Sounder » Thu Mar 31, 2016 6:56 pm wrote:
...love the silence.
What silence?
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WIRED
How Plants Secretly Talk to Each Other
Up in the northern Sierra Nevada, the ecologist Richard Karban is trying to learn an alien language. The sagebrush plants that dot these slopes speak to one another, using words no human knows. Karban, who teaches at the University of California, Davis, is listening in, and he’s beginning to understand what they say.
The evidence for plant communication is only a few decades old, but in that short time it has leapfrogged from electrifying discovery to decisive debunking to resurrection. Two studies published in 1983 demonstrated that willow trees, poplars and sugar maples can warn each other about insect attacks: Intact, undamaged trees near ones that are infested with hungry bugs begin pumping out bug-repelling chemicals to ward off attack. They somehow know what their neighbors are experiencing, and react to it. The mind-bending implication was that brainless trees could send, receive and interpret messages.
The first few “talking tree” papers quickly were shot down as statistically flawed or too artificial, irrelevant to the real-world war between plants and bugs. Research ground to a halt. But the science of plant communication is now staging a comeback. Rigorous, carefully controlled experiments are overcoming those early criticisms with repeated testing in labs, forests and fields. It’s now well established that when bugs chew leaves, plants respond by releasing volatile organic compounds into the air. By Karban’s last count, 40 out of 48 studies of plant communication confirm that other plants detect these airborne signals and ramp up their production of chemical weapons or other defense mechanisms in response. “The evidence that plants release volatiles when damaged by herbivores is as sure as something in science can be,” said Martin Heil, an ecologist at the Mexican research institute Cinvestav Irapuato. “The evidence that plants can somehow perceive these volatiles and respond with a defense response is also very good.”
backtoiam » Thu Mar 31, 2016 11:08 pm wrote:jakell » Thu Mar 31, 2016 11:28 am wrote:
...My impressions are that it is not the uncertainty of the quantum world that is the issue, but that this uncertainty 'collapses' to definite states after a certain point is reached. In the above vid Stuart mentions that Penrose connects this with underlying Platonic values, but also that the waveform collapses** when we 'look' at things, and there we have the connection with consciousness. (most people are familiar with Schrodinger's cat by now I think)...
** jargon alert!
http://www.theverge.com/2016/3/28/11284 ... -vr-reviewVIRTUAL REALITY
ALWAYS ALMOST HERE
For a long time, the hopes and dreams of many virtual reality fans could be summed up with two words: Oculus Rift. Helped by the rise of cheap smartphone displays, Oculus co-founder Palmer Luckey took a technology that most people considered a retro curiosity and convinced them that it could change the world. The Rift let you skydive without a parachute. It helped artists show the world through another person’s eyes. It simulated beheading. It put you in fictional settings that ranged from kaiju-fighting robots to Jerry Seinfeld’s apartment...
https://youtu.be/9bfBV-x0ftM
Published on Mar 28, 2016
After nearly four years, it’s time to see whether the Oculus Rift VR headset is still on the cutting edge of virtual reality.
tron » Sat Apr 16, 2016 7:01 am wrote:[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S0nlygb1Qfw[/youtube]
fiddlestix, i cant work in code......
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