japps13

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En utilisant une technique de mesure innovante, des chercheurs ont réussi à suivre précisément les étapes caractérisant la transformation du lait en fromage, ce qui pourrait approfondir la compréhension et aider à l’optimisation des mécanismes à l’œuvre dans la fabrication des nombreux fromages qui garnissent heureusement nos assiettes.

 

A l’Institut Néel, un groupe de physiciens lance une expérience d’un genre nouveau : réussir à faire de la recherche avec plus de sobriété. Et réclame une baisse du budget de fonctionnement corrélée à une réflexion sur l’impact environnemental de leurs pratiques.

 

Hello,

I am trying to wrap some Rust code that uses sea-orm compiled with "runtime-tokio-rustls" feature. I am using the new pyo3 "experimental-async" feature, which AFAIK is based on pyo3_async.

So I get that this is supposed to be runtime-agnostic, and not have two event loops, one for python async and one for rust async.

But, how do I tell pyo3 to use tokio runtime specifically? Or, how do I set up Python asyncio eventloop to use tokio somehow?

Indeed, it seems that it does not use tokio runtime, so I get this error when I invoke the rust async function from Python:

pyo3_runtime.PanicException: this functionality requires a Tokio context
[–] japps13@lemmy.physfluids.fr 2 points 8 months ago

Ok, I'll look into that then. Thanks.

[–] japps13@lemmy.physfluids.fr 1 points 8 months ago (2 children)

Going opt-in instead of opt-out does not change the fact that I would still have to toggle the features manually. To be more specific, my use case is that I have a program to control cameras in my lab. But not all computers have the libraries for all cameras. So, every supported library can be enable/disable using a feature But the program being still in active development, I am frequently using cargo run, cargo check, cargo install, on different computers with different libraries installed. What would be convenient would be to have a configuration file on each computer, specifying that we will build only for PCO camera on this computer, only for Photometrics camera on this one, only Ximea and PCO on this one, instead of having to remember to toggle the relevant features every time. A shell script is not very convenient because I use different commands, run, check, install etc.

[–] japps13@lemmy.physfluids.fr 2 points 8 months ago (1 children)

This would look like it would be what I am looking for, but the documentation of the configuration file does not mention features.

 

Hello,

I have a project for which some machines have only a subset of features set. Currently, I write

cargo run --no-default-features --features "toto,titi" --bin my_bin

This is a bit cumbersome and I sometimes forget the --no-default-features --features part. I was wondering if there is a local config file that I could put in the directory to instruct cargo to use this particular subset of features. I guess this should be in the documentation, but I didn't find it.

[–] japps13@lemmy.physfluids.fr 8 points 8 months ago (1 children)

Thank you very much for your reply. I have tried the approach you explain in your blog post, and it works. Your blog post is useful and clearly written !

 

Hello,

I am trying to use the SDK provided by the manufacturer of a camera from Rust. I use this in the build.rs :

println!(r"cargo:rustc-link-search=C:\Program Files\Digital Camera Toolbox\Camware4");
println!("cargo:rustc-link-lib=SC2_Cam");

However, it tries to find a .lib file, while the actual file is SC2_Cam.dll. I’ve tried specifying the kind as dylib=SC2_Cam but it makes no difference.

Am I missing something obvious, or is it just not possible? Do I have to manually load the DLL at runtime with things like the libloading crate?

[–] japps13@lemmy.physfluids.fr 13 points 11 months ago (1 children)

At equilibrium, I’d say yes.

 

Et si miniaturiser un espace géographique permettait de mieux l'étudier ? À Grenoble, où nous emmène ce reportage diffusé avec LeMonde.fr, une équipe de scientifiques a réalisé une maquette du détroit de Gibraltar. Grâce à la plateforme tournante Coriolis, ils modélisent vents, marées, rotation de la Terre ou encore échanges d'eau entre Méditerranée et Atlantique afin de collecter de précieuses données sur le détroit.

[–] japps13@lemmy.physfluids.fr 1 points 11 months ago (1 children)

Si tu veux... j'avais créé aussi https://lemmy.physfluids.fr/c/sciencefr dans le même esprit, mais il y a peu de trafic. Dans l'idée, même si j'ouvre pas l'instance elle-même à d'autres utilisateurs, je pensais au moins participer à partager la charge en hébergeant des communautés, de préférence orientée science puisque c'est mon domaine.

[–] japps13@lemmy.physfluids.fr 2 points 11 months ago (3 children)

Salut. Oui c’est ma propre instance (il y a aussi l’instance mastodon https://physfluids.fr). Je suis pas certain de vouloir l’ouvrir à tous car je n’ai pas assez de temps pour gérer de la modération. Je peux prendre quelques utilisateurs sûrs si certains le souhaitent.

[–] japps13@lemmy.physfluids.fr 2 points 11 months ago (5 children)

Ah oui, c'est une bonne idée ça !

[–] japps13@lemmy.physfluids.fr 6 points 1 year ago

I think I once read that when the metric system was first defined during the French Revolution, they also tried to use a decimal system for time, but that was quickly abandoned.

[–] japps13@lemmy.physfluids.fr 2 points 1 year ago

Impressive chart !

[–] japps13@lemmy.physfluids.fr 1 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Is there a full list of novels in this timeline ?

I found Memory Beta First Splinter novels timeline, but it does not have all the novels. In particular, I can't find either "Collateral Damage" or "Time To" in the list...

[–] japps13@lemmy.physfluids.fr 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Thank you for the detailed and insightful answer. I'll bookmark it to decide on the next books to read.

First, the Relaunch Treklit novelverse is a separate continuity from the new television series. I personally prefer a lot of the choices of major political arcs in the Relaunch timeline better than the new shows. Interestingly, the last season of Picard started to bring in some parallels from the books, despite being a very different future for Picard himself.

OK good to know. So I can continue forward and not get spoilt. Does it mean that they have stopped writing for this timeline, now that the new shows are out ?

Una McCormack has a few more Cardassia focused books. If you haven’t read them all yet, I’d suggest those given your preference for her book in the Fall. The book with Dr Pulaski is great and important but should be read after the Bashir S31 sequence if you’re going to do that.

You mean Enigma Tales, and Neverending Sacrifice, or are there others ?

the Voyager books advanced much more slowly through the timeline. I found the Christie Golden books exasperating (mainly due to the constraints out in her by the IP holder). When Kirsten Beyer took over and started the Full Circle sequence she was given freedom to fix many issues. It’s a great set of return to the Delta Quadrant books. Some recommend just starting with ‘Full Circle’ and going forward from there. Beyer takes about the first half of that book catching you up and moving things forward.

As a matter of fact, I remember reading some of the earliest of those Voyager books (paper version). But it is so long ago that I could as well reread them now. What's "IP holder" ?

 

Hello,

In the recent years, I have had much less time available to watch new shows (I have a young kid). So I am quite lagging behind: I haven't seen PIC, nor the last season of DIS, nor SNW. I tended to not find the right moment to read books either. I finally started reading e-books and I realise how convenient they are to take advantage of 15 minutes of calm and discretly (and without noise) read a chapter or two. I used to read books on paper exclusively, and to find reading on screen difficult, but it turns out that I am now becoming an e-book reader and they allow me to spend much more time reading.

So, I've started with Robinson's Stitch In Time because I heard a lot of good reviews. And it is indeed GREAT. Beautifully written. I wanted to read more, so I looked up what else Robinson had written, and bought "Prophecy and change Anthology". I read it entirely though I was initially interested only in "The Calling". But I was a bit disappointed as I found "The Calling" too esoteric for my liking. Nevertheless, I was eager to read more about Garak. So I bought and read "Enigma Tales" by Una McCormack, and it is AWESOME! Very well written. I like her writting style.

I am aware that I am not reading in the proper order, but I then decided I wanted more from Una McCormack, so I read "The Fall: Crimson shadow". But I decided to read The Fall in order, so I read Revelation and Dust before. I liked "Revelation and Dust" much much less than Enigma Tales. The writer style is quite heavy, especially when it comes to describing female characters. But it was OK. "Crimson shadow" was AWESOME. I found the description of the transition towards democracy on Cardassia, and the challenge with the facist old guard trying to take back control by various demagogical means very well written. And with a lot of references to real world issues: Starfleet leaving Cardassia somewhat reminiscent of western forces leaving occupied countries in the middle east, the fascist rethoric of Cardassia First reminiscent of some policians IRL. This is SF like I like it: the reader escapes into the Star Trek world, and at the same time is invited to reflect on IRL issues (a bit like Persian letters).

I was less impressed by the rest of the mini-series. The shenanigans on Andor were ok and I finally longed for the characters. But the conspiracy inside the Federation with the moustache-twirling villains that are Velk and Ishan made little sense to me. How could it be that the Federation which has existed for so long has so little counter-powers? How could an unelected person (president pro tempore) be allowed to wield that much power and make decisions without democratic oversight? Why do so many Starfleet personnels obey direct orders if this is illegal to do so? Why not telling him that he isn't authorized to issue them direct orders if that is so?

The shenanigans made sense on Cardassia which was a military dictatorship for at least a century. It made sorta sense on Andor because of what they endured in their recent past and the dangers for their survival (though it was already far fetched that people would be so uninformed after 200 years in the Federation). To top it up, the last book (poisoned chalice) is much too predictable. You know the answer basically after the first few pages, and the story is just lagging. It almost felt like the author is just trying to fill pages (though I was still willing to keep reading until the end). There is also (I don't remember in which books in the mini series) all this discussion about Kira in the wormhole and things she experience there, but it is an unused Chekov gun. There are chapters about her, and then nothing.

So my question is: what to read next? What are good series worth reading? Are there more featuring Garak? Is there a book with Kira coming back from the Wormhole? Do we get to see Crusher under Captain Ro on DS9?

As I stated in introduction, I haven't been able to keep up with the new shows, and I don't want to get spoilt. So, I'd rather not go with books taking place after the events of PIC until I have had to opportunity to watch the shows (unless they don't spoil anyway).

Any advice?

 

Les analyses paléogénomiques réalisées sur les individus du site funéraire néolithique de Gurgy "les Noisats" (Yonne), dans le Bassin parisien, ont permis de reconstruire les arbres généalogiques de deux familles, d'une ampleur sans précédent. Une équipe impliquant des membres du LGL-TPE a publié dans la revue Nature les résultats de ces analyses qui, combinées aux données archéologiques, anthropologiques et isotopiques, éclairent l'organisation sociale de cette communauté vieille de 6 700 ans.

 
  • Des scientifiques ont découvert sur Mars des témoins fossiles d’un climat cyclique, organisé en saisons sèches et humides comme sur Terre.

  • S’ajoutant à la découverte de molécules organiques simples, cet environnement a pu offrir les conditions idéales à l’apparition de composés organiques complexes.

  • Ces travaux ouvrent de nouvelles perspectives de recherche sur l’origine de la vie, dont les vestiges ont disparu sur Terre.

 

Dans la nature, tout est affaire de perception : c’est en connaissant leur environnement que les êtres vivants peuvent y réagir. Nos cellules sont notamment capables de percevoir la présence de bactéries à leur contact. Mais comment ? En utilisant la mouche du vinaigre - la drosophile - comme modèle, une équipe de recherche menée par l’Institut de Génomique Fonctionnelle de Lyon (IGFL, CNRS/ENS de Lyon) décrit un nouveau mécanisme grâce auquel les cellules de l’intestin peuvent "sentir" les bactéries du microbiote et s’y adapter. Cette étude est publiée dans eLife.

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