Mildly interesting
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Interesting demonstration of differentials (autos).
https://www.facebook.com/share/r/1DAekz32rD/?mibextid=wwXIfr
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@Renauda said in Mildly interesting:
https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20251117-the-animals-that-can-eat-poisons-and-not-die
That's interesting. On a very loosely related subject, it struck me that if cats and dogs ever did go to war, the felines could triumph very quickly with the use of chocolate-based WMD's.
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In a new study published on Thursday, researchers sent a type of moss called Physcomitrium patens to the International Space Station (ISS). This moss didn't get to live in the comfy more-or-less Earth-like confines of the station, but rather was put outside into the harshness of space for nine months.
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first presidential election i ever voted in. at hunter college on 68th street. remember like it was yesterday. i voted for jimmy.
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Harry Chapin performed his final benefit concert with chest pain so sharp he gripped the mic stand between verses, hiding the fact that he had skipped a scheduled cardiology appointment because he refused to cancel a fundraiser feeding eleven thousand families a week. Fans saw generosity. His body was warning him to stop.
By the early 1980s, Chapin was running himself ragged. He played more than 200 shows a year, most of them benefits. His tour manager kept a ledger from 1980: 121 free concerts, 47 reduced-fee shows, and nearly $2 million raised for anti-hunger work. The numbers looked noble. They were also financially brutal. Chapin often covered travel expenses out of pocket, and his accountant documented one quarter where he earned only $18,000 despite selling out theaters nationwide.
His health declined under the pace. Doctors warned him in March 1981 that his blood pressure was dangerously high and urged him to slow down. He scheduled a follow-up appointment for July 16. When a Long Island food bank asked him to headline a fundraiser that same night, he told his manager, “People need the money. I’ll see the doctor later.” He never went.
On July 15 he rehearsed at the Eisenhower Park bandshell. Crew members noticed him rubbing his sternum between run-throughs. One sound technician later said, “He looked gray. But he kept talking about the families he wanted to help.” Chapin finished rehearsal and spent the evening reviewing notes for a national hunger commission meeting he planned to attend in Washington.
The next morning he drove to another event when his car stalled on the Long Island Expressway. Minutes later he died in a collision. At the time of his death he had only $200,000 in assets and more than $500,000 pledged to future benefit commitments.
Harry Chapin did not build his legacy on fame. He burned through money, time and health to feed people he would never meet, and he kept giving until the hour he ran out of chances.

