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marcan42's profile
Hector Martin
Hector Martin
Hector Martin
@marcan42

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Hector Martin

@marcan42

If it ain't broke, I'll fix it! I'm porting Linux to Apple Silicon Macs at @AsahiLinux. http://patreon.com/marcan  | http://github.com/sponsors/marcan 

Tokyo, Japan
marcan.st
Joined May 2009

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    1. foone‏ @Foone 3 Jul 2018
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      but since you didn't go "WELL THAT WAS TERRIBLE I BETTER TAKE BETTER CARE OF MY EYES" and stop fucking with lasers, you keep doing it eventually you accumulate so much damage that your visual system simply cannot manage hiding it all and your vision rapidly degrades.

      8 replies 125 retweets 2,724 likes
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    2. foone‏ @Foone 3 Jul 2018
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      the other reason lasers are so dangerous is that they don't necessarily trigger the same responses as regular incoherent light. your pupil reflex is only triggered by some special cells in the center of your eye, so an off-center laser might not cause your iris to contract

      8 replies 81 retweets 2,205 likes
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    3. foone‏ @Foone 3 Jul 2018
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      and infrared laser light is just as dangerous as visible laser light, but can't trigger your blink reflex. Your eyes automatically close when exposed to bright light, but they can't detect infrared light. Despite not seeing it, it still causes damage.

      6 replies 78 retweets 1,721 likes
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    4. foone‏ @Foone 3 Jul 2018
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      Anyway, back on how amazing and crazy your vision is: There was an experiment back in 1890 where someone wore glasses made with mirrors in them to flip their vision. After about 8 days, they could see just fine with them on. Their vision system had started "flipping" the image.

      17 replies 167 retweets 2,526 likes
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    5. foone‏ @Foone 3 Jul 2018
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      (I say flipping in quotes because it's not as simple as it started showing the pixels at the top row on the bottom row, cause our vision doesn't work like that) It only took them a few hours to get back to normal after taking these glasses off, though.

      5 replies 55 retweets 1,735 likes
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    6. foone‏ @Foone 3 Jul 2018
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      The last really fun part about this flipping experiment: your eyes already do it. Based on how our vision is wired, we should be seeing everything upside down. We don't, but only because our visual system has had our whole life to adapt to this.

      25 replies 72 retweets 1,984 likes
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    7. foone‏ @Foone 3 Jul 2018
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      BTW, since a few people have brought it up: There's a great sci-fi novel by Peter Watts called Blindsight. In it humans encounter an alien race they call Scramblers, who can move very fast and precisely, and they exploit saccades.

      45 replies 248 retweets 3,705 likes
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    8. foone‏ @Foone 3 Jul 2018
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      because if they only move during saccades, we never see them moving. and since so much of our vision is based on just filling in what we think is there, if they stay out of the direct center of our vision, we'll just visually fill them in, like they were never there.

      17 replies 79 retweets 2,260 likes
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    9. foone‏ @Foone 3 Jul 2018
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      Check it out if you're into hard SF stories of first contact. It's got some really neat ideas about human vision, very unique aliens, the nature of conciousness, the future of humanity in the face of perfect VR, and vampires. (Really, it has "vampires", while still being hard-SF)

      19 replies 61 retweets 2,245 likes
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    10. foone‏ @Foone 3 Jul 2018
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      BTW, remember how I said "vertebrate eyes" up there? Guess who has eyes which are wired forwards instead of backwards (no have no blindspot), have an internal lens, and can even see polarization of light? our good friends the Cephalopods!pic.twitter.com/SOMT5CB2SY

      151 replies 247 retweets 3,398 likes
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      Hector Martin‏ @marcan42 3 Jul 2018
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      Replying to @Foone

      We're also as stupid as evolution. Originally all CMOS and CCD image sensors were wired backwards too, we just ran the wires out the sides instead to avoid a blind spot. It wasn't until backside illumination sensors that we went the cephalopod way.

      8:28 PM - 3 Jul 2018
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      • Thaddeus Philip Isenhour indecisive egg Pete Mark Hopkins Jean-Marc Desperrier ash 🦉 Alex Del Sarto Jed Davis 🏳️‍🌈
      0 replies 0 retweets 11 likes

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