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Definitely publish! Check out the Journal of Open Source Software - https://joss.theoj.org/


https://www.science.org/doi/abs/10.1126/scirobotics.aan2971

This is one of the first papers describing the AMI surgery.


Do you have a source or a specific reason to comparing to Morocco? I was there in 2015. The trains were in pretty rough shape, on one of the trains the toilet was damaged and you could see the train tracks... I don't remember any other specifics, but overall the transportation was a bit rough. That being said, I don't know much about the quality of transportation in America outside of the east coast.



This is so cool! And it's from 2013, thats amazing. A very similar printing method is being explored by MIT's Self Assembly lab, I think they first published in 2017 - https://selfassemblylab.mit.edu/rapid-liquid-printing https://www.liebertpub.com/doi/full/10.1089/3dp.2017.0037


His whole website is an absolute goldmine of awesome projects and hacks. I thought this was really cool: Optical Mouse Cam: https://spritesmods.com/?art=mouseeye


I'm a big fan of this one too: https://spritesmods.com/?art=veccart&page=5


The non-obvious way to greatly speed this method up is to use an array of nozzles and dip them all at the same time. Draw them upward while squirting your resin at the appropriate times and you have a 3D printer that prints as fast as you can move something up and down...

Imagine a sewing machine, but every time it moves up a 3D part is left behind in a binder. A new container is whisked in to replace it and the process repeats. Patent #10,870,239 issued, and more are pending :)


The old MIT leglab website is still live and hosted by csail. Wayback machine has oldest capture back in 1996. I checked a few of the images of the older robots and wayback machine shows the links were unchanged since96. http://www.ai.mit.edu/projects/leglab/ https://web.archive.org/web/20210126053221/http://www.ai.mit...


It's hard to tell. In the 2016 primaries Trump had 44% of the vote. That's a lot, and it's more than the other candidates, but its not a majority of the total vote. In the earlier primaries he most of his victories were in the 30's. So now you have to guess where he ranked for the 60-70% of people that voted for other people in early primaries. He might have still won, or other candidates could have emerged with majorities. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Results_of_the_2016_Republican...

[edit] I guess that doesn't really answer your question, because you asked about this election...


Just the fact that he's an incumbent virtually guarantees that he'd get a lot of #1 slots. Unless there was a mass exodus of his base or a major Republican challenger, which I don't see.


Chris Bourg sent the email announcing it.



If you get an mri or ct scan you can use this package to segment the bones and the convert the image slices to 3D geometry. https://www.gibboncode.org/ It’s open source, but uses matlab which is not free if you are not at a university. It will also take a while...


Could you substitute in octave for matlab? Or does it use something in matlab that is not available in octave?


Octave looks really cool, I am not familiar with it. Like I said, gibbon is open source, so you could attempt to port it. I didn't write gibbon, so I have no idea what the dependencies are like. But I imagine it would not be trivial.


Thank you, this is helpful!


Amusing note, The "what is the common thread" slide literally shows the promised land. It's a picture of Ben Gurion Airport in Israel.


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