Readit News logoReadit News
hummuscience commented on Bitchat – A decentralized messaging app that works over Bluetooth mesh networks   github.com/jackjackbits/b... · Posted by u/ananddtyagi
moneywaters · 2 months ago
I’ve been toying with a concept inspired by Apple’s Find My network: Imagine a decentralized, delay-tolerant messaging system where messages hop device-to-device (e.g., via Bluetooth, UWB, Wi-Fi Direct), similar to how “Find My” relays location via nearby iPhones.

Now add a twist: • Senders pay a small fee to send a message. • Relaying devices earn a micro-payment (could be tokens, sats, etc.) for carrying the message one hop further. • End-to-end encrypted, fully decentralized, optionally anonymous.

Basically, a “postal network” built on people’s phones, without needing a traditional internet connection. Works best in areas with patchy or no internet, or under censorship.

Obvious challenges: • Latency and reliability (it’s not real-time). • Abuse/spam prevention. • Power consumption and user opt-in. • Viable incentive structures.

What do you think? Is this viable? Any real-world use cases where this might be actually useful — or is it just a neat academic toy?

hummuscience · 2 months ago
Get Uber drivers/taxis, truck drivers, ups/amazon delivery people etc. As your relay devices (and gives them extra cash for driving around)
hummuscience commented on ICE test train reaches speeds of up to 405.0 km/h   deutschebahn.com/de/press... · Posted by u/doener
KronisLV · 2 months ago
Recently took some of these in Germany, was a pretty pleasant experience!

It was a bit odd how the ticket prices seem to fluctuate a lot over there based on timing (like 20 EUR if you buy half a week ahead of time, closer to 40 EUR nearer to travel date, at least in my case) but I much preferred taking the train over flying.

hummuscience · 2 months ago
For every train, there is a fixed number of tickets per price category. So sometimes, you can still find cheap tickets ("super sparpreis") a day before because thag specific train didn't have many bookings:)
hummuscience commented on Building an AI that watches rugby   nickjones.tech/ai-watchin... · Posted by u/reddavis
hummuscience · 4 months ago
The moment I started reading this, I got reminded of this recent study: https://arxiv.org/html/2503.10212v1

The scope is a bit different. The study uses an LLM to interpret pose estimation data and describe the behavior in each frame. The output is text which can be used to create embeddings of behavior. As someone who works in ethology, that's a clever (but maybe expensive) idea.

I think the author could use something similar. With multi-person pose estimation models.

hummuscience commented on WikiTok   wikitok.vercel.app/... · Posted by u/Group_B
xhrpost · 7 months ago
Wonder what it would take to add a simple algorithm to this. Part of what makes short media apps (dangerously) addictive is that they eventually learn what you like and feed you more of that. An app like this with such an algo could help with the stickiness (and presumably get us away from the other apps at least for a little bit). "Oh this person likes science stuff, let's feed them more, oh they specifically like stuff related to quantum mechanics, let's place a summary paragraph from a related page topic in there."
hummuscience · 7 months ago
Since its text, especially text with links to other articles, there is no need for tags.

If I had a clue how to do this (sorry, just a neuroscientist), I would probably create "communities" of pages on a network graph and weight the traversal across the graph network based on pages that the person liked (or spend X time on before).

hummuscience commented on Comment on 2015 mRNA paper suggests data re-used in different contexts   pubpeer.com/publications/... · Posted by u/picture
the__alchemist · 7 months ago
An (agarose?) gel.

There are partial holes in at at one end. You insert a small amount of dyed DNA (etc) containing solution each. Apply an electrical potential across the gel. DNA gradually moves along. Smaller DNA fragments move faster. So, at a given time, you can coarsely measure fragment size of a given sample. Your absolute scale is given by "standards", aka "ladders" that have samples of multiple, known sizes.

The paper authors cheated (allegedly) by copy + pasting images of the gel. This is what was caught, so it implies they may have made up some or all results in this and other papers.

hummuscience · 7 months ago
This is protein on a western blot but the general idea is the same.
hummuscience commented on Blackcandy: Self hosted music streaming server   github.com/blackcandy-org... · Posted by u/nateb2022
crossroadsguy · 8 months ago
I have 700 via those tools but then my current Spotify/Apple Music list must be close to 1500 and I shudder at the thought of hunting the rest of 800 down on P2P here and there. So I was wondering is there a way to do it in one shot or few shots as a batch/automated process.
hummuscience · 8 months ago
Streamrip on github
hummuscience commented on 40 out of 60 German climate greening endavours fraudulent   fr.de/politik/warnungen-m... · Posted by u/Log_out_
BrandoElFollito · a year ago
I hate such data presentation. 40 / 60 = 67%, this is a figure that we are all used to understanding, just because plenty of things are in percentages.

Or 2 out of 3 - this is something we can relate to as well.

The next one will be 378 out of 2567, quickly is this a lot or not. Sure you would say that 78 is about a third of 1000, and we have about 2.5 thousands so it ... etc. Instead of just saying 15%.

hummuscience · a year ago
It depends.

40 out of 60 is easier to grasp for many people than 67%.

Percentages are better in cases where the numbers are harder to imagine (like your second example).

hummuscience commented on 40 out of 60 German climate greening endavours fraudulent   fr.de/politik/warnungen-m... · Posted by u/Log_out_
tsimionescu · a year ago
But, crucially, it seems that the Chinese subsidiaries are the ones that came forward to set the record straight to the German government. So basically it seems to be multinational corporations defrauding Germany by trying to hide behind Chinese laws.
hummuscience · a year ago
Not "the Chinese subsidiaries". Only one of them.
hummuscience commented on What happens in the brain to cause depression?   quantamagazine.org/what-h... · Posted by u/EA-3167
Harmohit · a year ago
This was a great read! I generally find quanta magazine articles and podcasts to be of higher quality than a lot of other pop science journalism.

Can somebody point me towards a good review article or textbook to learn about the chemistry of the brain? Any exciting startups working in this field? Or any startups trying to come up with unconventional treatments for mental health problems?

hummuscience · a year ago
You can start with Behave by Robert Sapolsky

u/hummuscience

KarmaCake day11February 9, 2024View Original