12-18-2024, 06:20 PM
Wmay Why Economic Inequality is Killing Us
Your mom brought you up to believe honesty is always the best policy. That because she a good woman. But sometimes鈥攋ust sometimes鈥攈onesty is a terrifying glimpse into your crazy little brain. The world is a complex and confusing place, and that before you start thinking about stanley cup what else exi stanley cup sts in the rest of the univ stanley cup erse. It natural to feel bewildered and confused and like it impossible to keep up. Just keep it quiet鈥攂ecause deep down, everyone else feels the same, too. [XKCD] xkcd Evta Why Cork Is the Most Amazing Material in the World to Keep Your Wine Tasty
Ready for a piece of technology you can rampantly steal for NaNoWriMo How about secretly encoded E. coli that glow and can be used to send messages Researchers have developed a way of getting seven strains of the bacteria to fluoresce in seven different colors. You can use them to create a secret message that starts as an apparently empty petri dish but grows into an encoded message after delivery. They ;ve dubbed the system SPAM: Steganography by Printed Arrays of Microbes, and it only gets cooler from here. A key part of cryptography is making sure only your inte stanley mugs nded recipient can read the message, right So with SPAM, not only do you have a cypher associated with how the lights correspond with letters, but by tweaking different bacterial strains, or by modifying the bacterial replication speed, antibiotic resistance, and protein expression time they can alter the content and time of delivery. The bacteria could change over time, expressing different colors or just stop glowing entirely, thus rendering the message only accurate for a specific time period. For another great twist, look at th stanley termosar is image. Using the cipher below, the SPAM message shows different translations depending on the growth media. When the source plate is grown on Ampicillin, it reads this is a bioencoded message from the walt lab @ tufts university 2010. On kanamycin it says you have used t stanley vaso he wrong cipher and the message is gibberish. Finally, the third one o
Your mom brought you up to believe honesty is always the best policy. That because she a good woman. But sometimes鈥攋ust sometimes鈥攈onesty is a terrifying glimpse into your crazy little brain. The world is a complex and confusing place, and that before you start thinking about stanley cup what else exi stanley cup sts in the rest of the univ stanley cup erse. It natural to feel bewildered and confused and like it impossible to keep up. Just keep it quiet鈥攂ecause deep down, everyone else feels the same, too. [XKCD] xkcd Evta Why Cork Is the Most Amazing Material in the World to Keep Your Wine Tasty
Ready for a piece of technology you can rampantly steal for NaNoWriMo How about secretly encoded E. coli that glow and can be used to send messages Researchers have developed a way of getting seven strains of the bacteria to fluoresce in seven different colors. You can use them to create a secret message that starts as an apparently empty petri dish but grows into an encoded message after delivery. They ;ve dubbed the system SPAM: Steganography by Printed Arrays of Microbes, and it only gets cooler from here. A key part of cryptography is making sure only your inte stanley mugs nded recipient can read the message, right So with SPAM, not only do you have a cypher associated with how the lights correspond with letters, but by tweaking different bacterial strains, or by modifying the bacterial replication speed, antibiotic resistance, and protein expression time they can alter the content and time of delivery. The bacteria could change over time, expressing different colors or just stop glowing entirely, thus rendering the message only accurate for a specific time period. For another great twist, look at th stanley termosar is image. Using the cipher below, the SPAM message shows different translations depending on the growth media. When the source plate is grown on Ampicillin, it reads this is a bioencoded message from the walt lab @ tufts university 2010. On kanamycin it says you have used t stanley vaso he wrong cipher and the message is gibberish. Finally, the third one o