so now we have to explain it. Discovering strange and unexpected things is what makes planetary exploration so exciting.”

It was one of several Curiosity discovered while driving off-road through a channel in Gediz Canyon, a 5-kilometer (3-mile) groove that runs gently down part of Mount Sharp, where Curiosity has been climbing the base of the mountain since 2014.

The channel was discovered from space years before the rover launched and is one of the main reasons the science team wanted to visit this part of Mars.

Researchers believe the channel was carved out by flows of liquid water and debris, leaving a ridge of rock and sediment stretching for 3.2 kilometers (2 miles) on the mountainside below the channel.

The goal is to better understand how this landscape changed billions of years ago, and while recent clues are helping, there is still much to learn from this dramatic formation.

Since Curiosity arrived in the strait earlier this year, scientists have been studying whether a large pile of rubble that rose from the bottom of the strait was formed by an ancient flood or landslide.

The latest clues from the spacecraft suggest that both played a role: some mountains appear to have been left by powerful flows of water and debris, while others appear to be the result of more localized landslides.

These conclusions are based on the rocks found in the debris middens: while stones carried by water are rounded like river stones, some of the debris middens are littered with more angular rocks that appear to have been deposited by dry avalanches.

Eventually, water seeped into all the material that had settled here.

Chemical reactions caused by water have caused white “halo” shapes to appear on some of the rocks.

Erosion by wind and sand has revealed the shapes of these halos over the years.

“This has not been a quiet period for Mars,” said Dr. Becky Williams, a scientist at the Planetary Science Institute in Tucson, Arizona, and deputy principal investigator for Curiosity's Mast Camera.

“There has been a lot of activity here. We're seeing multiple flows through the channel, including heavy flooding and rocky flows.”

_____

This article is a version of a press release provided by NASA.

Source: www.sci.news

Posted in Science | Tagged curiosity, discovered, Mars, Pure, Sulfur | Leave a reply

Review of Flock: A Peaceful Flying Game Collecting Creatures, a Pure Bliss Experience | Games

Posted on July 17, 2024 by Igor Mitreski
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yesWhile the name might lead you to think of a game about herding sheep, it’s actually a lot stranger than that. teeth They’re sheep, but they’re fluffy flying sheep that float around after you as you ride on the back of a giant, colorful bird. Every now and then, they’re sheared and knitted into new jumpers or hats with pom-poms so the sheep look like naked, purple, aerial sausages with eyes. But the majority of your flock is actually made up of flying fish. Or are they fish? Some are curvy like eels, some moo like chickens, and some look like winged whales. Like we said, it’s pretty weird.

Your job in Flock is to find them in the wild, identify them from their short but varied and obvious written clues (“drooping proboscis,” “vertical stripes,” “often mistaken for a noisy radish”), and fill a field guide full of these big-eyed, flying-fish-like creatures. They all resemble sea creatures through a slightly surreal pop art filter, but are so well drawn that you can now tell the difference between a Cosmet and a Beul, a Thrips and a Rustic. Some camouflage among weeds and leaves, others flee when you approach, and others chirp at you while sunning themselves on rocks. You can find a piper to teach the birds to sing, and then collect them like a piper into a cloud of creatures that will follow you.

I’m still not very good at charming creatures. I can’t get the timing right and often end up frightening the birds with my off-key shrieks instead of leading them into the flock. But I morning It’s good at finding them. The flying is done for you. Birds fly around trees and mossy rocks automatically, so you’re free to observe your surroundings and listen for the chirps and twitters that announce the presence of undiscovered birds and fish. I navigated by sound as often as by sight. The nature-inspired soundscapes are one of Flock’s strongest features, along with the eye-catching art and cute, witty writing.

I enjoyed my few days with Flock, though I wish it were longer. There were some really interesting environmental puzzles that made me want to find other creatures hiding out on the plateau. Most creatures were easy to find, but a few required some fun deduction from a single sentence in the field guide. Once or twice, a creature in my entourage would tell me the location of another creature or help me find something, but most creatures just follow the player around and don’t do anything. I couldn’t help but imagine a more ambitious version of this game, one where the main creatures give you interesting abilities once you’ve filled out the field guide, and you can do things with your friends in races and challenges. But in under five hours, I’d done everything there was to do.

And yet I keep firing up Steam Deck just to fly around the swamps and moss forests for a few minutes – it’s so relaxing, so fun to look at, and so endearingly quirky that it stands out from the crowd.

Source: www.theguardian.com

Posted in Technology | Tagged Bliss, Collecting, creatures, experience, Flock, flying, Game, games, Peaceful, Pure, review | Leave a reply

Top 10 Groundbreaking Medical Advancements: Pure Moments of Eureka captured in Photos

Posted on February 29, 2024 by Igor Mitreski
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The history of science is filled with moments of discovery, those “Eureka” moments when a theory is proven or a breakthrough is achieved. The latest image competition at Great Ormond Street Hospital, titled ‘A Moment of Discovery’, celebrates these breakthroughs.

Staff from Great Ormond Street Children’s Hospital NHS Foundation Trust (GOSH) and its partners have submitted images capturing significant milestones in research. The public voted on the three most popular images shortlisted by a panel of experts via social media.

The shortlisted images range from colorful micrographs to cartoon illustrations, offering a glimpse into the research conducted at GOSH. It is hoped that this research will lead to new treatments for rare and complex conditions, transforming the lives of children and young people with serious illnesses.

The winning image, taken by PhD student Giada Benedetti at the Zayed Pediatric Rare Disease Research Center (ZCR), shows exploding intestinal organoids revealing their inner workings.

Organoids are small three-dimensional tissue cultures derived from stem cells that can mimic different organs like the heart and liver in the human body.

In honor of Rare Disease Day on February 29, all winning and shortlisted images will be displayed at an event at the Zayed Pediatric Rare Disease Research Center.

Selected as a finalist – my lungs are on fire

These lung “mini-organs,” or organoids, were grown from stem cells to replicate the complexity of lungs. The image showcases cell nuclei in blue, cell membranes in red, and moving hair-like structures called cilia in yellow/orange. Photo courtesy of Giuseppe Cala at GOSH.

Shortlist – Active Glial Cells

The image showcases nerve helper cells, known as glial cells, with long fibrous structures that transport nutrients and oxygen to surrounding nerve cells. Photo courtesy of Lucien Bonfante at GOSH.

Finalist – Light of Life

The image shows the spinal cord of a zebrafish embryo with different neurons generated through asymmetric division. Photo courtesy of Atachapon Theppichaiyanond at GOSH.

Source: www.sciencefocus.com

Posted in Science | Tagged Advancements, captured, Eureka, groundbreaking, medical, moments, photos, Pure, top | Leave a reply

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