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1000 results for “m_cadek”

  1. Tonight's #SvenTune parodies "I'm Sitting on Top of the World" by Ray Henderson, Sam M. Lewis and Joe Young, published in 1925. The first hit version recorded by Al Jolson. #svengoolie en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I%27m_Si

  2. Tonight's #SvenTune parodies "I'm Sitting on Top of the World" by Ray Henderson, Sam M. Lewis and Joe Young, published in 1925. The first hit version recorded by Al Jolson. #svengoolie en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I%27m_Si

  3. Tonight's #SvenTune parodies "I'm Sitting on Top of the World" by Ray Henderson, Sam M. Lewis and Joe Young, published in 1925. The first hit version recorded by Al Jolson. #svengoolie en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I%27m_Si

  4. Tonight's #SvenTune parodies "I'm Sitting on Top of the World" by Ray Henderson, Sam M. Lewis and Joe Young, published in 1925. The first hit version recorded by Al Jolson. #svengoolie en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I%27m_Si

  5. Tonight's #SvenTune parodies "I'm Sitting on Top of the World" by Ray Henderson, Sam M. Lewis and Joe Young, published in 1925. The first hit version recorded by Al Jolson. #svengoolie en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I%27m_Si

  6. #RossDouthat : "I am one of them, which is why all of my future columns about North American Union will begin, "As a proud Canadian ..."" | nitter
    nitter.net/DouthatNYT/status/2

    In response to "Canada passed a bill meant to fix a technicality affecting a few dozen people, but accidentally gave >4 million people Canada citizenship by right."

    Great job, Ottawa.

    #CanPol #cdnpoli

  7. #RossDouthat : "I am one of them, which is why all of my future columns about North American Union will begin, "As a proud Canadian ..."" | nitter
    nitter.net/DouthatNYT/status/2

    In response to "Canada passed a bill meant to fix a technicality affecting a few dozen people, but accidentally gave >4 million people Canada citizenship by right."

    Great job, Ottawa.

    #CanPol #cdnpoli

  8. @m_hundhausen @rio ... welche Lufttemperaturen erreicht man im #Solarkocher im Brennfokus ?

    ... PS.: heute wäre sicherlich ein guter Feiertagsmittag um die maximale Solarkochertemperatur zu ermitteln bzw. zu messen ;)

    ... die diesjährige ALDI (nord): "CROFTON Teekanne aus Gusseisen mit klappbarem Griff ca. 0,8 L"

    ist innen emailliert" <==_(!)_

    "Die Teekanne ist NUR zum Servieren gedacht" (?)

    ca 11,5 cm hoch
    der schwarze Bügel muß metallisch sein, da ein magnet so wie am Kannenkörper anhaftet.

    "GTIN:4068706816574 Fabiqué en Chine"

    anscheinend aber ein andere Inverkehrbringer als die negativ bewertet Vorjahresproduktion: "GEDA LABELs GMbH"
    "DE 2009010123271 02/2026" <== _!_?

    @alemana

    #SolarKocher #jederSolarfanZählt #Kochgeschirr4Solarkocher

  9. @m_hundhausen

    Der Sprung von gestern auf heute war das Einpreisen des Tankrabats.

    Das wird dann wieder gesenkt und dann kostet der Sprit das gleiche wie vorgestern und die Fossilindustrie steckt sich die 17 Cent Tankrabat in die eigenen Taschen. Alles wie geplant.

    #tankrabatt #cdu #csu #union #fossilLobby

  10. M!LK、自身初のストリーミング1・2位独占 1位「爆裂愛してる」、2位「好きすぎて滅!」【オリコンランキング】
    oricon.co.jp/news/2451881/full/

    #oricon_news #M_LK #音楽 #音楽ランキング #ニュース #画像 #写真

  11. Wab Kinew says Manitoba will ban social media and AI for youth
    nationalpost.com/news/canada/m

    Putting aside for a moment whether this is good policy, does a provincial government in Canada have the power to ban certain modes of communication? Does the federal government?

    #CanPol #cdnpoli
    #NationalPost

  12. M.K. befeuert wieder das geistige Selbstbetrugssystem seiner Jünger 1 #Signal bringt kompromitierbaren Mist aus 2 #Putin Trolle nutzen das aus 3 User fallen auf #Influenzer der #SignalApp rein 4 #Bundesregierung wird von #Russland ausspioniert Mit #Threema unmöglich! #Kuketz entlarvt Teil 39

  13. M.C. Escher and CP Violation

    I’ve had these pictures for quite a while and can’t remember where I got them from, but I used to show them in my lectures on Theoretical Particle Physics when I was in Nottingham to illustrate CP-violation and used them in this morning’s lecture at Maynooth.

    The following picture by M.C. Escher is called Day and Night:

    If you look at it you can see two kinds of symmetry emerging. One is a kind of reflection symmetry about a vertical axis drawn through the centre of the picture that applies to shapes but not to colour. The other is between black and white. But it is obvious that the picture doesn’t display these symmetries separately: to get a picture unchanged from the original you would have to do the mirror reflection and change black to white (and vice-versa).

    The mirror reflection in the image can be taken to represent parity (P). Strictly speaking parity refers to a reflection through the origin in 3D rather than a mirror reflection, but it’s just for illustration. We know that a parity symmetry is violated in weak interactions just as it is in the picture.

    The other possible symmetry, between black and white can be taken to represent charge-conjugation (C), the operation that converts particles into anti-particles and vice-versa.

    While P is not an exact symmetry of weak interactions, it was long thought that the combination of C and P (CP) would be. Actually it isn’t. The story of the discovery of CP-violation is fascinating but I don’t have time to go into it here. It suffices to say that the Escher print also displays CP violation.

    First lets do `C’, i.e. convert black to white and vice-versa. The result is:

    Now reflect about the vertical mid-line to illustrate `P’:

    If `CP’ were an exact symmetry then that image would be identical to the original, which I reproduce here:

    You can see, however, that while some elements of the picture do look the same after this combined operation (e.g. the birds), others (e.g. the buildings at the bottom) do not. Although CP is not an exact symmetry of this picture, it is almost (just like it is in particle physics).

    #CPViolation #DayAndNight #MCEscher #ParticlePhysics
  14. M.C. Escher and CP Violation

    I’ve had these pictures for quite a while and can’t remember where I got them from, but I used to show them in my lectures on Theoretical Particle Physics when I was in Nottingham to illustrate CP-violation and used them in this morning’s lecture at Maynooth.

    The following picture by M.C. Escher is called Day and Night:

    If you look at it you can see two kinds of symmetry emerging. One is a kind of reflection symmetry about a vertical axis drawn through the centre of the picture that applies to shapes but not to colour. The other is between black and white. But it is obvious that the picture doesn’t display these symmetries separately: to get a picture unchanged from the original you would have to do the mirror reflection and change black to white (and vice-versa).

    The mirror reflection in the image can be taken to represent parity (P). Strictly speaking parity refers to a reflection through the origin in 3D rather than a mirror reflection, but it’s just for illustration. We know that a parity symmetry is violated in weak interactions just as it is in the picture.

    The other possible symmetry, between black and white can be taken to represent charge-conjugation (C), the operation that converts particles into anti-particles and vice-versa.

    While P is not an exact symmetry of weak interactions, it was long thought that the combination of C and P (CP) would be. Actually it isn’t. The story of the discovery of CP-violation is fascinating but I don’t have time to go into it here. It suffices to say that the Escher print also displays CP violation.

    First lets do `C’, i.e. convert black to white and vice-versa. The result is:

    Now reflect about the vertical mid-line to illustrate `P’:

    If `CP’ were an exact symmetry then that image would be identical to the original, which I reproduce here:

    You can see, however, that while some elements of the picture do look the same after this combined operation (e.g. the birds), others (e.g. the buildings at the bottom) do not. Although CP is not an exact symmetry of this picture, it is almost (just like it is in particle physics).

    #CPViolation #DayAndNight #MCEscher #ParticlePhysics
  15. M.C. Escher and CP Violation

    I’ve had these pictures for quite a while and can’t remember where I got them from, but I used to show them in my lectures on Theoretical Particle Physics when I was in Nottingham to illustrate CP-violation and used them in this morning’s lecture at Maynooth.

    The following picture by M.C. Escher is called Day and Night:

    If you look at it you can see two kinds of symmetry emerging. One is a kind of reflection symmetry about a vertical axis drawn through the centre of the picture that applies to shapes but not to colour. The other is between black and white. But it is obvious that the picture doesn’t display these symmetries separately: to get a picture unchanged from the original you would have to do the mirror reflection and change black to white (and vice-versa).

    The mirror reflection in the image can be taken to represent parity (P). Strictly speaking parity refers to a reflection through the origin in 3D rather than a mirror reflection, but it’s just for illustration. We know that a parity symmetry is violated in weak interactions just as it is in the picture.

    The other possible symmetry, between black and white can be taken to represent charge-conjugation (C), the operation that converts particles into anti-particles and vice-versa.

    While P is not an exact symmetry of weak interactions, it was long thought that the combination of C and P (CP) would be. Actually it isn’t. The story of the discovery of CP-violation is fascinating but I don’t have time to go into it here. It suffices to say that the Escher print also displays CP violation.

    First lets do `C’, i.e. convert black to white and vice-versa. The result is:

    Now reflect about the vertical mid-line to illustrate `P’:

    If `CP’ were an exact symmetry then that image would be identical to the original, which I reproduce here:

    You can see, however, that while some elements of the picture do look the same after this combined operation (e.g. the birds), others (e.g. the buildings at the bottom) do not. Although CP is not an exact symmetry of this picture, it is almost (just like it is in particle physics).

    #CPViolation #DayAndNight #MCEscher #ParticlePhysics
  16. M.C. Escher and CP Violation

    I’ve had these pictures for quite a while and can’t remember where I got them from, but I used to show them in my lectures on Theoretical Particle Physics when I was in Nottingham to illustrate CP-violation and used them in this morning’s lecture at Maynooth.

    The following picture by M.C. Escher is called Day and Night:

    If you look at it you can see two kinds of symmetry emerging. One is a kind of reflection symmetry about a vertical axis drawn through the centre of the picture that applies to shapes but not to colour. The other is between black and white. But it is obvious that the picture doesn’t display these symmetries separately: to get a picture unchanged from the original you would have to do the mirror reflection and change black to white (and vice-versa).

    The mirror reflection in the image can be taken to represent parity (P). Strictly speaking parity refers to a reflection through the origin in 3D rather than a mirror reflection, but it’s just for illustration. We know that a parity symmetry is violated in weak interactions just as it is in the picture.

    The other possible symmetry, between black and white can be taken to represent charge-conjugation (C), the operation that converts particles into anti-particles and vice-versa.

    While P is not an exact symmetry of weak interactions, it was long thought that the combination of C and P (CP) would be. Actually it isn’t. The story of the discovery of CP-violation is fascinating but I don’t have time to go into it here. It suffices to say that the Escher print also displays CP violation.

    First lets do `C’, i.e. convert black to white and vice-versa. The result is:

    Now reflect about the vertical mid-line to illustrate `P’:

    If `CP’ were an exact symmetry then that image would be identical to the original, which I reproduce here:

    You can see, however, that while some elements of the picture do look the same after this combined operation (e.g. the birds), others (e.g. the buildings at the bottom) do not. Although CP is not an exact symmetry of this picture, it is almost (just like it is in particle physics).

    #CPViolation #DayAndNight #MCEscher #ParticlePhysics
  17. M.C. Escher and CP Violation

    I’ve had these pictures for quite a while and can’t remember where I got them from, but I used to show them in my lectures on Theoretical Particle Physics when I was in Nottingham to illustrate CP-violation and used them in this morning’s lecture at Maynooth.

    The following picture by M.C. Escher is called Day and Night:

    If you look at it you can see two kinds of symmetry emerging. One is a kind of reflection symmetry about a vertical axis drawn through the centre of the picture that applies to shapes but not to colour. The other is between black and white. But it is obvious that the picture doesn’t display these symmetries separately: to get a picture unchanged from the original you would have to do the mirror reflection and change black to white (and vice-versa).

    The mirror reflection in the image can be taken to represent parity (P). Strictly speaking parity refers to a reflection through the origin in 3D rather than a mirror reflection, but it’s just for illustration. We know that a parity symmetry is violated in weak interactions just as it is in the picture.

    The other possible symmetry, between black and white can be taken to represent charge-conjugation (C), the operation that converts particles into anti-particles and vice-versa.

    While P is not an exact symmetry of weak interactions, it was long thought that the combination of C and P (CP) would be. Actually it isn’t. The story of the discovery of CP-violation is fascinating but I don’t have time to go into it here. It suffices to say that the Escher print also displays CP violation.

    First lets do `C’, i.e. convert black to white and vice-versa. The result is:

    Now reflect about the vertical mid-line to illustrate `P’:

    If `CP’ were an exact symmetry then that image would be identical to the original, which I reproduce here:

    You can see, however, that while some elements of the picture do look the same after this combined operation (e.g. the birds), others (e.g. the buildings at the bottom) do not. Although CP is not an exact symmetry of this picture, it is almost (just like it is in particle physics).

    #CPViolation #DayAndNight #MCEscher #ParticlePhysics
  18. "security professionals now rank in the bottom three for overall workplace satisfaction alongside QA testers and infrastructure bods"

    Ah, cyber security, QA, DevOps, all the unimportant, costly stuff. The triumvirate of project blockers. 😉

    theregister.com/2026/04/27/fro

    #cybersecurity #skillsgap

  19. "security professionals now rank in the bottom three for overall workplace satisfaction alongside QA testers and infrastructure bods"

    Ah, cyber security, QA, DevOps, all the unimportant, costly stuff. The triumvirate of project blockers. 😉

    theregister.com/2026/04/27/fro

    #cybersecurity #skillsgap