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<title>StumbleUpon | simplify3's blog posts</title>
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<description>simplify3's recent blog posts on StumbleUpon</description>
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<pubDate>Sun, 08 Nov 2009 04:23:24 -0800</pubDate>
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	<pubDate>Fri, 01 Aug 2008 09:28:27 -0700</pubDate>
	<title><![CDATA[http://simplify3.stumbleupon.com/review/23965994/]]></title>
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		<p>Four spatial dimensions - everything has them<br />
2008 1, 08 by simplify3 <br />
<br />
Everything - I mean everything! has FOUR spatial DIMENSIONS! That&#8217;s why proteins like to fold the way they do, why it&#8217;s hard to figure out the shortest path from one point to another. We need a new &#8220;top down&#8221; way of looking at the universe, even the very small like quarks. [that's why quarks seem to disappear - they don't]. That&#8217;s where &#8220;dark matter&#8221; and &#8220;dark energy&#8221; is hiding &#8212; in fact, that&#8217;s where MASS IS. That&#8217;s where gravity lies. a &#8220;higgs field&#8221; or &#8220;higgs boson particle&#8221; is simply the 4th spacial dimension. You won&#8217;t find a particle that you can see that you can interact with in our dimension by smashing the atoms, unless you&#8217;re lucky, because it&#8217;s like being a two dimension being on a piece of paper not knowing you&#8217;re on a piece of paper. You scratch the paper&#8217;s surface and all this &#8217;stuff&#8217; suddenly magically appears that you didn&#8217;t see before. It&#8217;s higher dimensional stuff that fell onto your paper (ie - into your dimension). Read on:<br />
<br />
The DIGG<br /> <a href="http://www.stumbleupon.com/to//digg.com/general_sciences/Everything_has_four_spacial_dimensions_plus_time/t:4af6b83c57f99;src:syndicate" rel="nofollow" target="_new">http://digg.com/general_sciences/Everything_has_four_spacial_dimensions_plus_time</a> <br />
<br />
the ORIGINAL ARTICLE:<br /> <a href="http://www.stumbleupon.com/to//free.naplesplus.us/articles/view.php/37648/everything-is-four-dimensional-plus-time/t:4af6b83c57f99;src:syndicate" rel="nofollow" target="_new">http://free.naplesplus.us/articles/view.php/37648/everything-is-four-dimensional-plus-time</a> <br />
<br />
Tags: 4th dimension, boson, four dimensions, fourth dimension, higgs, higher dimensions, kenneth udut, naplesplus, p=np, protein folding, simplify3</p>
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	<pubDate>Fri, 04 Jan 2008 08:31:49 -0800</pubDate>
	<title><![CDATA[http://simplify3.stumbleupon.com/review/15847372/]]></title>
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		<p>My latest obsessions:<br />
<br />
Magnesium.<br />
<br />
Too much calcium eats up magnesium.  You need it to build your teeth and bones.<br />
<br />
Calcium constricts muscles. Magnesium relaxes them.<br />
<br />
Diabetic? High Blood Pressure?  Drinker? Smoker? Under-stress? Use a water softener? <br />
<br />
Then you don't get enough of it.<br />
<br />
It's as close to a "miracle" supplement as you can get for Americans, who don't get enough, yet its under-rated.<br />
<br />
Soak in epsom salt and you'll get more magnesium in you.<br />
<br />
Eat a teaspoon of milk-of-magnesia.<br />
<br />
Magnesium is a component of CHLORYPHIL (can't spell it). The greener it is, the more magnesium it has.<br />
<br />
Wheat germ has a ton of it. White bread has almost none.  molasses has it. nuts have it. But its hard to get enough.<br />
<br />
do a search for sudden death and magnesium and you'll be surprised.<br />
<br />
Weightlifters take it before bed - a combination of magnesium (200-400mg) and B6 - good combinations. Parents of autistic kids also use that combination.  Weightlifters also add Zinc to the mag/b6 combination to increase testostorone levels which help repair muscle.</p>
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	<pubDate>Sat, 06 Oct 2007 14:09:47 -0700</pubDate>
	<title><![CDATA[http://simplify3.stumbleupon.com/review/13228412/]]></title>
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		<p>One of the trouble with modern day online is that is can be tough to meet people who are local and also online.  One would think that it would be easier, being that a whole lot of people now have the ability to go online, have email, join social networking services like myspace, friendster, fubar, orkut, hi5 and a host of others, yet it isn't.<br />
<br />
If you belong to a school, then GREAT - you've got it easy.<br />
<br />
If you go out to work at an office... okay - you have a chance of finding someone local online - but then if its workmates you have to really watch what you say in case it doesn't get back to your boss.<br />
<br />
But if you work from home? Don't go to starbucks? Don't want to "hookup" (that's an important feature) - just want to make friends with people who happen to live nearby?<br />
<br />
Very very tricky.<br />
<br />
Back in the early 1990s, there was a thing called a BBS.  Bulletin Board Service.<br />
<br />
You and your fellow geeks would each set up their computers so that you could dial (with your modem and telephone line) each others computers.  You would set up a BBS (similar to a full-featured website, although everything was colored text with a screensize of 80x25 characters) and call each other's home computers, leave messages, make groups. Some BBS' would have dozens or hundreds of local people on them, all actively chatting away.  All different ages, from teen to senior. And it was pretty cool. Sometimes you'd meet some of the BBS buddies at a local Duncan Donuts (the Starbucks of the day) or White Castle / McDonalds / etc, or just meet up at an empty lot by a supermarket.<br />
<br />
You'd hang out, B.S for a while and then a few hours later (around 2am or whenever the cops came by to break it up) and you'd go home.<br />
<br />
Or you'd go to each others' houses, watch movies, etc.<br />
<br />
In other words, friendships were forged through technology.<br />
<br />
the same was true for CB radios.  Local, geeky, bonded by technological geekiness.<br />
<br />
Ah, I miss those days.<br />
<br />
but perhaps with some of the social networking services out here, maybe it'll get easier.  We'll see.<br />
<br />
Ken Udut<br />
old geek.</p>
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