spiderweb
How to avoid the horror of walking through a spiderweb, according to the National Park Service
Hiking sticks, hats, and other simple tricks can keep your hike web-free. More information Adding us as a Preferred Source in Google by using this link indicates that you would like to see more of our content in Google News results. Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent six days a week. You're striding confidently down what seems to be a clear, open path, and then you feel it. The more you try to backtrack and flail your way out of it the more you feel like Frodo wrapped in Shelob the spider's deadly web, your luckier friends snickering like orcs ready to take you back to Mordor .
- Health & Medicine (0.35)
- Government (0.31)
Programming tension in 3D printed networks inspired by spiderwebs
Masmeijer, Thijs, Swain, Caleb, Hill, Jeff, Habtour, Ed
Each element in tensioned structural networks -- such as tensegrity, architectural fabrics, or medical braces/meshes -- requires a specific tension level to achieve and maintain the desired shape, stability, and compliance. These structures are challenging to manufacture, 3D print, or assemble because flattening the network during fabrication introduces multiplicative inaccuracies in the network's final tension gradients. This study overcomes this challenge by offering a fabrication algorithm for direct 3D printing of such networks with programmed tension gradients, an approach analogous to the spinning of spiderwebs. The algorithm: (i) defines the desired network and prescribes its tension gradients using the force density method; (ii) converts the network into an unstretched counterpart by numerically optimizing vertex locations toward target element lengths and converting straight elements into arcs to resolve any remaining error; and (iii) decomposes the network into printable toolpaths; Optional additional steps are: (iv) flattening curved 2D networks or 3D networks to ensure 3D printing compatibility; and (v) automatically resolving any unwanted crossings introduced by the flattening process. The proposed method is experimentally validated using 2D unit cells of viscoelastic filaments, where accurate tension gradients are achieved with an average element strain error of less than 1.0\%. The method remains effective for networks with element minimum length and maximum stress of 5.8 mm and 7.3 MPa, respectively. The method is used to demonstrate the fabrication of three complex cases: a flat spiderweb, a curved mesh, and a tensegrity system. The programmable tension gradient algorithm can be utilized to produce compact, integrated cable networks, enabling novel applications such as moment-exerting structures in medical braces and splints.
- Machinery > Industrial Machinery (0.69)
- Health & Medicine > Therapeutic Area (0.46)
Ukraine's 'Spiderweb' drone assault forces Russia to shelter, move aircraft
Russia's increased sense of vulnerability may be the most important result of a recent large-scale Ukrainian drone attack named Operation Spiderweb, experts tell Al Jazeera. The operation destroyed as much as a third of Russia's strategic bomber fleet on the tarmac of four airfields deep inside Russia on June 1. Days later, Russia started to build shelters for its bombers and relocate them. An open source intelligence (OSINT) researcher nicknamed Def Mon posted time-lapse satellite photographs on social media showing major excavations at the Kirovskoe airfield in annexed Crimea as well as in Sevastopol, Gvardiyskoye and Saki, where Russia was constructing shelters for military aircraft. They reported similar work at several airbases in Russia, including the Engels base, which was targeted in Ukraine's attacks on June 1.
- Europe > Ukraine > Crimea > Sevastopol (0.25)
- North America > United States (0.15)
- Europe > Russia > Central Federal District > Moscow Oblast > Moscow (0.06)
- (5 more...)
- Government > Military > Air Force (0.98)
- Government > Regional Government > Europe Government > Russia Government (0.30)
- Government > Regional Government > Asia Government > Russia Government (0.30)
How will Ukraine's attack on Russian bombers affect the war?
Kyiv, Ukraine – Any description of Ukraine's attacks on Russia's fleet of strategic bombers could leave one scrambling for superlatives. Forty-one planes – including supersonic Tu-22M long-range bombers, Tu-95 flying fortresses and A-50 early warning warplanes – were hit and damaged on Sunday on four airfields, including ones in the Arctic and Siberia, Ukrainian authorities and intelligence said. Moscow did not comment on the damage to the planes but confirmed that the airfields were hit by "Ukrainian terrorist attacks". Videos posted by the Ukrainian Security Service (SBU), which planned and carried out the operation, which was called The Spiderweb, showed only a handful of planes being hit. The strategic bombers have been used to launch ballistic and cruise missiles from Russian airspace to hit targets across Ukraine, causing wide scale damage and casualties.
- Europe > Ukraine > Kyiv Oblast > Kyiv (0.28)
- Europe > Russia > Central Federal District > Moscow Oblast > Moscow (0.28)
- Europe > Russia > Northwestern Federal District > Murmansk Oblast > Murmansk (0.06)
- (8 more...)
- Government > Military > Air Force (0.93)
- Government > Regional Government > Europe Government > Russia Government (0.49)
- Government > Regional Government > Asia Government > Russia Government (0.49)
- Government > Regional Government > Europe Government > Ukraine Government (0.35)
The Cloud Weaving Model for AI development
Kim, Darcy, Kalender, Aida, Ghebreab, Sennay, Sileno, Giovanni
While analysing challenges in pilot projects developing AI with marginalized communities, we found it difficult to express them within commonly used paradigms. We therefore constructed an alternative conceptual framework to ground AI development in the social fabric -- the Cloud Weaving Model -- inspired (amongst others) by indigenous knowledge, motifs from nature, and Eastern traditions. This paper introduces and elaborates on the fundamental elements of the model (clouds, spiders, threads, spiderwebs, and weather) and their interpretation in an AI context. The framework is then applied to comprehend patterns observed in co-creation pilots approaching marginalized communities, highlighting neglected yet relevant dimensions for responsible AI development.
- Europe (1.00)
- North America > United States > New York > New York County > New York City (0.14)
- Health & Medicine (1.00)
- Government (0.93)
These tiny spiders perform a synchronized pop-and-lock 'dance' as they hunt
Take a walk in French Guiana's tropical rainforests, and you'll encounter giant spiderwebs longer than a school bus. Inside, thousands of tiny, quarter-inch-long spiders wait for their prey to be trapped, allowing the predators to rush to overwhelm their victims. "In groups, they can capture prey up to 700 times [heavier] than each individual spider," such as moths and grasshoppers, says Raphaël Jeanson, an ethologist who studies the behavior of animals in their natural environment at the Center for Integrative Biology in Toulouse, France. Anelosimus eximius is a so-called "social" spider that lives in large, cooperative colonies--an extremely rare lifestyle for spiders. Each amber-colored South American spider is smaller than a ladybug, and even when they're hunting together, they pose no threat to people.
- South America > French Guiana (0.26)
- Europe > France > Occitanie > Haute-Garonne > Toulouse (0.25)
- North America > United States > Indiana (0.05)
- (3 more...)