Post 1805884 by mrjunge@niu.moe
(DIR) More posts by mrjunge@niu.moe
(DIR) Post #1805255 by Epsiloco@letsalllovela.in
2018-12-07T16:53:46.054696Z
1 likes, 0 repeats
The one thing I miss from my biology degree was animal dissections. It was therapeutic to cut them open and look around inside.I also find dissecting software and stuff too, but it's a little different when there's meat involved. Not necessarily better though.
(DIR) Post #1805592 by mrjunge@niu.moe
2018-12-07T17:02:38Z
1 likes, 0 repeats
@Epsiloco I'm a little disturbed. :blobpeek:
(DIR) Post #1805593 by Epsiloco@letsalllovela.in
2018-12-07T17:06:45.952707Z
0 likes, 0 repeats
@mrjungeSaid by someone who doesn't know the lovely feeling of perfectly peeling back the skin of a cat or small shark, slowly scraping the connective tissue, and taking in that sweet formaldehyde aroma :blobuwu:
(DIR) Post #1805747 by Chuculate@niu.moe
2018-12-07T17:07:22Z
1 likes, 0 repeats
@Epsiloco What did you get to dissect? Anything strange like a starfish?
(DIR) Post #1805748 by Epsiloco@letsalllovela.in
2018-12-07T17:12:03.983689Z
0 likes, 0 repeats
@ChuculateCat, dogfish (small shark), pigeon, snake, and frogs of course. All vertebrates. I wanted to do the invertibrate class but schedule conflicts with an important class prevented me :blobangery:Not sure how I would have handled spiders at the time though, I was kind of arachnophobic.
(DIR) Post #1805749 by bodomit@niu.moe
2018-12-07T17:07:48Z
2 likes, 0 repeats
@Epsiloco :blobcat: :blobpeekjohnny: <- Accurate Reconstruction
(DIR) Post #1805884 by mrjunge@niu.moe
2018-12-07T17:13:27Z
0 likes, 0 repeats
@Epsiloco "taking in that sweet formaldehyde aroma" 🤢 and nnnnnnnoooooooo--not a cat, of all animals!!!I only remember doing a dissection on a frog in hs. I can actually understand how it could be therapeutic since you're carefully using the utensils to open the right parts the right way, etc. Bit of an art. I'd still rather not do it tho... lol
(DIR) Post #1805885 by Epsiloco@letsalllovela.in
2018-12-07T17:18:58.758986Z
0 likes, 0 repeats
@mrjungeFair enough. It's very enlightening too. But I can see how people wouldn't want to do it.Dissection of software elicits somewhat of a similar feeling though. At least in discovering how something works and being able to mess around with it. Makes me think that I should start learning reverse engineering...
(DIR) Post #1806307 by mrjunge@niu.moe
2018-12-07T17:28:44Z
1 likes, 0 repeats
@Epsiloco Reverse engineering stuff is definitely really fun, and can be a fun way to learn depending on how in-depth you're going to trying to understand how something works just by looking at how everything fits together. :blobowo: