• progress_activity cloud_sync

    Reconnection to the server…

    Movim cannot talk with the server, please try again later


    • Public subscriptions

    • chevron_right

      coopr8

    • chevron_right

      gabagoo

    • chevron_right

      kenu_demon

    • chevron_right

      coopr8

    • chevron_right

      gabagoo

    • chevron_right

      kenu_demon

    • chevron_right

      coopr8

    • chevron_right

      gabagoo

    • chevron_right

      kenu_demon

  • Register Login

    Movim

    movim.chatterboxtown.us


  • group_work rss_feed
    add Follow

    ArsTechnica

    • Ar chevron_right

      To invent the wheel, did people first have to invent the spindle?

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 18 November 2024 • 1 minute

    Twelve-thousand years ago, people in a coastal village in the Levant used stone weights on their spindles to spin thread faster and more evenly—and, some archeologists are arguing, in the process they pioneered the basic mechanics that eventually made cart wheels possible.

    Archaeologists found hundreds of perforated, roundish, flattish pebbles in the 12,000-year-old village of Nahal Ein-Gev II, all with neat holes drilled in their centers. Based on their uneven appearance and their varied sizes, it seemed that these weren’t beads, but spindle whorls: a flywheel-like piece that makes a drop spindle spin faster and more steadily. The find is the oldest known evidence of a newfangled textile production technology called the drop spindle. But it may also have been a distant precursor to the wheel. According to archaeologists Talia Yashuv and Leore Grosman of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, drop spindles work on the same mechanical principle as the earliest wheels, which show up on carts around 6,000 years ago during the Bronze Age.

    “Circular objects with a hollowed center connected to a bar make one of the most important inventions of all time,” write Yashuv and Grosman in their recent paper. “At the core of it all, the importance of the wheel and axle lies in a relatively simple rotational mechanism capable of transforming linear to rotary motion and vice versa.”

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagscience tagscience tagscience tagancient people did stuff tagancient people did stuff tagancient people did stuff tagarchaeology tagarchaeology tagarchaeology tagflywheel tagflywheel tagflywheel tagtextiles tagtextiles tagtextiles tagscience tagscience tagscience tagancient people did stuff tagancient people did stuff tagancient people did stuff tagarchaeology tagarchaeology tagarchaeology tagflywheel tagflywheel tagflywheel tagtextiles tagtextiles tagtextiles tagscience tagscience tagscience tagancient people did stuff tagancient people did stuff tagancient people did stuff tagarchaeology tagarchaeology tagarchaeology tagflywheel tagflywheel tagflywheel tagtextiles tagtextiles tagtextiles

    • Pictures 3 image

    • visibility
    • visibility
    • visibility
    • Ar chevron_right

      To invent the wheel, did people first have to invent the spindle?

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 18 November 2024 • 1 minute

    Twelve-thousand years ago, people in a coastal village in the Levant used stone weights on their spindles to spin thread faster and more evenly—and, some archeologists are arguing, in the process they pioneered the basic mechanics that eventually made cart wheels possible.

    Archaeologists found hundreds of perforated, roundish, flattish pebbles in the 12,000-year-old village of Nahal Ein-Gev II, all with neat holes drilled in their centers. Based on their uneven appearance and their varied sizes, it seemed that these weren’t beads, but spindle whorls: a flywheel-like piece that makes a drop spindle spin faster and more steadily. The find is the oldest known evidence of a newfangled textile production technology called the drop spindle. But it may also have been a distant precursor to the wheel. According to archaeologists Talia Yashuv and Leore Grosman of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, drop spindles work on the same mechanical principle as the earliest wheels, which show up on carts around 6,000 years ago during the Bronze Age.

    “Circular objects with a hollowed center connected to a bar make one of the most important inventions of all time,” write Yashuv and Grosman in their recent paper. “At the core of it all, the importance of the wheel and axle lies in a relatively simple rotational mechanism capable of transforming linear to rotary motion and vice versa.”

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagscience tagscience tagscience tagancient people did stuff tagancient people did stuff tagancient people did stuff tagarchaeology tagarchaeology tagarchaeology tagflywheel tagflywheel tagflywheel tagtextiles tagtextiles tagtextiles tagscience tagscience tagscience tagancient people did stuff tagancient people did stuff tagancient people did stuff tagarchaeology tagarchaeology tagarchaeology tagflywheel tagflywheel tagflywheel tagtextiles tagtextiles tagtextiles tagscience tagscience tagscience tagancient people did stuff tagancient people did stuff tagancient people did stuff tagarchaeology tagarchaeology tagarchaeology tagflywheel tagflywheel tagflywheel tagtextiles tagtextiles tagtextiles

    • Pictures 3 image

    • visibility
    • visibility
    • visibility
    • Ar chevron_right

      To invent the wheel, did people first have to invent the spindle?

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 18 November 2024 • 1 minute

    Twelve-thousand years ago, people in a coastal village in the Levant used stone weights on their spindles to spin thread faster and more evenly—and, some archeologists are arguing, in the process they pioneered the basic mechanics that eventually made cart wheels possible.

    Archaeologists found hundreds of perforated, roundish, flattish pebbles in the 12,000-year-old village of Nahal Ein-Gev II, all with neat holes drilled in their centers. Based on their uneven appearance and their varied sizes, it seemed that these weren’t beads, but spindle whorls: a flywheel-like piece that makes a drop spindle spin faster and more steadily. The find is the oldest known evidence of a newfangled textile production technology called the drop spindle. But it may also have been a distant precursor to the wheel. According to archaeologists Talia Yashuv and Leore Grosman of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, drop spindles work on the same mechanical principle as the earliest wheels, which show up on carts around 6,000 years ago during the Bronze Age.

    “Circular objects with a hollowed center connected to a bar make one of the most important inventions of all time,” write Yashuv and Grosman in their recent paper. “At the core of it all, the importance of the wheel and axle lies in a relatively simple rotational mechanism capable of transforming linear to rotary motion and vice versa.”

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagscience tagscience tagscience tagancient people did stuff tagancient people did stuff tagancient people did stuff tagarchaeology tagarchaeology tagarchaeology tagflywheel tagflywheel tagflywheel tagtextiles tagtextiles tagtextiles tagscience tagscience tagscience tagancient people did stuff tagancient people did stuff tagancient people did stuff tagarchaeology tagarchaeology tagarchaeology tagflywheel tagflywheel tagflywheel tagtextiles tagtextiles tagtextiles tagscience tagscience tagscience tagancient people did stuff tagancient people did stuff tagancient people did stuff tagarchaeology tagarchaeology tagarchaeology tagflywheel tagflywheel tagflywheel tagtextiles tagtextiles tagtextiles

    • Pictures 3 image

    • visibility
    • visibility
    • visibility
    • Ar chevron_right

      The amorous adventures of earwigs

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 18 November 2024

    Few people are fond of earwigs, with their menacing abdominal pincers—whether they’re skittering across your floor, getting comfy in the folds of your camping tent, or minding their own business.

    Scientists, too, have given them short shrift compared with the seemingly endless attention they have lavished on social insects like ants and bees .

    Yet, there are a handful of exceptions. Some researchers have made conscious career decisions to dig into the hidden, underground world where earwigs reside, and have found the creatures to be surprisingly interesting and social, if still not exactly endearing.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagscience tagscience tagscience taganimal behavior taganimal behavior taganimal behavior taginsects taginsects taginsects tagsyndication tagsyndication tagsyndication tagscience tagscience tagscience taganimal behavior taganimal behavior taganimal behavior taginsects taginsects taginsects tagsyndication tagsyndication tagsyndication tagscience tagscience tagscience taganimal behavior taganimal behavior taganimal behavior taginsects taginsects taginsects tagsyndication tagsyndication tagsyndication

    • Pictures 3 image

    • visibility
    • visibility
    • visibility
    • Ar chevron_right

      The amorous adventures of earwigs

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 18 November 2024

    Few people are fond of earwigs, with their menacing abdominal pincers—whether they’re skittering across your floor, getting comfy in the folds of your camping tent, or minding their own business.

    Scientists, too, have given them short shrift compared with the seemingly endless attention they have lavished on social insects like ants and bees .

    Yet, there are a handful of exceptions. Some researchers have made conscious career decisions to dig into the hidden, underground world where earwigs reside, and have found the creatures to be surprisingly interesting and social, if still not exactly endearing.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagscience tagscience tagscience taganimal behavior taganimal behavior taganimal behavior taginsects taginsects taginsects tagsyndication tagsyndication tagsyndication tagscience tagscience tagscience taganimal behavior taganimal behavior taganimal behavior taginsects taginsects taginsects tagsyndication tagsyndication tagsyndication tagscience tagscience tagscience taganimal behavior taganimal behavior taganimal behavior taginsects taginsects taginsects tagsyndication tagsyndication tagsyndication

    • Pictures 3 image

    • visibility
    • visibility
    • visibility
    • Ar chevron_right

      The amorous adventures of earwigs

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 18 November 2024

    Few people are fond of earwigs, with their menacing abdominal pincers—whether they’re skittering across your floor, getting comfy in the folds of your camping tent, or minding their own business.

    Scientists, too, have given them short shrift compared with the seemingly endless attention they have lavished on social insects like ants and bees .

    Yet, there are a handful of exceptions. Some researchers have made conscious career decisions to dig into the hidden, underground world where earwigs reside, and have found the creatures to be surprisingly interesting and social, if still not exactly endearing.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagscience tagscience tagscience taganimal behavior taganimal behavior taganimal behavior taginsects taginsects taginsects tagsyndication tagsyndication tagsyndication tagscience tagscience tagscience taganimal behavior taganimal behavior taganimal behavior taginsects taginsects taginsects tagsyndication tagsyndication tagsyndication tagscience tagscience tagscience taganimal behavior taganimal behavior taganimal behavior taginsects taginsects taginsects tagsyndication tagsyndication tagsyndication

    • Pictures 3 image

    • visibility
    • visibility
    • visibility
    • Ar chevron_right

      Apple’s headphone adapter for older iPhones sells out, possibly never to return

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 18 November 2024

    When Apple infamously ditched the headphone jack with the launch of the iPhone 7, it at least provided customers with a Lightning-to-3.5 mm adapter either right in the box or as a $9 standalone purchase in its online store. Now it looks like that adapter is being retired.

    As MacRumors first noted, the adapter is showing as sold out in most regions, along with a few other Lightning accessories, like the even-more-archaic-seeming Lightning-to-VGA adapter. That includes the United States, where it is not possible to order the headphone adapter from Apple's store .

    Inventory has run out, and it seems unlikely Apple will make more to refill it.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagapple tagapple tagapple tagtech tagtech tagtech tag3.5mm tag3.5mm tag3.5mm tagapple store tagapple store tagapple store tagheadphone jack tagheadphone jack tagheadphone jack tagiphone tagiphone tagiphone taglightning taglightning taglightning tagapple tagapple tagapple tagtech tagtech tagtech tag3.5mm tag3.5mm tag3.5mm tagapple store tagapple store tagapple store tagheadphone jack tagheadphone jack tagheadphone jack tagiphone tagiphone tagiphone taglightning taglightning taglightning tagapple tagapple tagapple tagtech tagtech tagtech tag3.5mm tag3.5mm tag3.5mm tagapple store tagapple store tagapple store tagheadphone jack tagheadphone jack tagheadphone jack tagiphone tagiphone tagiphone taglightning taglightning taglightning

    • Pictures 3 image

    • visibility
    • visibility
    • visibility
    • Ar chevron_right

      Apple’s headphone adapter for older iPhones sells out, possibly never to return

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 18 November 2024

    When Apple infamously ditched the headphone jack with the launch of the iPhone 7, it at least provided customers with a Lightning-to-3.5 mm adapter either right in the box or as a $9 standalone purchase in its online store. Now it looks like that adapter is being retired.

    As MacRumors first noted, the adapter is showing as sold out in most regions, along with a few other Lightning accessories, like the even-more-archaic-seeming Lightning-to-VGA adapter. That includes the United States, where it is not possible to order the headphone adapter from Apple's store .

    Inventory has run out, and it seems unlikely Apple will make more to refill it.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagapple tagapple tagapple tagtech tagtech tagtech tag3.5mm tag3.5mm tag3.5mm tagapple store tagapple store tagapple store tagheadphone jack tagheadphone jack tagheadphone jack tagiphone tagiphone tagiphone taglightning taglightning taglightning tagapple tagapple tagapple tagtech tagtech tagtech tag3.5mm tag3.5mm tag3.5mm tagapple store tagapple store tagapple store tagheadphone jack tagheadphone jack tagheadphone jack tagiphone tagiphone tagiphone taglightning taglightning taglightning tagapple tagapple tagapple tagtech tagtech tagtech tag3.5mm tag3.5mm tag3.5mm tagapple store tagapple store tagapple store tagheadphone jack tagheadphone jack tagheadphone jack tagiphone tagiphone tagiphone taglightning taglightning taglightning

    • Pictures 3 image

    • visibility
    • visibility
    • visibility
    • Ar chevron_right

      Apple’s headphone adapter for older iPhones sells out, possibly never to return

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 18 November 2024

    When Apple infamously ditched the headphone jack with the launch of the iPhone 7, it at least provided customers with a Lightning-to-3.5 mm adapter either right in the box or as a $9 standalone purchase in its online store. Now it looks like that adapter is being retired.

    As MacRumors first noted, the adapter is showing as sold out in most regions, along with a few other Lightning accessories, like the even-more-archaic-seeming Lightning-to-VGA adapter. That includes the United States, where it is not possible to order the headphone adapter from Apple's store .

    Inventory has run out, and it seems unlikely Apple will make more to refill it.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagapple tagapple tagapple tagtech tagtech tagtech tag3.5mm tag3.5mm tag3.5mm tagapple store tagapple store tagapple store tagheadphone jack tagheadphone jack tagheadphone jack tagiphone tagiphone tagiphone taglightning taglightning taglightning tagapple tagapple tagapple tagtech tagtech tagtech tag3.5mm tag3.5mm tag3.5mm tagapple store tagapple store tagapple store tagheadphone jack tagheadphone jack tagheadphone jack tagiphone tagiphone tagiphone taglightning taglightning taglightning tagapple tagapple tagapple tagtech tagtech tagtech tag3.5mm tag3.5mm tag3.5mm tagapple store tagapple store tagapple store tagheadphone jack tagheadphone jack tagheadphone jack tagiphone tagiphone tagiphone taglightning taglightning taglightning

    • Pictures 3 image

    • visibility
    • visibility
    • visibility
  • history

    Get older posts

  • cloud_queue

    Powered by Movim