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chantepierre

440 karmajoined hace 4 años
meet.hn/city/44.4051354,1.4447979/Cahors

Socials: - https://turing-express.fr

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- https://lucassifoni.info/

Submissions

Building an Unbeatable Mechanical 3D Printed Tic-Tac-Toe Computer [video]

youtube.com
1 points·by chantepierre·hace 11 días·0 comments

Wallace the 6 inch f/2.8 telescope, building it, and hiking with it

lucassifoni.info
153 points·by chantepierre·hace 15 días·33 comments

A worm in my Erlang cluster, and adventures in microfluidics

lucassifoni.info
14 points·by chantepierre·el mes pasado·0 comments

The tiniest yet real telescope I've built

lucassifoni.info
272 points·by chantepierre·hace 7 meses·72 comments

comments

chantepierre
·hace 11 días·discuss
Sadly not as I exclusively practice visual astronomy.

Here is a nebula, NGC7000, drawn by an excellent observer, which appears that way (very wide field, but a bit dimmer than their drawing) :

http://www.astrosurf.com/magnitude78/serge/images/NGC7000_10...

My advantage despite the low diameter is the ability to frame such huge objects !
chantepierre
·hace 11 días·discuss
Thanks for the clarification. I don't think so, my largest eyepiece has a field stop of 39mm, and I'm taking advantage of the fact that edge illumination falloff is not perceptible in visual astronomy when the f/D ratio is low.
chantepierre
·hace 11 días·discuss
I'm sorry, I did not find what you meant by a 220 format frame. Is it a film photography type ?
chantepierre
·hace 11 días·discuss
Very nice, are you documenting this somewhere ?
chantepierre
·hace 11 días·discuss
We still do it ! But the designs have evolved, see : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SWhxCwHVPms

I'm planning this kind of build for my 16". It's still a dob, still uses teflon against formica and a wood structure, but the ability to move it easily indeed became a desirable feature.
chantepierre
·hace 12 días·discuss
Well, I could, but checking collimation at 1-2D magnification for an instrument used at 0.16D provides no observable advantage once star collimation was done. My rule of thumb is to star collimate at a higher power than actually used to observe
chantepierre
·hace 12 días·discuss
Hi ! It is quite easy, with 2 tilt screws at the secondary cage, and the primary cell floats on three heavy duty springs. I can shake it and nothing moves, this is my first criteria. I collimate with a cheshire tool but always finish on a star at medium power (since this telescope realistically does not reach high power, since it would need 2mm eyepieces which are the opposite of wide field views). I use it with Explore Scientific 17mm 92 degree, and a 13mm APM XWA 100 degree eyepieces, and do star collimation with a 6.7mm eyepiece.

So most of the use is at 25x, to frame huge objects like NGC7000 or the largest extensions of M31
chantepierre
·hace 12 días·discuss
To me, there are two models that stand out from the crowd :

- The Hadley, a 4"1/2 f/9 dobsonian telescope, which is a smaller aperture but easy to build and to find optics for, and very mature : https://www.printables.com/model/224383-astronomical-telesco...

- The "open smallest telescope" from a friend, which I show here, a foldable 6inch f5 dobsonian : https://lucassifoni.info/blog/2025-best-6-inch-f5-150-750-po... and can be found on Printables : https://www.printables.com/model/1325533-ost-open-smallest-t...

Both are very cool projects, the smallest shows more for deep sky but costs a bit more in optics, and the Hadley has a very mature community.
chantepierre
·hace 12 días·discuss
Hi, thank you !

I am using DFTFringe ( https://github.com/githubdoe/DFTFringe ) with a Bath interferometer (specifically this model which is super handy : https://www.printables.com/model/986094-multi-bath-interfero... ) and this 3-axis table which is bulky but simple to build ( https://www.printables.com/model/860316-xyz-platform-for-bat... ).

I am also trying to automate the XYZ table, capture and analysis like WavefrontPro does, I have a POC going on that bases itself on a CLI-only build of DFTFringe + outside orchestration with Elixir. My goal would be to control everything with a gamepad and automate the whole test session. Here is a video : ( https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ii2eGb7vbk4 ). But I need to throw the code away and rewrite it.
chantepierre
·hace 14 días·discuss
After this year's Paris marathon, I ran the same per-minute graphs, and they match perfectly the "overall study" graphs with more than 9 million finishes in the article. I also added graphing by age category and gender. I don't want to deduce too much but I think it showed that young men are the most "competitive" (what I mean by that is targeting a specific time) since there are the clearest "goal time" peaks in the graphs.
chantepierre
·hace 15 días·discuss
There is no rest. There is just (properly done) a continuous output from start to finish, or a very slight increase of output (negative splitting), but effort to maintain it feels exponential. In terms of feeling, it’s a 32km « dynamic run » where you should feel good, then the hardest 10k you can pull off just after that. If paced properly there should not be a « wall » but at all levels you pass people walking who disintegrated around 30km. Even people with sub-elite/elite bibs sometimes explode.

A half is more intense but way easier, you’re just sub threshold but for a time short enough that you cannot really not make it.
chantepierre
·hace 16 días·discuss
Yeah you're right, I hear it more like "this is a week long hike, not a sprint" as if a marathon included rest. In any length of racing there's no tomorrow. But I'm doing tongue-in-cheek pedanticness here and will stop that right now !
chantepierre
·hace 16 días·discuss
It makes me smile when runners use "X is a marathon, not a sprint" to hint at an effort that accumulates over time and an optimal use of energy.

I do it too because it's a common expression, and a marathon is of course longer than a sprint, but both have in common that properly raced, they are absolutely brutal efforts that leave you without a single additional drop at the end. The effort length and instantaneous power output changes, of course. Maybe "it's a marathon build, not the race" would be more precise at the loss of nearly all its expressive power (but with a lot more pedanticism points) :-p .

Nice project !
chantepierre
·hace 26 días·discuss
"German mode" is an interesting idea !
chantepierre
·el mes pasado·discuss
I routinely use "load bearing" in conversations and writing, both seriously and ironically (like a "load bearing just" or "load bearing paint").. maybe I should stop.
chantepierre
·hace 2 meses·discuss
I felt that but find it worked way better by invoking it with `claude --effort max` only
chantepierre
·hace 3 meses·discuss
The hydrogel textures (not maurten but naak, but close enough), for me, allow while racing to swallow a full 40g gel in half a second without feeling the sugary taste a lot, which is nice. Compared to thick syrup-like gels, it’s a way better experience in a marathon.

But I only buy for actual races, rest of the time, I do my own 1:0.8 mix with a bit of thickener, in soft flasks. Much more cost effective.
chantepierre
·hace 4 meses·discuss
Converting an app that started per-client deploy, single-tenant, cloud-ignorant and mono-node to multi-tenant, multi-node, cloud storage and a cluster of a few nodes.

On one hand, I regret not having thought it could find a market and I now have to do this and plan a migration.

On the other, I saved a lot of time going to customers instead of building the boring side first... So I don't know what to think of it.

I find that most of the development work is now "ops" instead of user-facing features (either addition, removal, or polish) and am a bit perplex at this.
chantepierre
·hace 4 meses·discuss
Here is a 6in f/5 travel truss dob kit by my friend :

https://www.printables.com/model/1325533-smallest-telescope-...

Wallace, my 6” f/2.8 :

https://www.printables.com/model/997327-wallace-6-f28-telesc...

And my tiny but mighty 3” f/4 : https://www.printables.com/model/1475113-76300-pocket-dobson

Wallace is built, but Gromit, a 16.5” F/3, is under progress. Working on the mirror and CAD :)
chantepierre
·hace 7 meses·discuss
Re : running relaxed, it is said that the real marathon is the training you put in, and the race itself should feel like a celebration. I am not anywhere near elite level but felt that for a lot of races. The hardships of the training enables a state of deep calm, joy and feeling like you are flying the morning of the actual race. Nights before races are often very bad, like a last storm before everything clears and your mind is finally empty when you get into the corral. Then, with a clear mind, you proceed to run with joy despite being physically tired by the training and sleepless night.