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@primonatura@mstdn.social
2026-01-05 15:00:43

"Can beavers help heal burn scars after wildfires? Researchers build their own dams to find out"
#Beavers #Animals #Nature

@Dragofix@mastodontti.fi
2025-12-27 17:41:30

Sairaaksi jalostettu broileri #eläinoikeudet

@StephenRees@mas.to
2025-11-27 18:50:07

From CBC in partnership with The Narwhal
Hundreds of animals killed by trains on B.C. railways, documents reveal. So, what’s being done to stop it?
CN reported 340 wildlife collisions between 2020 and 2023, These numbers include 202 collisions involving moose and 67 involving bears.
CPKC reported 182 animals were killed and injured by trains in the Kootenay region of B.C. in 2022 and 2023.

A black bear on the railway track
@blakes7bot@mas.torpidity.net
2026-01-30 10:30:27

Series D, Episode 05 - Animals
SLAVE: Oh, er...
TARRANT: Come on, come on!
SLAVE: Try zero seven two.
TARRANT: Zero seven two it is. [Explosions on the flight deck, Tarrant is dazed]
blake.torpidity.net/m/405/26 B7B2

Claude Sonnet 4 describes the image as: "This image shows the interior of what appears to be a spacecraft or space station, featuring a distinctive retro-futuristic design typical of classic science fiction films. The setting has a predominantly green color scheme with curved walls and ceiling panels. The space contains various technological elements including control panels, screens, and what looks like a spherical pod or chamber in the center. The architecture has a utilitarian, industrial fe…
@theodric@social.linux.pizza
2025-12-19 19:48:04

I've never wanted to be a pig more than I do right now

Patent US3008452A depicting the C. E. BAIRD ANIMAL INSECTICIDE APPLICATOR which offers a hog the opportunity for a nice back-scratch from an abrasive belt which also simultaneously applies insecticide.

"It will be appreciated that animals often like to rub or scratch portions of their bodies. Accordingly, the prior art discloses various devices which enables an animal to easily rub its back against a slightly abrasive surface. It has been found desirable to apply insecticide to animals at peri…
@leftsidestory@mstdn.social
2025-12-08 00:30:06

Urbanity - Urbana Composita 🌆
城市化 - 建构城市 🌆
📷 Pentax MX
🎞️ Ilford Pan 100
#filmphotography #Photography #blackandwhite

Ilford Pan 100 (FF)

English Alt Text:
A partially obscured urban scene showing the upper portion of a road or railway overpass. A height restriction sign reading “2.8m” is mounted on a pole in front of the overpass structure. The sign is circular with a bold border, indicating maximum vehicle height. The overpass is made of concrete and steel, with visible support beams. The lower half of the image is covered by a white, jagged-edged area, possibly due to overexposure or image damage. The visi…
Ilford Pan 100 (FF)

English Alt Text:
A black-and-white photo of a shaded public seating area under a pergola-style structure. Several people sit on benches, some using phones, others chatting. The background includes a glass storefront with reflections and Chinese advertisements, one showing a person. Trees cast dappled light on the ground. The scene captures a moment of urban social life, blending architecture, nature, and human interaction.

中文替代文本:
一张黑白照片,展示一个带棚架的公共座椅区。几位市民坐在长椅上,有人使用手机,有人交…
Ilford Pan 100 (FF)
English Alt Text:
A black-and-white image of a traditional Chinese architectural wall. The upper section features a tiled roof with ornate end caps. Beneath the roof is a decorative frieze with repeating patterns. The central focus is a circular stone relief embedded in a brick wall, depicting a detailed scene with human and animal figures, possibly mythological. The relief is framed by a square border with geometric motifs. A translucent plastic sheet partially obscures the…
Ilford Pan 100 (FF)

English Alt Text:
A black-and-white photograph of a quiet urban sidewalk lined with tall trees casting shadows on the path. Several people walk along the sidewalk, including one person holding an umbrella. On the right side, a long row of concrete barriers separates the walkway from a wooded or residential area. The scene evokes a calm, everyday moment in a city, with natural light filtering through the trees and people moving at a relaxed pace.

中文替代文本:
一张黑白照片,展示一条安静的城市人行道…
@mgorny@social.treehouse.systems
2026-01-18 18:04:19

Cynicism, "AI"
I've been pointed out the "Reflections on 2025" post by Samuel Albanie [1]. The author's writing style makes it quite a fun, I admit.
The first part, "The Compute Theory of Everything" is an optimistic piece on "#AI". Long story short, poor "AI researchers" have been struggling for years because of predominant misconception that "machines should have been powerful enough". Fortunately, now they can finally get their hands on the kind of power that used to be only available to supervillains, and all they have to do is forget about morals, agree that their research will be used to murder millions of people, and a few more millions will die as a side effect of the climate crisis. But I'm digressing.
The author is referring to an essay by Hans Moravec, "The Role of Raw Power in Intelligence" [2]. It's also quite an interesting read, starting with a chapter on how intelligence evolved independently at least four times. The key point inferred from that seems to be, that all we need is more computing power, and we'll eventually "brute-force" all AI-related problems (or die trying, I guess).
As a disclaimer, I have to say I'm not a biologist. Rather just a random guy who read a fair number of pieces on evolution. And I feel like the analogies brought here are misleading at best.
Firstly, there seems to be an assumption that evolution inexorably leads to higher "intelligence", with a certain implicit assumption on what intelligence is. Per that assumption, any animal that gets "brainier" will eventually become intelligent. However, this seems to be missing the point that both evolution and learning doesn't operate in a void.
Yes, many animals did attain a certain level of intelligence, but they attained it in a long chain of development, while solving specific problems, in specific bodies, in specific environments. I don't think that you can just stuff more brains into a random animal, and expect it to attain human intelligence; and the same goes for a computer — you can't expect that given more power, algorithms will eventually converge on human-like intelligence.
Secondly, and perhaps more importantly, what evolution did succeed at first is achieving neural networks that are far more energy efficient than whatever computers are doing today. Even if indeed "computing power" paved the way for intelligence, what came first is extremely efficient "hardware". Nowadays, human seem to be skipping that part. Optimizing is hard, so why bother with it? We can afford bigger data centers, we can afford to waste more energy, we can afford to deprive people of drinking water, so let's just skip to the easy part!
And on top of that, we're trying to squash hundreds of millions of years of evolution into… a decade, perhaps? What could possibly go wrong?
[1] #NoAI #NoLLM #LLM