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Cake day: October 4th, 2023

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  • But what Ms Salagaras and the dozens of others who purchased the cookies didn’t know was that their baked goods were five days old, purchased at a store in Hawaii by people unaffiliated with Crumbl Cookie (Crumbl), and flown back to Australia.

    Hmm. Setting aside trademark law, that sounds like a legitimate concern from a consumer standpoint. This “Crumbl Cookie” company presumably wouldn’t intentionally sell five-day-old baked goods under their brand, and as a consumer, I’d distinguish between fresh cookies and five-day-old cookies, even if five-day-old cookies are perfectly edible. Maybe there’s an argument for making it normal to also rate the maximum age of a given baked good – I don’t know if that’s mandated in the US, but bakeries I’ve seen normally distinguish between bagels and day-old bagels, for example.

    But setting legalities aside…I wonder how practical it would be to do something like this and get better output than these guys flying the things did?

    Most of the time, it probably makes sense to just bake whatever the thing is domestically. But it sounds like the issue here is that the demand is small in scale, not enough to support a domestic bakery:

    “I think the fact that our market is small here, means that there’s a lot of things that never get here,” said Ellen Garbarino, a professor in marketing at the University of Sydney’s Business School.

    According to Professor Garbarino, many international brands are unlikely to open permanent locations in Australia due to the required costs and expected return.

    “The cost of setting that up is pretty high, to get it into the shelves or to get a retail outlet and pay rent and get customers and get staff and all those kinds of things, and get over the laws of a different country.”

    So for Australia – and, hell, anyone to some degree – it might make sense to just try to do a better job of being able to ship stuff and keep it as fresh as possible.

    https://www.quora.com/What-chemical-reaction-causes-food-to-go-stale

    There isn’t a single well-defined meaning of “stale.” When we say bread is stale, we usually mean it’s hard. Interestingly, this is due to the bread absorbing water from the air (water usually softens things, doesn’t it?) If bread is slightly hardened, you may be able to restore some of its freshness by microwaving it. This will make it obviously moist, and you can then toast it. This is also a good procedure if you freeze bread, which we have to do in our household because otherwise we eat way too much :) It’s not like super-fresh bread, but I find it edible.

    Another meaning of “stale” is partially rotten or rancid. Rotting is generally due to bacterial growth. Rancidification is chemical oxidation of fats to fatty acids, which is why rancid butter tastes sour (acids are sour).

    I mean, there are ways that you can counter that. They will add cost to the item. But they’re doable.

    Like, you can make something not rot by irradiating it sufficiently and then sealing the food in a sterile environment.

    Storing them in a low-oxygen environment, like under carbon dioxide, can cut into oxidation (though I’m not sure that that’d help much for cookies if they use yeast to rise, since the yeast would require oxygen, though maybe they’re okay if you use baking soda to make them rise).

    You could control humidity in the transport container.

    https://discover.texasrealfood.com/food-shelf-life/oreos

    The shelf life of Oreos can depend on various factors, including the storage method and whether the package has been opened. A packet of Oreos typically comes with a “best before” date, which is usually set for 9 to 12 months after the manufacturing date. This date serves as a guideline for optimal freshness rather than a hard expiration date. When stored properly in a cool, dry place, unopened Oreos can retain their quality slightly beyond this date, while opened Oreos should be consumed within a shorter timeframe to enjoy their characteristic crunch and flavor.

    Oreos are designed to have a pretty impressive shelf life, as long as you don’t open the package. They’re very dry. The problem with these “Crumbl Cookie” things is trying to use a cookie that isn’t designed to have a shelf life but to get more of one. So you can’t alter the cookie, can’t add preservatives or something.

    But some of the processes I listed above don’t require modifying the original cookie.



  • Even if it doesn’t happen prior to some form of peace agreement or something…that’s an interesting thought. Like, any scenario where the conflict restarts would place Ukraine in a considerably more-favorable position militarily than is the case today. Today, simply by dint of weapons each has available, Russia has much more ability to attack Ukrainian territory than vice versa. But in the event of such a guarantee and Russia restarting conflict with Ukraine in some form, Russia wouldn’t be able to touch a lot of Ukraine’s territory without starting a conflict with NATO, but Ukraine would have a free hand to hit Russia’s territory, with whatever weapons it could obtain.


  • I’m not saying that that wouldn’t work, but that seems like an excessively-complicated bit of lawyering.

    If the goal is to provide NATO guarantees for part of Ukraine’s territory, but not to provide guarantees for another part of it, to counter Russia playing the “as long as I control part of your territory, you can’t join NATO” bit, the only thing that produces the guarantee is what’s on the paper of the NATO Treaty.

    That treaty text is not written in stone. As long as all the members – and this assumes that we can avoid excessive shennanigans of the sort that Hungary and Turkey did around Sweden and Finland joining – are okay with it, the treaty text can be revised to say whatever. Yeah, you need unanimity for any such revision, but you need unanimity anyway to add a member, so the bar is no different from having Ukraine join in any other way.

    NATO Treaty Article 6 defines the scope of Article 5 coverage.

    https://www.nato.int/cps/en/natohq/official_texts_17120.htm

    Article 6

    For the purpose of Article 5, an armed attack on one or more of the Parties is deemed to include an armed attack:

    • on the territory of any of the Parties in Europe or North America, on the Algerian Departments of France, on the territory of Turkey or on the Islands under the jurisdiction of any of the Parties in the North Atlantic area north of the Tropic of Cancer;
    • on the forces, vessels, or aircraft of any of the Parties, when in or over these territories or any other area in Europe in which occupation forces of any of the Parties were stationed on the date when the Treaty entered into force or the Mediterranean Sea or the North Atlantic area north of the Tropic of Cancer.

    In the original treaty, the bit about Turkey – much of Turkey’s territory is outside Europe – was not present. When Turkey joined, we did a small revision to extend NATO coverage – which originally did not cover territory outside of the Mediterranean, North Atlantic, Europe, and North America at all. Even today, the treaty does not guarantee against attacks on European territories like New Caledonia or American territories like Hawaii.

    Honestly, I think that there may be a very legitimate argument that given that Romania and Bulgaria joined – and this becomes even more-significant with a Ukrainian membership – that the scope of Article 6 should be extended to the Black Sea, as we did with Turkey when Turkey joined. Otherwise, it’s possible for Russia to perform a blockade on NATO Black Sea powers and sink their warships without them being able to avail themselves of NATO Article 5 protection.


  • tal@lemmy.todaytoTechnology@lemmy.worldHow are holograms possible?
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    1 hour ago

    Hmm.

    You’d think that you could take three exposures, using a red, blue, and green laser, and then use optics to recombine the output to create a color hologram.

    But I’ve never heard of such a thing. I wonder if there’s some kind of physical limitation that I can’t think of preventing it?

    kagis

    Nope. Apparently you can do exactly that, and devices do exist to do it:

    https://www.litiholo.com/hologram-kits-color.html

    First I’d seen of this, though.

    EDIT: Ah, late in the video, they actually do show a few color holograms, the most-obvious of which is probably the R2D2 shot, which clearly has both blue and red.


  • By the same logic I would think this idea would be legal as well.

    That’s a thought, though I’d also point out that this might involve international law, and there might be different doctrines involved in international law.

    Also, international law on involvement in warfare is fluid. I remember reading an article pointing out that if you go back, to, say, the pre-World War era, the obligations on non-involved parties were generally held to be much stricter – like, doing something like having preferential arms export policy to one party would be considered involvement in a conflict. When Switzerland, earlier, refused to export Gepard ammunition to Ukraine, that’s not really in line with the present norm, where countries often do provide arms to countries and consider that to be separate from being directly involved, but it does conform to historical rules on neutrality.

    kagis

    Not the article I was thinking of, but this is some related discussion:

    https://crsreports.congress.gov/product/pdf/LSB/LSB10735/3

    International neutrality law governs the legal relationship between countries that are not taking part in an international armed conflict (neutral states) and those that are engaged in such a conflict (belligerents). The international community developed the principles of the international law of neutrality in an era before the Charter of the United Nations (U.N.) prohibited using force as a tool to resolve international conflict. Scholars have described the law of neutrality as an “old body of law” with a “slightly musty quality” that does not always translate to modern warfare.

    Russia and Ukraine are engaged in an international armed conflict and, thus, are belligerents. Under traditional conceptions of neutrality, sending “war material of any kind” to Ukraine or any other belligerent would violate a duty of neutrality; however, some countries, including the United States, have adopted the doctrine of qualified neutrality. Under this doctrine, states can take non-neutral acts when supporting the victim of an unlawful war of aggression. For the reasons discussed in an earlier Sidebar, Ukraine has firm grounds to contend that it is such a victim and is acting in self-defense. Under these circumstances, arms assistance to Ukraine would generally be lawful under the qualified neutrality doctrine, provided that Ukraine complies with other legal frameworks governing the conduct of hostilities.


  • There was that cat in the news a few years back who drove off that dog that was attacking and dragging a little boy in that family.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EEa6jZv-Khc

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LSG_wBiTEE8

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tara_(cat)

    On May 13, 2014, Jeremy Triantafilo, a four-year-old boy, was riding his bicycle in his family’s driveway in Bakersfield, California when Scrappy, a neighbor’s eight-month-old Labrador-Chow mix cross, came from behind and bit his leg.[9] As the dog began dragging Jeremy down his driveway, Tara, who the family states was very attached to Jeremy, tackled the dog and chased him away before returning to Jeremy’s side to check on him.

    Jeremy needed ten stitches in his left calf following the attack. He quickly recovered and was thankful for Tara’s actions calling her “my hero”.[10]

    If mean, if I were a cat – smaller than the dog in question, and physically less-able to take on larger animals than a dog anyway – and the dog was already doing a number on a human, that’s not a fight I’d casually jump into. And while there are a few social cat species, like lions, I don’t think that the wildcat ancestor of the housecat is a social animal, so it’s probably not really geared up to be helping out other members of a pride or anything.

    kagis

    Yeah, it’s solitary:

    https://synapsida.blogspot.com/2020/03/small-cats-domestic-cats-closest.html

    Among these three species, the one thought to be closest of all to the domestic animal is the sand cat (Felis margarita). This split off from the line leading to the wildcats and the Chinese mountain cat around 2.5 million years ago, just before the Ice Ages got going, while the other species (or their immediate ancestors) seem to have been around since the Late Pliocene 3 to 3.5 million years ago.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sand_cat

    The sand cat is solitary, except during the mating season and when a female has kittens.



  • Honestly, given a canine’s physical capabilities, I’m not sure that I could have done as well as she did in that situation.

    And for a dog, what had to have gone into that…

    • Assess that her owner was in trouble.

    • Assess that another human could help. I’m not sure that that’s an obvious conclusion for a dog to come to from an evolutionary standpoint. My guess is that most cases, in a pack of wild dogs, for most problems short of being attacked by something, there’s not a whole lot that bringing another dog to help is going to do, if one gets hurt.

    • She had to plan out in advance a way to get a human to do what she needed them to do.

    • Assess that disrupting traffic would be a way to get attention. That is, she had to have a model of the mental state of other humans sufficient to predict how they’d act in a situation that I doubt that she’d seen before.

    • Evade capture when someone tried to capture her.

    • And keep them interested enough to follow her to the cabin.











  • IIRC from reading an few earlier articles, the limiting factor is that Iran’s nuclear weapons facilities are underground and can potentially only be penetrated with very large weapons. According to what I read, Israel apparently doesn’t have conventional weapons that can penetrate, which would mean that the US, with heavier bombers, would have to do the strike (and Biden said that he didn’t support hitting the nuclear facilities).

    That being said, I haven’t seen anything about using multiple weapons to impact the same spot, and I’m suspicious that with the accuracy of weapons today, it may be possible to just repeatedly hit a single spot and break through.

    EDIT:

    https://www.businessinsider.com/israel-not-able-to-take-down-iran-nuclear-sites-own-2024-10

    https://archive.ph/nk1KB#selection-2009.126-2017.96

    “Israel can damage Iran’s nuclear program without US assistance, but it is unclear if it can by itself carry out the type of sustained and penetrating conventional attack that would seriously set back the program,” Farzan Sabet, senior research associate at the Geneva Graduate Institute, told Business Insider.

    And I guess that it’s not impossible that Israel could have – knowing that Iran has underground facilities – built something that they’ve kept quiet specifically aimed at penetration.

    I don’t know how hard building a tandem-charge weapon is, but Israel has produced the tandem-charge Spike, and I imagine that they could have some kind of heavier tandem-charge weapon that they’ve quietly tucked away for this sort of situation.