It's very likely that PCB is made in KiCAD seeing the fonts. I really really hope they make the project files available. That would be a sick example project.
CERN is a big proponent of KiCad, so it wouldn't surprise me.
I didn't see an Open Source Hardware Logo on it, or any marking suggesting it's CERN Open Hardware License, but it might also be on the back.
The big issue is that it's tough to collaborate with something like Altium Designer when its $460/mo (and no one else can open your design unless you pay the fee).
That is what the experiment is trying to discover. They need time to collect enough data. The current phase started in 2021. The papers, including this one, have been about apparatus.
"The phrase beg the question can also mean 'strongly prompt the question', a usage that is distinct from the sense in logic but is widespread, though some consider it incorrect."
Yes, it is in common use now to mean that, and dictionaries are descriptive of common use. I think we are losing something to blur the meaning, as there is already another, commonly used and even more clear, phrase: to "raise the question".
Imagine a large portion of the population interchangeably used "teal" and "cyan". It wouldn't be the end of the world, but a useful distinction would be lost, and dictionaries would start stating the two words are often used synonymously.
You can try to fight against it, but language is constantly evolving. Calling someone "nimrod" originally meant they were a great hunter and not the modern meaning of fool
If it were not for those who assiduously compile dictionaries and other sources, and those who correct, you would not be able to understand the English from fifty years ago.
Language evolution needs serious gatekeeping.
It would ideally be best left to those who know what they are doing, not those who can't be bothered to look up a word.
Nimrod as a pejorative probably arose among students who knew the name from history, and just started using it for fun. Kids in my eighth grade class, when we studied The Hobbit, started using "Bilbo" as a pejorative (referencing the character name Bilbo Baggins).
This is a very interesting take to me. So you think language should be policed by a self selected cabal of experts? While i might agree for something like specific scientific findings being held tight by a small group of experts, i think language at large is a much, much larger thing. Mainly because literally everyone (okay 99%) use it pretty much all day every day. Very very few of the antivaxers are studying and using epidemiology and virology all day every day, but everyone talks.
As such, language evolves local dialects and accents just due to the fact that there's far too many people to corral into one way of speaking. How do you feel about regional accents?
Finally, i am very thankful for the experts who make dictionaries and find the origins of words i find interesting. However i _strongly_ doubt it would be impossible to understand the English my father spoke when he was a little under my age. Chiefly because, he's literally still alive and speaking? It sounds insane to assert that 50 years is enough to change language enough to become unintelligible unless i had a "1975 dictionary" in which i could look up all the slang and terminology. Sure, kids talk funny, jeepers man, it's like totally rad sometimes though. Far out dude. Did you have to look up what far out meant when you first heard it? Or did you understand it from the context and tone with which it was said.
Good luck telling me I'm not intelligent enough to decide what I say bud, even better luck telling that to the kids. Get with it or be history my guy.
The thing is, "jeepers", "ain't got nothin'" or "far out" are correct in ways that wrong usage of "begging the question" aren't. They're not based on a misunderstanding or anything. Jeepers is a way of avoiding saying Jesus, far out is just a shortening of something like far out of the ordinary, rad is an abbreviation of radical. None of these are criticized as words or phrases being used incorrectly.
In the English speaking culture it's not uncommon for "begging the question" to be called out when it should be "raising the question". Until those voices completely stop it's questionable usage. It carries a blemish, unlike usage that is free of criticism.
That's a descriptive stance. If I stand outside the English speaking culture and observe it, I see that certain malapropisms and whatnot are criticized by a good many of its members. They are native speakers and their opinions are data points that cannot be disregarded.
Been to CERN underground during one of their open days (every 5 years IIRC). How wires and everything was organized, you could literally eat from the ground of any big underground area. Seeing detector opened had similar vibes to that photo but stretched into 3D and it was few tens of meter long and at least 10m wide.
It's very likely that PCB is made in KiCAD seeing the fonts. I really really hope they make the project files available. That would be a sick example project.
Also, obligatory ꙮ
CERN is a big proponent of KiCad, so it wouldn't surprise me.
I didn't see an Open Source Hardware Logo on it, or any marking suggesting it's CERN Open Hardware License, but it might also be on the back.
The big issue is that it's tough to collaborate with something like Altium Designer when its $460/mo (and no one else can open your design unless you pay the fee).
Ok, I want to watch. Where can I "watch" it?
Direct link to the paper:
https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.ads1176
> Watch Antimatter Fall: Scientists Capture Gravity's Pull with a 3840MP Camera
They forgot to say how they generate Antihydrogen.
So this begs the question - did anti hydrogen fall like normal hydrogen?
That is what the experiment is trying to discover. They need time to collect enough data. The current phase started in 2021. The papers, including this one, have been about apparatus.
It raises the question. "Begging the question" has a very different meaning, though maybe it is a lost cause to preserve its meaning.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Begging_the_question
"The phrase beg the question can also mean 'strongly prompt the question', a usage that is distinct from the sense in logic but is widespread, though some consider it incorrect."
Yes, it is in common use now to mean that, and dictionaries are descriptive of common use. I think we are losing something to blur the meaning, as there is already another, commonly used and even more clear, phrase: to "raise the question".
Imagine a large portion of the population interchangeably used "teal" and "cyan". It wouldn't be the end of the world, but a useful distinction would be lost, and dictionaries would start stating the two words are often used synonymously.
Only among people who parrot language without ever looking anything up, and disregard or forget the remarks of those who do look up.
You can try to fight against it, but language is constantly evolving. Calling someone "nimrod" originally meant they were a great hunter and not the modern meaning of fool
If it were not for those who assiduously compile dictionaries and other sources, and those who correct, you would not be able to understand the English from fifty years ago.
Language evolution needs serious gatekeeping.
It would ideally be best left to those who know what they are doing, not those who can't be bothered to look up a word.
Nimrod as a pejorative probably arose among students who knew the name from history, and just started using it for fun. Kids in my eighth grade class, when we studied The Hobbit, started using "Bilbo" as a pejorative (referencing the character name Bilbo Baggins).
This is a very interesting take to me. So you think language should be policed by a self selected cabal of experts? While i might agree for something like specific scientific findings being held tight by a small group of experts, i think language at large is a much, much larger thing. Mainly because literally everyone (okay 99%) use it pretty much all day every day. Very very few of the antivaxers are studying and using epidemiology and virology all day every day, but everyone talks.
As such, language evolves local dialects and accents just due to the fact that there's far too many people to corral into one way of speaking. How do you feel about regional accents?
Finally, i am very thankful for the experts who make dictionaries and find the origins of words i find interesting. However i _strongly_ doubt it would be impossible to understand the English my father spoke when he was a little under my age. Chiefly because, he's literally still alive and speaking? It sounds insane to assert that 50 years is enough to change language enough to become unintelligible unless i had a "1975 dictionary" in which i could look up all the slang and terminology. Sure, kids talk funny, jeepers man, it's like totally rad sometimes though. Far out dude. Did you have to look up what far out meant when you first heard it? Or did you understand it from the context and tone with which it was said.
Good luck telling me I'm not intelligent enough to decide what I say bud, even better luck telling that to the kids. Get with it or be history my guy.
The thing is, "jeepers", "ain't got nothin'" or "far out" are correct in ways that wrong usage of "begging the question" aren't. They're not based on a misunderstanding or anything. Jeepers is a way of avoiding saying Jesus, far out is just a shortening of something like far out of the ordinary, rad is an abbreviation of radical. None of these are criticized as words or phrases being used incorrectly.
In the English speaking culture it's not uncommon for "begging the question" to be called out when it should be "raising the question". Until those voices completely stop it's questionable usage. It carries a blemish, unlike usage that is free of criticism.
That's a descriptive stance. If I stand outside the English speaking culture and observe it, I see that certain malapropisms and whatnot are criticized by a good many of its members. They are native speakers and their opinions are data points that cannot be disregarded.
FIGHT ON! ;)
It's a sexy looking PCB too!
It looks like a roulette table, complete with chips too.
The Latin says: "From rocks humans made eyes, through art and talent/ingenuity. Now it is our turn to re-emerge from the universe."
The "Ophanim" are circular biblical angels with many eyes.
also discussed - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43576559
That PCB is a work of art
Been to CERN underground during one of their open days (every 5 years IIRC). How wires and everything was organized, you could literally eat from the ground of any big underground area. Seeing detector opened had similar vibes to that photo but stretched into 3D and it was few tens of meter long and at least 10m wide.
flagged for clickbait
No video
[dead]