I also use @zksmk@slrpnk.net and @zksmk@lemmy.ml
- 32 Posts
- 17 Comments
zksmk@sopuli.xyzOPMto
Map Enthusiasts@sopuli.xyz•Expansion of Al-Qaeda and the Islamic State in West Africa in first half of 2023
5·2 years agoAnd here’s a map of the recent/currently ongoing Niger coup:

And the ratio of the forces of the Islamist fighters and the ECOWAS coalition forces (currently committed: Nigeria, Senegal, Côte d’Ivoire, and Benin):

zksmk@sopuli.xyzOPMto
Map Enthusiasts@sopuli.xyz•Global antineutrinos emitted from nuclear power stations
891·2 years agoAntineutrinos don’t interact with almost anything. They’re just a bunch of wimps. They’re harmless. Neat for mapping nuclear reactors tho.
zksmk@sopuli.xyzOPMto
Map Enthusiasts@sopuli.xyz•European Parliament election seat projections by EuropeElects [conducted July 2023]
5·2 years agoContext:
- light blue: center-right
- red: center-left
- yellow: liberal
- black: far-right
- green: green/regionalist
- dark blue: conservative
- dark red: left
- gray: not in any group
- white: not in parliament currently
zksmk@sopuli.xyzOPMto
Map Enthusiasts@sopuli.xyz•Map of Yeísmo in the Spanish speaking world. Blue areas have the same sound for y and ll [IPA:/ʝ/; ENG:"y"], areas in pink maintain a distinction between the two sounds [IPA:/ʝ/+/ʎ/; ENG:"y"+"ly"]
11·2 years agoWhat I find interesting about this is that this transition also happened in highly unrelated languages such as Hungarian, Greek and Swedish, not only in related Portuguese and French.
- In Hungarian, /ʎ/ in most dialects turned into /j/, but the spelling ⟨ly⟩ was preserved, hence lyuk [juk].
- In Swedish, /lj/ turned into /j/ in word-initial positions, but the spelling ⟨lj⟩ was preserved, hence ljus [ˈjʉːs].
- In Cypriot Greek, /lj/ is often pronounced as [ʝː], especially by younger speakers. In Standard Modern Greek, it always surfaces as [ʎ].
I guess people find it hard to pronounce /ʎ/ but are too inert to change the spelling.
zksmk@sopuli.xyzOPMto
Map Enthusiasts@sopuli.xyz•Map of about 0.001 percent of the observable universe
12·2 years agoThe radius of the currently observable universe is about 50 billion light-years and this map depicts a sphere with a radius of about 1 billion light-years, so if my calculamalations are correct, following through with sphere volume V being V=4/3πr³ this map depicts about 0.001 percent of the observable universe.
zksmk@sopuli.xyzMto
Map Enthusiasts@sopuli.xyz•The shrinking of Lake Chad from 1963 to 2021.English
2·2 years agoAt least the vegetation seems to have bounced back in the last 10 years.
zksmk@sopuli.xyzOPMto
Map Enthusiasts@sopuli.xyz•Neitokainen is a body of water in Finland, which is shaped like Finland
3·2 years agoRight here: https://www.openstreetmap.org/search?query=neitokainen#map=18/67.55653/24.50085
You’re right, it’s very far north, next to the border with Sweden.
zksmk@sopuli.xyzMto
Map Enthusiasts@sopuli.xyz•Geographical origin of various agricultural crops.English
1·2 years agoThe borders between the areas in Europe are indeed a bit weird. Other continents seem mostly fine tho.
zksmk@sopuli.xyzMto
Map Enthusiasts@sopuli.xyz•History of languages on the British IslesEnglish
1·2 years agoI wasn’t expecting that much Old Norse tbh.
zksmk@sopuli.xyzOPMto
Map Enthusiasts@sopuli.xyz•Map of what different Europeans identify with most.
1·2 years agoI should’ve specified the map has data only for countries in the EU. This is the price you pay for Brexit, alas.
It would be interesting to see the results for some Balkan countries too.
zksmk@sopuli.xyzOPMto
Map Enthusiasts@sopuli.xyz•The 30 largest countries (and territories) by total area, roughly to scale (thanks to the Dymaxion map projection).
1·2 years agoBtw, here’s the Dymaxion map projection with Tissot’s indicatrix of deformation.
And here’s the Peirce quincuncial map projection with Tissot’s indicatrix of deformation.
And here’s the classic Robinson map projection with Tissot’s indicatrix of deformation.
And here’s the Waterman butterfly map projection with Tissot’s indicatrix of deformation.
And here’s the, oh horror, Mercator map projection with Tissot’s indicatrix of deformation.
Dymaxion map projection does a pretty good job with this info.
zksmk@sopuli.xyzOPMto
Map Enthusiasts@sopuli.xyz•Africa's third longest river takes a crazy long route to get to the sea from its source in southern Guinea.
1·2 years agoKind of, yes. Surprisingly not that much. But enough to divert all the local water northward apparently.
What’s interesting is that all the other surrounding water flows southward. Burkina Faso even used to be called Upper Volta, because of the largest river there.
zksmk@sopuli.xyzto
Firefox@lemmy.ml•[@firefox](https://lemmy.ml/c/firefox) part 3 Similarly ecosia as the default browser of firefox with a clear message on startup that ecosia plants trees when you use its search engine and giving a op
0·2 years agoThey’re not saving the environment, they’re running a monoculture tree farm
Nope.
https://blog.ecosia.org/everyone-getting-tree-planting-wrong/
https://www.ecosia.org/#our_tree_planting_approach
https://blog.ecosia.org/where-why-how-does-ecosia-plant-trees/
https://ecosia.co/finreportsen
Instead of monocultures, we grow over 500 different native species where they are needed most. Always shoulder-to-shoulder with local communities.
zksmk@sopuli.xyzOPto
Memes@sopuli.xyz•This dog is simultaneously sitting, standing and lying.
1·2 years agoIt’s a bug related to the influx of new users and the hosting changes, it will get fixed.

That’s a good question, but no. It was just a bit of word play.
Antineutrinos are not WIMPs. WIMPs are weakly interacting massive particles. Antineutrinos are anything but massive, they’re almost massless, so massless that they were, for the longest time, thought to be massless. They can be a product of dark matter, as speculated, but they aren’t it tho.