Podcasts about voronoi

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Best podcasts about voronoi

Latest podcast episodes about voronoi

Topic Lords
266. Voronoi Cookies

Topic Lords

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2024 67:10


Lords: * Ben * Andrew Topics: * Baking: precise science of measurement or do it all by feel? (People have very different philosophies of muffins) * I've gotten into making crosswords this year and recently had the idea to start putting them on postcards and leaving them in public places for people to find. Am I becoming the Riddler? Is this fine? * I just found out that there aren't exactly 52 weeks in a year * The Rules, Leila Chatti * https://poets.org/poem/rules * Building fidgeting into a Zoom lecture * Things of Science. (Subscription science toy service that I got when I was a kid) Microtopics: * Posting pictures of pottery to social media. * The Hopefully Year of Layoffs. * Teaching game development as a hobby. * The interactive comic books of Jason Shiga. * Lies and truth and sea monsters. * Waiting for half an hour to find out if you fucked it up. * Baking intuitively. * Skimming a recipe and thinking "hmm yes, I've made food before" * Voronoi cookies. * Keeping separate baking notebooks for each season. * Having units that are divisible by two. * Putting it in a Gas 4 Oven. * How to pronounce "tare." * Sneaking into Grandma's kitchen and weighing all the ingredients. * Cruciverbalism. * Where to post the crosswords you've constructed. * A Lord's Puzzle. * Giving people a little bit of joy and avoiding hearing any feedback about it. * Living in the puzzle capital of the world. * Constructing a crossword puzzle for every party you attend. * The MIT Mystery Hunt. * Making art for a really small group of people. * Crosswordese. * Designing themed vs. themeless crossword puzzles. * How many weeks are in a leap year. * Yet another ratio that doesn't work out. * Calendrical systems you could use. * Things that you know that are wrong. * What's your favorite thing you don't know that you don't know? * Finding a drawer full of narwhal tusks in a bone shop and thinking "hm, sixty unicorns died here" * NASA's antigravity room. * Why doesn't the Mars habitat work out? * Multiple digressions on horse urine. * Refining horse urine into progesterone on Mars. * Suddenly realizing that you've been dead all along. * Cicadas doing whatever they do in the trees. * Acknowledging the expectations of what a poem is. * Why you always turn out to have been dead at the end. * Who is out there still making games about guns? * Adding line breaks to make your essay look like a poem. * Innominateness. * Garden path level design. * Reading aloud etudes. * Mavis Beacon Teaches Elocution. * Replacing your Zoom background with a video of yourself. * Brain massaging video of cutting sand. * The calming effect of amphetamines. * Fidgeting incessantly during Zoom calls. * Fidgeting for people so they don't have to. * Bubbling noises and space harps. * Remote testing protocols. * Plagiarism detector snake oil. * Doing homework to get used to the idea of doing homework. * Mass-production of adults. * Paperwork as a method of crowd control. * Homework as a barrier to family time vs. homework that facilitates family time. * Mailing people little bits of science. * Aerogel vs. Superslurper. * Growing mold in your oobleck. * Sending 1940s children asbestos in the mail. * Using every sense to explore the world. * A dog sniffing your hand and walking away. * Throwing away all the business cards that just have your Twitter handle on them.

parkrun adventurers podcast
Episode 377 - Purple Patches

parkrun adventurers podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2024 76:43


Back to regular programming at Level Two with a View with Mel upping her p-index at Wilson Botanic parkrun while TOC was offering auroras with the sunshine over at the Stump. We chat about the new ED/EA volunteer credits, discuss the Voronoi map, cover May celebrations with the birthday boy, catch up on a swather of launches plus… Johan reports from Piggly Wiggly, Lyndell splits herself between Oakey and Capestone Lake and Marvellous Mark shuns Bushy for Gunnersbury parkrun. Tune in to find out why!

The Stephen Wolfram Podcast
Science & Technology Q&A for Kids (and others) [August 12, 2022]

The Stephen Wolfram Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2023 105:59


Stephen Wolfram answers general questions from his viewers about science and technology as part of an unscripted livestream series, also available on YouTube here: https://wolfr.am/youtube-sw-qa Questions include: How is computation in nature different than the computation that a computer does? ​- Why do cars get much hotter than the outside air temperature? In Austin this week, my car's internal air temperature was 130° F, while it was 100° F outside. - Why haven't we discovered a cure for baldness? Compared to the other great apes, we have lost most of our body hair, so I wonder if baldness is not just our further evolutionary progression of losing all body hair. - Think about things in nature as having autonomous rules. For example, a flower is one rule, but different shapes, colors, etc. of flowers have different initial conditions. Is this too crazy an idea? - To what extent are plant cells Voronoi meshes? How about animal cells? To what extent could one build a simulation of a tree using something like a "Voronoi mesh automaton"? - Do you believe there is a concrete description of evolution waiting to be fleshed out in the multicomputational paradigm? If so, does its basic rule relate to the expansion of the hypergraph? - If mammals have a common ancestor, then how did they get divided into carnivores and herbivores? - What do you think of the notion of chemical interspecies communications? - ​Can we think of some fungi species that could reach some kind of intelligence like the human one in the future? - Are bubbles round because of gravity?

Scientificast
Ricci da corsa

Scientificast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 14, 2022 57:32


Episodio 433 con Luca e Fabio ai microfoni.Iniziamo parlando di ricci di mare ed in particolare di un nuovo studio riguardante come l'impalcatura costituente lo scheletro calcificato degli echinodermi segua un pattern specifico chiamato Voronoi, con importanti implicazioni riguardo la resistenza meccanica e stabilità da poter applicare a nuovi materiali.Nel nostro intervento esterno Romina intervista Nadia Loy sull'uso della matematica nella biomedicina. In particolare per lo studio della migrazione cellulare in ambito neuro-tumorale.Dopo una barza fatta in casa, Fabio ci descrive le principali innovazione tecnologiche della nuova Ferrari 296 GT3 che dall'anno prossimo competerà su tutti i circuiti del mondo.

Meant To Be
MTB6: What Are Angel Numbers?

Meant To Be

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2022 29:15


What does it mean when you keep seeing the same series of numbers everywhere you look? Maybe the sequence 4-4-4 keeps showing up for you every time you look at the clock, check your odometer or see the price listed at the gas station. Could it have any significance? Actually, yes. Seeing the same repeated number pattern may be a sign from your spirit guides urging you to make a certain decision or to look at your life through a different lens! In this episode, you'll learn what angel numbers are, where they come from, and how they tie in with our daily lives and with the greater universe. Janeen covers the meaning behind some of the numbers most commonly seen in repeating patterns in everyday life. She also dips into some basics on Numerology, the Fibonacci Sequence and Voronoi diagrams--but don't worry, there won't be a math quiz at the end! Special shout-out to Rachel Grace of Grace Crystals & Academy, whose beautiful deck of Numerology cards were used alongside others as a resource for this episode. Order your deck of Numerology Cards by Rachel Grace here! ***ATTN PARENTS, CAREGIVERS, GRANDPARENTS AND EDUCATORS*** Please join Janeen this Friday, 10/7/22, live at noon EST, for a FREE virtual workshop: 'Discover & Nurture Your Child's Greatest Gifts.' Learn how to use Human Design to identify and cultivate the box of tools your kiddo(s) came to earth with, so they can grow into the highest, fullest expressions of their whole, true selves. Space is limited so register asap! Sign up for the latest e-news to get discounts, announcements and info at janeenellsworth.com, and be sure to follow Janeen on Instagram and Facebook. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/womenfriends/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/womenfriends/support

Prog Notes
Spotlight: Voronoi

Prog Notes

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 1, 2021 26:39


Welcome back to another episode of Spotlight! This time round we have Aleks from Voronoi to talk about their album “The Last Three Seconds”! We chat about the influence behind his signature distorted piano sound, how their jazz background sparked their unique approach to progressive music, and how the pandemic has affected them as gigging musicians. Voronoi! Visit our Website! Become a Patron! Follow us on Instagram! Follow us on Facebook! Join our Discord Server to chat with us and other prog-rock fans! **Prog Notes: Spotlight is a fireside chat with your favourite up-and-coming or long-established prog artists! Hear straight from the Tarkus' mouth what inspired the music, their creative process, the history of the groups, and much more! An offshoot of Prog Notes, these two dorky Canadian counterparts bring in the best in the genre, connecting fans to the masters behind the music.

SNAP - Architettura Imperfetta
Snap | Ep. 130 - Tassellazione dello spazio

SNAP - Architettura Imperfetta

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 2, 2021 34:24


Bentornati su Snap!Iniziamo con una nuova diavoleria di nVidia e, visto che siamo in tema di cose al limite del magico, vediamo la nuova tecnologia di Varjo che permette il teletrasporto virtuale.Torniamo con i piedi per terra con la prima casa stampata 3d abitata in Europa e il progetto di Milano City Village mentre gli argomenti del BIM di questa puntata riguardano la fase di mobilizzazione e la qualità del modello.Infine, ci divertiamo a scoprire la progettazione algoritmica con i diagrammi di Voronoi.Buon ascolto!--> Capitoli[1.30] nVidia Canvas https://www.tomshw.it/hardware/nvidia-canvas-lapp-che-crea-paesaggi-fotorealistici-disponibile-gratis/[3.30] Varjo Reality Cloud https://architosh.com/2021/06/varjo-unveils-reality-cloud-groundbreaking-virtual-teleportation/[7.00] Prima casa 3D abitata https://www.dezeen.com/2021/05/06/3d-printed-home-project-milestone-eindhoven/[13.00] Milano City Village https://www.bimportale.com/abiatarein-dva-strategia-digitale-loperazione-milano-city-village/[18.40] Fase di mobilizzazione https://www.shelidon.it/?p=12967[23.10] Qualità del modello BIM https://bim.acca.it/controllo-della-qualita-del-modello-bim/[26.40] Water Cube Pavillon https://blog.archicad.it/bim/il-water-cube-pavillion-di-pechino-modellato-con-archicad[32.30] Saluti—> Se vuoi unirti alla discussione sugli argomenti trattati nel podcast puoi trovarmi su:- Twitter https://twitter.com/Architecday - Instagram https://www.instagram.com/architecday/- sul blog Mac e Architettura https://marchdotnet.wordpress.com - canale Telegram SNAPPer https://t.me/snapperarchitetti —> Piaciuto l'episodio? Lascia una recensione su iTunes seguendo la guida di Filippo Strozzi di Avvocati e Mac https://bit.ly/2WPVuJ9 —> Puoi contribuire con:- l'acquisto di merchandising personalizzato Runtime https://supporta-runtime-radio.hoplix.shop- donazione per sostenere l'infrastruttura di Runtime http://runtimeradio.it/ancheio/ anche via PayPal https://www.paypal.me/runtimeradio Se invece preferisci, puoi farmi una donazione diretta tramite Paypal https://paypal.me/architecday?locale.x=it_IT oppure in modo del tutto gratuito partendo a far acquisti su Amazon da questo mio link sponsorizzato https://amzn.to/3gc4PCJ: l'importo non subirà variazioni ed una piccola percentuale di esso sarà donato a questo podcast.—> Tra l'altro, puoi ascoltare il Podcast e tutta la programmazione di Runtime Radio in streaming su https://runtimeradio.it , anche su Spotify https://spoti.fi/2WR861q e vedere di cosa mi occupo sul mio sito professionale: http://www.studioemme2.itAlla prossima!Roberto.

ProgCast
Episode 135: Aleks Podraza (Voronoi)

ProgCast

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2021 46:38


Progcast host Dario's latest musical obession: Voronoi's debut full length album "The Last Three Seconds". That means a call with keyboarder and bandleader Aleks Podraza about distortion pedals, Bach and poly-meters was in order. All of that and much more, only on Episode 135 of the Progcast. Follow us: Website: https://stewis-podcasts.castos.com/podcasts/997/episodes Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/progcastpodcast/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/progcastpodcast/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/Progcastpodcast Progcast is a Stewis Media Podcastwww.stewismedia.com

bach aleks voronoi progcast
Riot Act
143 - Weezer, Teenage Fanclub, Voronoi and Cruelty

Riot Act

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2021 88:08


Remfry is uncharacteristically keen to talk about the rumours of a new Spice World film that is set to emerge next year to coincide with Spice Girls' 25th anniversary (according to The Sun ... so maybe don't get your hopes up Spice Girls fans). Also in the news, one of the best new stories of the year, nay the decade, nay EVER - a drunk man was arrested after swinging a full colostomy bag at police. What has this to do with music? Well, it happened at Kid Rock's Honky Tonk Rock 'N Roll Steakhouse in Nashville. So, just another typical day at the Steakhouse then ... Albums reviewed this week are Van Weezer by Weezer (18:42) Endless Arcade by Teenage Fanclub (47:40) The Last Three Seconds by Voronoi (59:35) and There Is No God Where I Am by Cruelty (78:35) This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis: Chartable - https://chartable.com/privacy

Topic Lords
77. A Vocal Quirk Of Your Mind (For Other People)

Topic Lords

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2021 68:14


Support Topic Lords on Patreon and get episodes a week early! (https://www.patreon.com/topiclords) Lords: * Tyriq * https://twitter.com/FourbitFriday * Chris * https://twitter.com/MrChrisLHall Topics: * Revisiting Game Maker after 10 years, and getting right back into it * What's your jrpg/anime vocal quirk? * Electric showers * Weval - Someday * https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n-wEvzqdDZg * UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Lists * https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UNESCOIntangibleCulturalHeritageLists Microtopics: * A game that has been in early access for 7,000 years. * Coming back to software you last used a decade ago and finding that it has a night theme now. * Old vs. new Game Maker. * Knowing the context a word is borrowed from and assuming more meaning carried over than actually did. * Terms that programming borrowed from philosophy, like "monad" and "blockchain." * Function-shaped functions. * Seeing people misuse a tool and trying to decide whether it'd be better to teach them how to use the tool, or make a new tool that works how they expect. * That time someone tried to port Catacomb Kids to C++ before realizing that someone had been adding features to this game for ten years. * The Dark Theme era. * Jim just happening to know how many lines of code the Frog Fractions remaster is. * How many lines of code is reasonable for an action roguelike that one person has worked on for ten years. * Measuring code complexity by zipping it and looking at the file size. * Designing the rules of a game to stop people from ruining it for themselves. * How your laugh maps to your blood type. * Deciding that when a character says "..." that means that they farted, and suddenly being able to enjoy Visual Novels. * Whether Jay Gatsby saying "old sport" all the time is the same phenomenon as Moogles always saying "kupo." * Typing in a swear word when an Animal Crossing character asks you for a new catchphrase and returning the cartridge to GameStop who will sell it to a small child and it'll end up on the local news. * Incorporating goat noises into your speech in a subtle enough way that people aren't sure if you just made a goat noise. * Everybody having their own weird noise that they made repeatedly instead of just having a face. * Deciding that your signature isn't cool enough and hiring a signature designer to help you out. * Whether "signature designer" is a real job you can make a living doing. * Designing a different unique fart for every character in your JRPG so they each have a fart that fits your personality. * Why making a fart noise with your tongue is called a "raspberry." * How nobody can tell you've got a duck call under your COVID mask until it's too late. * A showerhead plugged into a wall outlet. * Heating water as it passes through the showerhead. * Reassuring onlookers that you've been showering in an electric shower for decades and you've only been shocked a few times and you just have to not touch the metal plumbing. * Wearing rubber shoes in the shower so the electric showerhead doesn't electrocute you. * How nobody posting in the thread about electric showers has died. * Electric showers waking you up even more effectively than regular showers. * Not knowing what people want from things. * Nuclear pacemakers. * The number of nuclear pacemakers still in use today. * Your nuclear pacemaker keeping your heart beating long after the rest of you has died. * The Council of the Nuclear Hearts. * Plugging your electric shower right into your nuclear heart. * Electric flamethrowers. * Lighting your cigarette with a tiny taser. * 24 seconds of zooming in on the forest canopy. * A video which is very dense with frames. * A video which is exactly the kind of video that video codecs are be bad at encoding. * Star Turns. * A web site where people can repost your content uncredited and go viral. * A guest accidentally unplugging their headphones followed by thirty seconds of "can you hear me? I can hear you." * Standing on a floor that is painted to give you vertigo. * Buildings that are cool in this video. * Getting really excited every time you see aerial photography. * Freeways. * Starting with macro shots of urban environments and transitioning to wider shots of rural environments. * Canopy shyness. * Voronoi diagrams. * Preserving aspects of human culture that don't take the form of a physical object. * Intangible cultural heritage in need of urgent safeguarding. * Intangible culture lost in the natural process of human becomingness. * Whether history is worth knowing. * A series of Duke Nukem strategy guides collected in the Library of Congress, rebound to look like a hardcover from the 1950s. * What it takes to preserve a skill that a community of people practices over the course of their lives. * Dance notation for very constrained types of dance. * Tugging rituals. * Avalanche risk management. * Notation for bee dances. * Dance notation which is just a list of where all the ping pong balls were. * How every culture agrees that Kiki is the spiky one and Bouba is the round one. * Wine horses. * A very Western centric view of how many instruments have ever existed. * How to make the number four out of only letters.

Este pana y el otro
EP 023 | La ciencia detrás del futbol

Este pana y el otro

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2020 50:33


En este episodio 23 hablamos del futbol y su estrecha relación con las matemáticas. Debatimos sobre los diagramas de Voronoi aplicados en el campo y su importancia en análisis de jugadores. Hablamos también sobre el efecto Magnus de Roberto Carlos y de como los penaltis son pura suerte.

PaperPlayer biorxiv bioinformatics
Boosting the analysis of protein interfaces with Multiple Interface String Alignment: illustration on the spikes of coronaviruses

PaperPlayer biorxiv bioinformatics

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 3, 2020


Link to bioRxiv paper: http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2020.09.03.281600v1?rss=1 Authors: Bereux, S., Delmas, B., Cazals, F. Abstract: We introduce Multiple Interface String Alignment (MISA), a visualization tool to display coherently various sequence and structure based statistics at protein-protein interfaces (SSE elements, buried surface area, {Delta}ASA, B factor values, etc). The amino-acids supporting these annotations are obtained from Voronoi interface models. The benefit of MISA is to collate annotated sequences of (homologous) chains found in different biological contexts i.e. bound with different partners or unbound. The aggregated views MISA/SSE, MISA/BSA, MISA/{Delta}ASAetc make it trivial to identify commonalities and differences between chains, to infer key interface residues, and to understand where conformational changes occur upon binding. As such, they should prove of key relevance for knowledge based annotations of protein databases such as the Protein Data Bank. Illustrations are provided on the receptor binding domain (RBD) of coronaviruses, in complex with their cognate partner or (neutralizing) antibodies. MISA computed with a minimal number of structures complement and enrich findings previously reported. The corresponding package is available from the Structural Bioinformatics Library (http://sbl.inria. fr). Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info

Friendly Potential Radio
Ep 209 pt.2 w/ Voronoi

Friendly Potential Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 26, 2020 60:21


Voronoi is the ambient electronic project of the itinerant artist, writer, and electronic musician Richard B. Keys. With Voronoi Keys synthesises a range of influences spanning ambient music, noise, electro-acoustic, neo-classical, film music, and high definition sound design. Drawing inspiration from the Voronoi tessellation — an equation that is used to both model actual landscapes and at the same time to construct virtual ones — his productions employ hybrid sampling and synthesis techniques to weave irreal ambient soundscapes. His recently released Mountains & Rivers EP is available through sonorous circle. This mix was developed from a hastily constructed Spotify playlist that the artist put together in anticipation of flying internationally during the unfolding Covid-19 pandemic. The track list, which features some of my favourite recent ambient releases, was selected to promote a sense of calm to allay my fears of contagion and flying, while still acknowledging and playing with the sense of dislocation and the uncanny that was invoked by the experience of travelling internationally during the pandemic. The original playlist soundtrack my journey as I passed through heightened broader security, empty airport terminals, and boarded a sparsely populated plane flight, before coming to rest in a government quarantine facility upon arriving home. This mix is an extended version of that original playlist. Feat. recent work by Chris Zabriskie, r beny, and Ulla among others. Track List Chris Zabriskie / I knew My Way Downtown and Walking Was Deluxe / self-released // 00:00 r beny / alone in the pavilion / self-released // 04:20 Ocoeur / Ascent / n5MD // 08:46 Skee Mask / Cafe Mu / ILIAN TAPE // 13:16 Space Afrika / Self / self-released // 17:06 Daniel Avery and Alessandro Cortini / Holo Dove / Phantasy Sound/Mute // 20:16 Evan Caminiti / Enter Exit / Dust Editions // 24:32 Ulla / Stunned Suddenly / Experiences Ltd. // 29:32 Felicia Atkinson / Moderato Cantabile / Shelter Press // 32:32 Chris Zabriskie / Editing Beyound the Door III Again / self-released // 40:08 r beny / shimmering and obvious / self-released // 46:32 Ulla / New Poem / Shelter Press // 52:16

Tetrahedra
02 - Voronoi Diagrams and Delaunay Triangulations

Tetrahedra

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 23, 2020 11:55 Very Popular


This episode is an introduction to computational geometry, namely Voronoi diagrams and Delaunay triangulations. Python applications of the aforementioned are also discussed. Remember to follow the pod on Twitter and GitHub, @PodTetrahedra! Stay curious, tinker, experiment, and explore the world!

Quail data
Quail data 0007 - Stats Wars

Quail data

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2020 29:38


Quail Data #0007 - Stats Wars Rodolfo #1: MOSP MONARC Objects Sharing Platform (MOSP) es una plataforma para crear, editar y compartir objetos JSON validados de cualquier tipo. MONARC - Method for an Optimised aNAlysis of Risks by CASES (Método para un análisis optimizado de riesgos por CASOS.) Puede usar cualquier esquema JSON disponible para crear nuevos objetos JSON a través de un formulario web generado dinámicamente y basado en el esquema seleccionado. Sergio #2: Scikit Geometry "scikit-geometry también viene con funciones para calcular el diagrama de Voronoi, el casco convexo, cuadros delimitadores, la suma minkowski de dos polígonos, un árbol AABB para consultas vecinas más cercanas y muchas otras utilidades útiles para cálculos geométricos, con planes para agregar muchos más!" Rodolfo #3: pandapy Demos un momento para tomar en cuenta el siguiente meme: https://www.reddit.com/r/mathmemes/comments/ewct2v/euler_moment/ Ahora, ¿recuerdan, por una parte a Pandas? Y por otra parte, ¿a NumPy? Pues bueno, pueden pensar en este paquete como un hijo de ambos. PandaPy tiene la velocidad de NumPy y la usabilidad de Pandas (10x a 50x más rápido). Así como importas pandas como pd y numpy como np, el común es importar a pandapy como pp (ya sabes → pd & np = pp). Sergio #4: Como hacer tu propio blog sin ser un experto en computadoras con fast.ai y fast_template Una guía muy fácil de seguir para crear tu propio blog hosteado en GitHub pages sin tener que usar la linea de comando. Es muy practico y facil de seguir y ahora utiliza GitHub Actions para transformar tus notebooks de jupyter a blog posts Rodolfo #5: Construyendo un Python Data Science Container usando Docker Es un blog post que ilustra cómo crear un contenedor de Docker que incluya paquetería como NumPy, SciPy, Pandas, SciKit-Learn, Matplotlib y NLTK. Todo se realiza a través de la construcción de un Dockerfile basado en Alpine, una versión muuuy ligera de Linux. El post te da todos los comandos para levantar el contenedor. Sergio #6: Blog de Juvenal Campos - Como Visualizar Pirámides de Población en R Un paso a paso de como construir una piramide de poblacion con ggplot2 Juvenal usa blogdown de R para este blog - todxs deberiamos bloguear mas! Extras: Sergio: Lorem Ipsum pero mexicano ? jajaja https://ignaciochavez.com/projects/lorempaisum/ RStudioConf está aquí en San Francisco esta semana y tienen los materiales de sus talleres en GitHub pa quién no pudo asistir: https://github.com/rstudio-conf-2020 Rodo: Para la gente Pythonista que nos escucha, ¡ya hay fecha para el PyCon Latam 2020! 27-29 de agosto, Pto. Vallarta, Jalisco. ¡No se lo pueden perder! (https://twitter.com/PyLatam/status/1221886633210982402) Meme de la semana --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/quaildata/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/quaildata/support

3 cosas que ayer no sabía
57 - Diagrama de Voronoi, Chopin y “echar un polvo”

3 cosas que ayer no sabía

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2019 4:44


Éste es el episodio 57 de 3 Cosas Que Ayer No Sabía, el del miércoles 20 de noviembre de 2019. ¡Al lío! 01. El diagrama Voronoi El diagrama Voronoi es algo complejísimo que he conseguido entender gracias a este hilo de Clara Grima: https://twitter.com/ClaraGrima/status/1196877912269611012 Entre sus aplicaciones prácticas se encuentran la que llevó a cabo el médico inglés John Snow para detectar el foco de la epidemia de cólera que asoló Londres en 1854 y también para que Grima y su equipo descubrieran el Escutoide: https://elpais.com/elpais/2018/07/30/ciencia/1532938371_705599.html 02. Un invierno en Mallorca ¿Sabías que Chopin pasó una temporada viviendo en Mallorca? El compositor polaco llegó allí junto a George Sand una escritora feminista que por aquel entonces era su amante. Sand, de hecho, escribió un cuaderno autobiográfico titulado “Un invierno en Mallorca” y que vio la luz en 1841: https://amzn.to/35lvYwQ Ambos convivieron en la Cartuja de Valldemosa y allí confirmaron que el compositor había contraído tuberculosis. Tras el invierno, que no fue bueno para él, se trasladaron a Barcelona, para luego viajar a Marsella y finalizar en París, donde está enterrado el músico. 03. Echar un polvo Gracias a @EtimosDirectos descubro que en el siglo XVIII “echar un polvo” era una expresión sin connotación sexual que hacía referencia a la costumbre de salir a tomar tabaco el polvo aspirándose por la nariz, lo que se conoce como “en forma de rapé” a quienes eran habituales se les daba el nombre de “raperos”. Con el tiempo, salir de un local a “echar un polvo” se convirtió en la excusa perfecta de las parejas que querían hacerse arrumacos por lo que la expresión acabó aludiendo a un encuentro sexual. Aqui se explica: https://twitter.com/EtimosDirectos/status/1196684844337643520 Despedida Y con esto termina el episodio número 57 de “3 cosas que ayer no sabía”, el del miércoles 20 de noviembre de 2019. Suscríbete a este podcast en cualquier plataforma y no te olvides de dejarme alguna review o comentario, ¡que siempre ayuda! A mí me encuentras en Twitter por @almajefi. Escríbeme y cuéntame qué te parece este podcast y, por qué no, enséñame cosas nuevas. Con dió.

FLOSS for Science
EP010 CGAL : The Computational Geometry Algorithms Library

FLOSS for Science

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 2, 2018 40:35


In Episode 10, we interviewed Sébastien Loriot about CGAL. A software project that provides easy access to efficient and reliable geometric algorithms in the form of a C++ library. CGAL is used in various areas needing geometric computation, such as geographic information systems, computer aided design, molecular biology, medical imaging, computer graphics, and robotics. The library offers data structures and algorithms like triangulations, Voronoi diagrams, Boolean operations on polygons and polyhedra, point set processing, arrangements of curves, surface and volume mesh generation, geometry processing, alpha shapes, convex hull algorithms, shape analysis, AABB and KD trees...

Geospatial Forum
Deep Spatial Learning for Forensic Geolocation with Microbiome Data

Geospatial Forum

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2017 49:31


Forensic analyses are often concerned with identifying the spatial source of biological residue. Using recent advances in high-throughput sequencing technologies, dust collected from nearly any object can be shown to harbor DNA fragments from thousands of bacteria and fungi species which may be informative of the source of the dust. We show that training collections of deep neural network classifiers on random Voronoi partitions of a spatial domain yields remarkably accurate geolocation predictions. When applied to the microbiomes of over 1,300 dust samples collected across the U.S., more than half of predictions produced by this model fall within 90 kilometers of their origin, a 60% reduction in error from competing geolocation methods. Speaker: Dr. Brian Reich | Associate Professor | Department of Statistics | NC State University

Look It Up
11: Voronoi school districts, rhubarb pie, blankets

Look It Up

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2017 11:36


On this week's episode: do school district boundaries follow the lines suggested by a Voronoi diagram? What are the origins of the Prairie Home Companion song about rhubarb pie? Are some types of blankets warmer than others?   0:42 - Voronoi school districts 3:09 - Rhubarb pie 7:06 - Shorts 7:40 - Blankets 9:33 - Sources 10:05 - Lev Theremin playing the theremin   Sources: supplementary images for "Voronoi school districts," bit.ly/liuschools1. School district boundaries, bit.ly/liuschools2. Prairie Home Companion, prairiehome.org. A book about Lawrence Tibbett, bit.ly/liulawrence.

3D Printing Today
093_Printing_Today

3D Printing Today

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 2, 2015 57:02


Optimal Layer heights, Printing Food Safe, Using the last bits of filament, Voronoi it!, Thingiverse Spam, Bronzefill finishing

Advanced Visualization (ECS277)
Voronoi Diagrams, Delaunay Triangulations, Data Approximation

Advanced Visualization (ECS277)

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 1, 2008 90:11


Advanced Visualization (ECS277)
Data Approximation over Voronoi Diagrams: Sibson's Method

Advanced Visualization (ECS277)

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 1, 2008 90:04


Medizin - Open Access LMU - Teil 11/22
3D-Voronoi Diagramme zur quantitativen Bildanalyse in der Interphase-Cytogenetik

Medizin - Open Access LMU - Teil 11/22

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 1994


Um die Anordnung von Chromosomen in Zellkernen der Interphase zu untersuchen, wurde ein Verfahren aus der Computergeometrie adaptiert. Dieser Ansatz basiert auf der Zerlegung von dreidimensionalen Bildvolumen mithilfe des Voronoi-Diagramms in konvexe Polyeder. Die graphenorientierte, geometrische Struktur dieses Verfahrens ermöglicht sowohl eine schnelle Extraktion von Objekten im Bildraum als auch die Berechnung morphologischer Parameter wie Volumina, Oberflächen und Rundheitsfaktoren. In diesem Beitrag wird exemplarisch die dreidimensionale Morphologie von XChromosomen in weiblichen Interphasezellkernen mithilfe dieser drei Parameter untersucht. Um diese Zellkerne mit lichtoptischen Methoden zu untersuchen, wurden die Territorien der X-Chromosomen mit einem molekularcytogenetischen Verfahren fluoreszierend dargestellt. Zur Unterscheidung des aktiven und inaktiven X-Chromosoms wurde das Barr-Körperchen zusätzlich markiert und mithilfe eines Epifluoreszenzmikroskops, ausgerüstet mit einer CCD-Kamera, aufgenommen. Anschließend wurden 1 2 - 2 5 äquidistante, lichtoptische Schnitte der X-Chromosomenterritorien mit einem konfokalen Laser Scanning Mikroskop (CLSM) aufgenommen. Diese lichtoptischen Schnitte wurden mithilfe des Voronoi-Verfahrens segmentiert und analysiert. Methoden aus der Computergraphik wurden zur Visualisierung der Ergebnisse eingesetzt. Es konnte gezeigt werden, daß mithilfe des Voronoi-Verfahrens Chromosomen- Territorien anhand der morphologischen Parameter zuverlässig beschrieben werden können.