InternetIsBeautiful

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A place for your preferably unique useful or fun sites and kind of a bookmark manager for me :p

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
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Hey guys, the new instance feddit.org is online, actually still in the test phase, but everything is running smoothly, while we at feddit.de do not know how things will continue because the admin is not available and the website is down. The future of feddit.de is uncertain. Feddit.org is managed democratically by the non-profit organization fediverse.foundation in Vienna, where the servers are also located. The administration consists of 3 feddit.de people and one from the foundation. You can decide for yourself whether you want to move the community to feddit.org or stay here, but the option is there. Wann move?

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A beautiful animation of geological history

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Hidden Mirrors (www.hidden-mirrors.com)
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"This app finds missing OpenStreetMap data in your vicinity and displays it on a map as quests. Solve each quest by visiting the location on-site and answering a simple question to update the map."

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You can enable push notifications for the site, and then you're able to anonymously ping other random users, even if they have closed their browser (it's pretty addicting). Opting out is easy, and no sign-up is required.

Source code

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https://matias.ma/nsfw/ use with caution

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ca/post/18481281

Over the next four years, the oVert team will CT scan 20,000 fluid-preserved specimens from U.S. museum collections, producing high-resolution anatomical data for more than 80 percent of vertebrate genera.

These digital images and 3D mesh files will be open for exploration, download and 3D printing on MorphoSource, an open-access online database. These new media will provide unprecedented global access to valuable specimens in museum collections and enhance the research value of existing data-rich specimens in iDigBio.

oVert is a multi-institutional project funded by the National Science Foundation.


Video:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JALuBzGvV3g


Some images from the site:

A colorized CT scan of a Burmese horned toad, Brachytarsophrys carinensis, showing the skeleton and mineralized skin. Florida Museum of Natural History image by Ed Stanley

Digitizing specimens through CT scanning makes it easier for museums to share their rare and important specimens. This is the holotype of the rough-footed mud turtle, Kinosternon hirtepes, from the Florida Museum herpetology collection. Florida Museum of Natural History image by Ed Stanley

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