1. YouTube has videos of tardigrades.
A coworker and I have decided there is a biological classification in between "single-celled organism" and "big and complex enough we'd just call it an animal", and that classification is "you don't expect videos".
2. In emacs, type M-x dunnet. Anybody remember how to break into a VAX 11/780?
A coworker and I have decided there is a biological classification in between "single-celled organism" and "big and complex enough we'd just call it an animal", and that classification is "you don't expect videos".
2. In emacs, type M-x dunnet. Anybody remember how to break into a VAX 11/780?
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goims
woims
bugs
critters
...my teachers wouldn't accept it for some reason.
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I've made a lot of progress, but I'm now stumped again. Hrmf.
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There were three default account/password combinations to VAX/VMS as I recall correctly, the 780 was clearly of the right era for that. (It was also the canonical "MIPS" benchmark, as I recall.)
Anyway, I'm not sure if I remember all three, but I'm going to guess:
SYSTEM / MANAGER
and
FIELD / SERVICE
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[from wikipedia.org]
Water bears are able to survive in extreme environments that would kill almost any other animal. They can survive temperatures close to absolute zero[4], temperatures as high as 151°C (303°F), 1,000 times more radiation than any other animal[5], nearly a decade without water, and can also survive in a vacuum like that found in space.
I'd never heard of these critters before now.
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Kindle
Re: Kindle
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Re: dunnet
PS: And how to get the paper. A clue tells me there's paper involved, but I haven't found it.
Re: dunnet
edit: I did something to get the paper, and I KNOW FOR SURE I tried that before and it didn't work! Hmf. Well, I have the paper. LOTS more stuff to do now! I got myself killed, so I'll start over and do some things right.