Spamton, a day in my life : Mechanical surprises !

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Spamton, a day in my life : Mechanical surprises !
A Belousov–Zhabotinsky reaction, or BZ reaction, is one of a class of reactions that serve as a classical example of non-equilibrium thermodynamics, resulting in the establishment of a nonlinear chemical oscillator.
never let an objectum into an antique store
Moog System 55
From Retrosynthads.blogspot.com
I Got A New Oscilloscope From Amazon A Must Have When It Come To Music Production, It Has Upped My Game 100% When It Comes To Sound Design You Can Get One Relitivly Cheep From Amazon Or Wish.com For Around 30$ to 40$ I Also Got A 3.5 mm Jack Capable Of Comnecting To The Oscilloscope To My Synthesizers Which I Have Few Of In My Home Music Studio
From flashing fireflies to cheering crowds: Physicists unlock secret to synchronisation
Physicists from Trinity have unlocked the secret that explains how large groups of individual "oscillators"—from flashing fireflies to cheering crowds, and from ticking clocks to clicking metronomes—tend to synchronize when in each other's company.
Their work, just published in the journal Physical Review Research, provides a mathematical basis for a phenomenon that has perplexed millions—their newly developed equations help explain how individual randomness seen in the natural world and in electrical and computer systems can give rise to synchronization.
We have long known that when one clock runs slightly faster than another, physically connecting them can make them tick in time. But making a large assembly of clocks synchronize in this way was thought to be much more difficult—or even impossible, if there are too many of them.
The Trinity researchers work, however, explains that synchronization can occur, even in very large assemblies of clocks.
Read more.
[5 images. A close up of a metal pan. A person smiling for the camera. A man looking at the camera. A group of people standing in a kitchen preparing food. A man standing in front of a screen. Captions: The Harrington 1200 compromises of keyboard, console and banks of oscillators and modulators. But it's at the heart of the Harrington that we find the musical motors that power this machine: DNA samples taken from the composers Gilbert and Sullivan.]