...yes.Wait, is she going to reign those doomweasels on us, or rain them down on us?
I really hope Ramada abuses the fuck out of your good well and strong work ethic a little less than Econo Lodge has.Goodbye Econo Lodge, hello Ramada. At an extra $4K per year.
Need to go turn in my shirts and name tag.
Well thanks for all those greenhouse emissions, man.runs on hundreds of processors for days, consuming hundreds of GB of RAM. But it works.
. . . I just realized how we could've solved that problem Douglas Adams passed. Several years ago, this is what should've happened:A project I have been working on for 2 years finally paid off today. This was a lot of work. Thousands of lines of code in multiple languages. Heavily computational, as in runs on hundreds of processors for days, consuming hundreds of GB of RAM. But it works.
Ken Jennings: "I'll take Life, the Universe and Everything for 2000, Alex"
Alex Trebek: "42"
Ken Jennings answers in the form of a question. The question.
--PatrickKen Jennings would have said:"What is generally accepted as the answer to the ultimate question of Life, the Universe, and Everything?"
I figured the exact same thing.--Patrick
Kuddos for taking a selfie whilst hanging on the side of the helicopter. That's @Docseverin type behavior.Took a heli-tour through the mountains here!!View attachment 19308
Especially with her arthritis.Kuddos for taking a selfie whilst hanging on the side of the helicopter. That's @Docseverin type behavior.
I just saw this. Ooops. It's hard to explain in a short span, but it models and inverts electromagnetic geophysical data from deep ocean EM surveys. There are devices that function like metal detectors, only with antennas that are a kilometer long. My expertise is in these instruments. In particular, modeling the hypothetical response of a theoretical earth. Why is this important? Because modeling is part of something more important called inversion, which as the name implies is the opposite of modeling. You start with a measured response and try to find the hypothetical earth that produced it, and if you've done everything right, that hypothetical earth should approximate the real one. This is also called things like "tomography" or "imaging". It's very computationally expensive, and the answers are non-unique (one earth produces one response, but the same response could have come from multiple earths).Anyway. So your code does something, fade. What does it do?
I used to work at TGS-NOPEC (a large speculative seismic company) like 15 years ago --I totally followed everything you wroteEDIT: Not sure if I made it clear, but the response you measure with one of these devices is not very useful on its own. You have to invert the response, producing an image of the earth in terms of electrical resistance, to make the best use of it.
Oh, so he's just reversing polarity on the deflector dish. Now I understand.I watched a lot of star trek, which means I followed about 30%.
In a way, seismic is a lot easier. It kind of does return a direct image of the subsurface, but in terms of reflections from (basically) the interfaces between different rock types. You can invert it for the speed at which vibrations move through rock, which depends on rock type. However, for oil exploration, it's a lot more common to create a direct image from reflections. You're limited in resolution by the frequency of the vibrations. A lot of seismic computing is involved in sharpening and cleaning up the image. What you end up with is immediately recognizable to even a layperson as a picture of the structure of the earth. EM doesn't afford you that luxury. There's not much you can take from the direct image (there is one), because everything overlaps into a big blob. You have to invert. And even when you invert it, it's still fairly blurry.layman's terms:
You can't really look under rock in the ocean to find oil. So you have to look indirectly. You can do things like shoot sound into the rock and see how it bounces back (siesmic) or shoot EM into the rock and see how it reacts.
Like this:
The data that is returned is just that: Data. It's not a picture of what's under the rock. It's just a stream of data that says what happened to the EM or sound once it entered the rock and returned. So they have to interpret it. The software looks at the results and tries to answer the question "what kind of land formation could produce this data". The data could imply multiple kinds of land formations, some oil bearing, and some not.
Here's an example of a 3d seismic survey and a possible interpretation.
Back when I worked at TGS, most of this work was done on several-feet-long printouts of seismic running up and down our office hallways, where geologists pored over them with colored pencils in hand. If you think IT guys are the high paid golden boys in most companies, we had nothing on these guys. They were making 4 or 5 times what I was at the time, and most of them had 5 large screen monitors side-by-side on their desks long before it was fashionable (or affordable) to have multiple monitors on one computer.
They tried to push this at the university I taught at. They built this $25M 3d vis center called LITE with the Field of Dreams business philosophy. It didn't work. The problem is that it has no real niche. You already have the best hardware for turning pseudo-3D images into 3D between your ears, and the UI inconveniences (despite what hollywood and tony stark want us to believe) far outstrip the minor added value from true 3D reflection.I was referring to the folks who do their reviewing of the collected data in VR 3D rooms.
--Patrick
And so we BOUNCE a graviton particle beam off the main deflector dish! That's the way we do things lad, we're makin' things up as we wish.Oh, so he's just reversing polarity on the deflector dish. Now I understand.
Nah, you'd get it if I had the room to explain it better. I keep meaning to move my old geophysiwiki (my attempt at plain-English geophysics, physics, and math) to Wikia. I can put this there, too.Fade and Tinwhistler are talking about way smarter shit than I will ever understand in my life.