Thank you for this recommendation!
Thank you for this recommendation!
Survivor of a TBI checking in.
I thought about this a bit actually in my earlyish recovery, though I never did confirm my thoughts with any doctors who might know more about the mechanics I was interpreting me perceptions of.
In summary, I don’t think it would help (for those with injuries exactly identical to mine*). The problem as I constructed it in my mind, was;
I think a system like the Exoskeleton referred to here would probably fix or at least greatly reduce the second problem, but the first problem would require, at the very least, a “processor” that could replace the thing that determines my balance from all my various senses (my brain, at least one part of it).
Fuck this is so cool, fascinating!
The point on pelvic tilt is especially fascinating to me!
I am a cis male who’s been getting a lot more into latin styles of partner dancing these past years, a focus of the level I’ve been getting into lately is body-movement generally but including hip position / pelvic tilt. As I’ve gained more awareness of my own body in everyday life I’ve come to assume that fem people must have a “more tilted” pelvis when in a neutral position because of non-specific societal pressures.
If I’m understanding your statement correctly though, the neutral angle of one’s pelvis has a strong correlation with the hormone balance or, perhaps more directly, the muscle/fat distribution around their body. Is that right?
Hmmmmmmmm I thought prion diseases were (usually) a result of eating brain matter and occasionally the result of eating non brain matter that shared a body with a brain. By this understanding, the risk of prion diseases wouldn’t be a factor as only the misfolded proteins of a brain are ones that can be risky.
MIT Desalination System Prototype A tilted ten-stage solar-powered prototype desalination device is located in a “boat-like” reservoir. It efficiently turns seawater into drinkable water, potentially at costs lower than tap water production. Credit: Jintong Gao and Zhenyuan Xu
10 COMMENTS stephen schaffer | October 3, 2023 at 8:43 am | Reply Thank goodness for plastic.
Tom Casper | October 4, 2023 at 6:11 am | Reply What happens to the salt?
A | October 5, 2023 at 5:09 am | Reply As if salt is the only issue with sea water…
Bryce k | October 5, 2023 at 7:50 am | Reply Actually it is. Salt in sea water is more or less the only thing we aren’t capable of filtering out cheaply and efficiently through traditional methods.
SuperiorDave | October 5, 2023 at 7:26 am | Reply Men in black have entered the chat.
Morgan | October 5, 2023 at 2:27 pm | Reply they built a solar distill? i built one of these in elementary school in the 80s. great job everybody?
California Dreamer | October 5, 2023 at 8:39 pm | Reply Sounds promising. However, it would be helpful to know how the seawater will be filtered and pumped to the desalination unit. They can’t draw in unfiltered seawater without clogging the intake with seaweed and other natural debris. Also, there is no discussion on toxins or other pollution. Seawater near shorelines in most parts of the urban world are polluted by untreated effluent or raw sewage, and often worse industrial chemicals. Still, it is a fantastic first step, but before these can be safely used, source water and denomination will be required.
Seja | October 5, 2023 at 11:29 pm | Reply All valid points, but they all can be addressed now and relatively cheaply. Like Bryce said – this is the only thing we haven’t done well. Debris – can have a number filter around. Toxins and heavy metals – another layer of filter we already have at mass scale. Even if you add more treatments it’s still cheaper than current energy intensive desalination. This is exciting new thing development that sadly will come with delays because of greed.
NameThatBillionaire | October 5, 2023 at 10:24 pm | Reply Perfect for billionairs on their yachts with years worth of food stored (they can also fish) while the world falls apart.
John S | October 6, 2023 at 9:06 am | Reply How well does it perform under cloudy skies?