HackerTrans
TopNewTrendsCommentsPastAskShowJobs

hezag

no profile record

Submissions

Zen Browser makes RSS and GitHub PRs first-class citizens via Live Folders

zen-browser.app
3 points·by hezag·4 tháng trước·2 comments

AfricaMuseum refuses to yield Congo geological archives despite US pressure

vrt.be
17 points·by hezag·4 tháng trước·10 comments

comments

hezag
·4 tháng trước·discuss
Not affiliated with the Zen Browser team, just a user who got excited about this latest release.

I submitted this because of the new "Live Folders" feature. For a long time, RSS has felt relegated to third-party extensions or separate reader apps. Zen's update integrates RSS feeds and GitHub Issues/PRs directly into the sidebar tab hierarchy.
hezag
·năm ngoái·discuss
Disclamer: the elephant in the room has nothing to do with ElePHPant, the PHP mascot.
hezag
·2 năm trước·discuss
Loved this practical guide publication format. Anyone know other magazines like this Everyday Practical Electronics?
hezag
·3 năm trước·discuss
You can share the Camera folder with the "send only" mode in the phone app.
hezag
·3 năm trước·discuss
> all under the guise of helping users who want to save money (poor people) even though this category lacks the skills and the interest to repair their devices anyway outside of a rare few exceptions

This is simply not true. At least in my country, poor people generally have interest and the skills to repair their devices (or to pay someone to do so, as it's cheaper than buying a new one)
hezag
·3 năm trước·discuss


  > If the book is available in the district libraries, that means it was approved by a media specialist and can be made available to students again. But any book not currently held in the district libraries must be individually evaluated and approved by a librarian. 

So... It's an allowlist and not a denylist. Even worse.
hezag
·4 năm trước·discuss
And snap, Appimage...
hezag
·4 năm trước·discuss
> "The bot is very deep on gender ideology"

Ok... Totally unbiased statement. /s
hezag
·4 năm trước·discuss
And since there is no such thing as an "impartial observer"...
hezag
·4 năm trước·discuss
Abstract of the research article:

  > Fungi are central to every terrestrial and many aquatic ecosystems, but the mechanisms underlying fungal tolerance to mercury, a global pollutant, remain unknown. Here, we show that the plant symbiotic fungus Metarhizium robertsii degrades methylmercury and reduces divalent mercury, decreasing mercury accumulation in plants and greatly increasing their growth in contaminated soils. M. robertsii does this by demethylating methylmercury via a methylmercury demethylase (MMD) and using a mercury ion reductase (MIR) to reduce divalent mercury to volatile elemental mercury. M. robertsii can also remove methylmercury and divalent mercury from fresh and sea water even in the absence of added nutrients. Overexpression of MMD and MIR significantly improved the ability of M. robertsii to bioremediate soil and water contaminated with methylmercury and divalent mercury. MIR homologs, and thereby divalent mercury tolerance, are widespread in fungi. In contrast, MMD homologs were patchily distributed among the few plant associates and soil fungi that were also able to demethylate methylmercury. Phylogenetic analysis suggests that fungi could have acquired methylmercury demethylase genes from bacteria via two independent horizontal gene transfer events. Heterologous expression of MMD in fungi that lack MMD homologs enabled them to demethylate methylmercury. Our work reveals the mechanisms underlying mercury tolerance in fungi, and may provide a cheap and environmentally friendly means of cleaning up mercury pollution.
https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2214513119