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Things that are IDM as Fuck


Guest analogue wings

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  A/D said:
Not sure how to categorize except electronic music. A nice lady makes some cool harmonics with a microphone in an unconventional way. NSFW. Probably jazzband, I'm sorry.

 

 

WAUW! With enough reverb those harmonics would make great ambient pads

 

EDIT: PLus she's hot

Edited by Squee
  • 2 months later...
  Squee said:
  A/D said:
Not sure how to categorize except electronic music. A nice lady makes some cool harmonics with a microphone in an unconventional way. NSFW. Probably jazzband, I'm sorry.

 

 

WAUW! With enough reverb those harmonics would make great ambient pads

 

EDIT: PLus she's hot

 

I think it's feedback and resonance. Since her mouth is a resonant chamber, any movement will change the frequency of feedback. You know when you completely cup a microphone and it starts to feed back? It's the same idea, but it's a chamber that can move, so she's able to alter the pitch.

 

Plus she's hot.

  A/D said:
just watched this video again and got a boner, again. i like how the camera guy has to leave because of his obvious boner.

 

 

haha, the way he sorta skulks off is lol

  On 5/7/2013 at 11:06 PM, ambermonk said:

I know IDM can be extreme

  On 6/3/2017 at 11:50 PM, ladalaika said:

this sounds like an airplane landing on a minefield

He gave distracting himself with the camera one last try but it didn't take long for him to realize that it wasn't gonna work. familiar time patterns

  • 2 weeks later...
Guest analogue wings

Laser-bonded Healing

 

2-14-09-laser-bonded-healin.jpg

 

  Quote
Despite medicine's inestimable progress over the past century, surgery can still leave scars that look more appropriate to Frankenstein's monster than to the beneficiary of a precise, modern operation. But in the Wellman Center for Photomedicine at Massachusetts General Hospital, Irene Kochevar and Robert Redmond have developed a method that has the potential to replace the surgeon's needle and thread. Using surgical lasers and a light-activated dye, the researchers are prompting tissue to heal itself.

 

Laser-bonded healing is not a new idea. For years, scientists have been trying to find ways to use the heat generated by lasers to weld skin back together. But they've had a difficult time finding the right balance. Too little heat and a wound won't heal; too much and the tissue dies. Eight years ago, one of Kochevar and Redmond's colleagues was examining pathology slides of cells killed by this kind of thermal healing when it occurred to him that it might be possible to use just the light of a laser, rather than its heat.

 

While the idea of skin weaving itself back together may sound more like superhero lore than surgical skill, the science is startlingly simple. The team took advantage of the fact that a number of dyes are activated in the presence of light. In the case of Rose Bengal--a stain used in just about every ophthalmologist's office to detect corneal lesions--the researchers believe that light helps transfer electrons between the dye molecule and collagen, the major structural component of tissue. This produces highly reactive free radicals that cause the molecular chains of collagen to chemically bond to each other, or "cross-link." Paint two sides of a wound with Rose Benga­l, illuminate it with intense light, and the sides will knit themselves back together. "We call this nano suturing," Kochevar says, "because what you're doing is linking together the little collagen fibers. It's way beyond anything that a thread of any kind can do."

 

The benefits of such nano suturing are manifold. In just about every case, it appears to result in faster procedures, less scarring, and possibly fewer infections, since it seals openings completely and leaves no gap through which bacteria can penetrate. This makes it particularly well suited for closing not only superficial skin incisions but also those made in eye and nerve operations. In eye surgeries, such as corneal replacement, stitches that can cause irritation and infection must sometimes be left in place for months, which can aggravate complications. In nerve surgeries, damage from scar tissue can decrease the conduction of neural impulses. "If you put a needle through skin, it's not a big deal," says Redmon­d. "But if you put it through a nerve it's a big deal, because you're destroying part of the nerve."

  • 2 weeks later...
Guest blicero
  tv_party said:
  triachus said:
fish

 

 

 

WITH TRANSPARENT HEAD

 

 

 

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/20...ture/index.html

 

  tv_party said:
edit: fuck

 

  blicero said:

 

LOL -- that just reinforces how fucking IDM that shit is.

Guest tv_party
  blicero said:
  tv_party said:
  triachus said:
fish

 

 

 

WITH TRANSPARENT HEAD

 

 

 

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/20...ture/index.html

 

  tv_party said:
edit: fuck

 

  blicero said:

 

LOL -- that just reinforces how fucking IDM that shit is.

 

well let's run with it then

 

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