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Hack Chat Transcript, Part 1

A event log for Citizen Science Hack Chat

[Ben Krasnow] Hosts a Hack Chat

lutetiumLutetium 04/29/2020 at 20:060 Comments

Dan Maloney12:00 PM
OK everyone, let's get started. We're excited to have Ben Krasnow on the Hack Chat today. Welcome Ben!

Ben Krasnow12:00 PM
Hello!

Mike Kennedy12:01 PM
Hi!

Kendall Meade12:01 PM
how's it going :D

Boian Mitov12:01 PM
Hello everyone :-)

krux12:01 PM
Hey hey

Dan Maloney12:01 PM
I think everyone knows you pretty well, but maybe you could give us a little about yourself?

Spencer Lund joined  the room.12:01 PM

Applied Procrastination12:02 PM
Hi, Ben! Good to see you

Ben Krasnow12:03 PM
Sure. I work at Verily (Google Life Sciences) doing hardware prototyping. The goal is to make devices that detect disease earlier in progression when it is often cheaper and easier to treat. I also host the Applied Science channel on YouTube, where I show interesting and practical applications of scientific principles. Thanks for having me on the chat.

apfelbroog joined  the room.12:03 PM

Kendall Meade12:03 PM
dude thanks for being here :D

Applied Procrastination12:03 PM
Thanks for being here

zacchaeus liang joined  the room.12:03 PM

Ahron Wayne12:03 PM
Hi Ben!!

Kendall Meade12:03 PM
so, WHAT ABOUT hydrogen blimp quad drones, lol

matt5walston joined  the room.12:04 PM

Leonas joined  the room.12:04 PM

Mike Kennedy12:04 PM
Are you currently working on anything for the Covid-19? or you can;t say...

zacchaeus liang12:04 PM
hi ben your my hero!

zacchaeus liang12:04 PM
always love seeing your videos and thought process!

Ben Krasnow12:04 PM
I have mostly been focused on early cancer detection projects.

Mike Kennedy12:05 PM
ah .

apfelbroog12:05 PM
nanotech stuff?

Kendall Meade12:05 PM
hang on, are you one of the guys using radar as a medical imaging technology?

Kendall Meade12:05 PM
is this the right language

Jeff Verive joined  the room.12:06 PM

Ben Krasnow12:06 PM
As it turns out, in order for cancer cells to continue their rapid growth, they end up burning fuel in a less efficient way that creates literal dirty exhaust in the blood stream. Detecting trace amounts of this would be a very good way to search for latent cancers.

logan.rooper joined  the room.12:06 PM

Ahron Wayne12:06 PM
Ben, can I ask you to take a look at a few seconds of this video? It's a droplet of water on a film of carbon black, which you can make by just putting a candle underneath a glass slide. It has some really interested properties that reminded me of your graphite air bearing

Abhishek Viswanathan12:06 PM
In your experience, what have you found as a significant stumbling block for people to start or sustain a local-scale citizen science project?

morgan12:07 PM
woo, back! Hi ben!

DrG12:07 PM
Are you working on any sensors for detection of alkanes and aromatic compounds generated by malignant tumors.....from the canine reports?

me joined  the room.12:08 PM

singularengineer12:08 PM
What are these 'dirty exhaust' exhaust you are looking for and how do you detect them?

pe1cmp joined  the room.12:08 PM

apfelbroog12:09 PM
regarding applied science, given 1000 different interests, how do you manage to finish any darn project? Any tips?

Mike Kennedy12:09 PM
And does this method work for all types of cancers?

Ben Krasnow12:09 PM
I think a very common stumbling block for any type of project is building consensus of setting goals. For market-driven companies, it's a little more clear because customers ultimately decide with their wallet. For efforts that are not pushed by consumerism, it becomes more difficult to assess if a goal is being met.

Ben Krasnow12:09 PM
DrG, yes along those lines!

me12:09 PM
Is your laboratory at your residence? If so, have there been any zoning law problems?

morgan12:10 PM
heh, or fed visits...

Lightning Phil12:10 PM
Wish my garage was tidier (and a lot bigger), would be awesome to have a similar setup

Shiz joined  the room.12:11 PM

Ben Krasnow12:11 PM
Ahron, that's cool!

Kendall Meade12:11 PM
lightning phil just start with tidying the garage up and fitting what you can in there, and actually doing the stuff you can do

Kendall Meade12:12 PM
all this media hype and you can still make an ar15 at the average kitchen table

Ben Krasnow12:12 PM
Yes, my lab is my home garage. I used to work here full-time when I owned my own MRI devices business.

Kendall Meade12:12 PM
hold up you made mri's as a business?

Kendall Meade12:12 PM
what's that like

pe1cmp12:12 PM
I see you use a Source Measurement Unit for some experiments, do you have any suggestions for measuring really low, complex impedances, like Lithium ION cells, Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy or Dielectric spectroscopy ?

Ben Krasnow12:12 PM
I made MRI-compatible computer peripherals (keyboards, mice, etc) for use in cognitive experiments.

me12:13 PM
Any trouble with the government?

Mike Kennedy12:13 PM
I remember , no metal parts... whatsoever

Kendall Meade12:13 PM
oh that's cool :D

Lightning Phil12:13 PM
Cool. The Fiancee does cognitive experiments.

Mike Kennedy12:13 PM
fiber optics based..

Applied Procrastination12:13 PM
Since the topic of this chat is "citizen science" I wanted to bring up a concept that has been stealing a lot of my attention lately: micrometeorites. Their existence has been known for a long time, but until around 2015 it was assumed by most scientists that they corroded away almost immediately upon landing on earths surface. This was disproved by a (literal) Norwegian Jazz musician named Jon Larsen when he was able to develop a method for finding and identifying these tiny objects in urban environments. Now, he (and other scientists in the field) is calling upon more citizen scientists to do like him to help improve those methods as it can make a huge impact on the field. Has anyone here ever considered doing or done something like that?

Kendall Meade12:13 PM
so you did stuff for active brain imaging as people were performing tasks or undergoing neurological events or whatever?

Christian12:14 PM
I remember the concept of the computer mouse it's both simple and ingenious

Ben Krasnow12:14 PM
Other than that funny X-ray problem, I haven't had any trouble working here.

Ken Y.y joined  the room.12:14 PM

Kendall Meade12:14 PM
does a faraday cage work for xrays

pe1cmp12:14 PM
Ah, the backscatter X-ray machine chicken experiment ? :)

Kendall Meade12:14 PM
or can one be made to?

Leonas12:14 PM
Ben, I love your work and excellent explanations. Are you based in Palo Alto?

Mike Kennedy12:15 PM
lead?

Ahron Wayne12:15 PM
Thanks ben! Glad you got to me in this torrent of fans :)

Lightning Phil12:15 PM
Ben, I have a lot of surplus HV kit. It's in the UK, which isn't convenient, especially now. Happy to figure out a way of overcoming that though.

geek_6012:15 PM
Sigh... why isn't there a central moderator to funnel questions to? This is a messy free-for-all.

Mike Kennedy12:15 PM
Do you still have your delorean car? :)

Dan Maloney12:15 PM
@Applied Procrastination - I think The Thought Emporium did a video about that, collecting micrometeroids from rooftops.

Mark VandeWettering12:15 PM
I spent a couple of afternoons searching for iron tektites in at the bottom of downpouts in my house by using a magnet. I didn't discover anything that I thought positively was a tektite, but my attempt was half hearted.

Sam Zeloof12:15 PM
what was your x-ray issue? i recently got into trouble from my university for having an x-ray in my dorm room, they were not happy about this one

Christian12:16 PM
hahaha sam

Peter Bosch12:16 PM
I was just about to ask about that, when I was doing vacuum experiments I noticed that one time when my vacuum became too soft and gas discharge occurred it seemed (according to my geiger counter) to start producing a bunch of Xrays even though the largest voltage differential was only about 500 V

Lightning Phil12:16 PM
That was probably noise pickup

me12:16 PM
I wonder where the cheapest place without legal impediments to hardware hacking is

Mark VandeWettering12:17 PM
I have this book, which has some interesting pictures: https://www.amazon.com/Search-Stardust-Micrometeorites-Terrestrial-Imposters/dp/076035264X

Christian12:17 PM
hardware hacking in general or stuff with x-rays?

alexwhittemore12:17 PM
@Sam Zeloof IIRC, a neighbor caught wind that he had an X-ray source in the garage and he got a visit from a nice government man who decided his shielding precautions were sufficient?

Applied Procrastination12:17 PM
@Dan Maloney That is probably true, Hackaday has even written an article about it a while back :) I'm considering making a YouTube video on it myself as well (well, I will probably do that at some point to be honest). It's just a field where I see sooo many potential projects and improvements that can be made that actually have the potential to make a scientific impact

Ben Krasnow12:17 PM
Applied Proc, that's pretty interesting. I hadn't heard of this. There is always a sort of tension between "leave it to the experts", and just doing things because they seem interesting and useful. It's a pretty fine line, and even before covid, there is a lot of room between too much emphasis placed on experts, and too much wild west.

Dan Maloney12:18 PM

https://hackaday.com/2019/08/21/fantastic-micrometeorites-and-where-to-find-them/

HACKADAY LEWIN DAY

Fantastic Micrometeorites And Where To Find Them

Space is very much the final frontier for humanity, at least as far as our current understanding of the universe takes us. Only a handful of countries and corporations on Earth have the hardware to readily get there, and even fewer are capable of reaching orbit.

Read this on Hackaday

Applied Procrastination12:18 PM
Hah, I was just about to link to that article

me12:19 PM
@Christian hardware hacking in general

Micah Elizabeth Scott12:19 PM
re "experts" vs everyone-for-themselves, it's worth considering your impact on local environment and on the supply chains. if you can build one of something in your garage but you need a hundred thousand of them, it's unlikely the work you did to figure out materials for that one is going to help

Mark VandeWettering12:19 PM
Ben: that's a line you walk really well. I admire the thoroughness and discipline of your approach, but even more your ability to just actually do the hard work, rather than be intimidated by it.

Peter Bosch12:19 PM
me: what sort of legal impediments? don't know about US law but if its not professional scale you should be fine doing it at home, right?

me12:19 PM
plenty of amateur scientists have been raided

Peter Bosch12:19 PM
except for radiation/hazardous materials

me12:19 PM
especially with the rise of meth labs etc

Ben Krasnow12:19 PM
Long ago, someone reported me to some kind of authority for showing an X-ray (CT scanner) in my video. I eventually was contacted by state officials, and they were very polite and helpful. :)

zacchaeus liang12:20 PM
how's the cookie machine?

Kenji Larsen12:20 PM
@Ben Krasnow You are an inspiration to many of us and I really want to thank you for your efforts, your channel, your excellence.

pe1cmp12:20 PM
Ben: did the person contact you first before reporting ?

Applied Procrastination12:20 PM
One of the really intriguing projects I see in Micrometeorite research is attempting to implement a visual classifying algorithm. This is not my expertise, so I'm not sure if I'll attempt it, but something like that would make a huge impact on the field (the field is quite small obviously). Even if the classifier is heavily biased towards false positives it would still be massively useful as the main point of Larsen's method is to increase the signal to noise ratio when searching through a batch of rocks in the microscope

alexwhittemore12:20 PM
What's funny @Sam Zeloof is that your second-hand machine is WAY less scary than the one @Ben Krasnow got reported for

Kendall Meade12:21 PM
@Ben Krasnow did you make the gingery home workshop machines, or am I remembering this wrong?

Ahron Wayne12:21 PM
It is my very future goal to do automated scanning for large fields of potential micrometeorites and then sort them out automatically. make a conveyor belt of sorts.

Kendall Meade12:21 PM
https://www.amazon.com/Build-Metal-Working-Scrap-Complete/dp/1878087355 for reference

alexwhittemore12:22 PM
Although TBH, when it comes to universities "ask forgiveness not permission" is a hard rule.

Christian12:22 PM
@me hm I wonder why? I mean hardware hacking in most cases does no involve chemicals that could be considered dangerous or used to make drugs.

Christian12:22 PM
or am I missing something

Shiz12:22 PM
decapping may

Shiz12:22 PM
/delayering

Mike Kennedy12:22 PM
Ben: if it's ok, when you converted your mill. did you use servo motors.. or steppers?

Sam Zeloof12:22 PM
@alexwhittemore agreed... cabinet x rays are pretty safe. but that didn't seem to make a difference in terms of action on the school's part. also you still have to register cabinet x-rays in most states

Ben Krasnow12:23 PM
Mike, I used the original servos. Tidy upgrade.

Mike Kennedy12:23 PM
ah ok..

Christian12:23 PM
hmmm that could be! btw heat decapping curious marc showed a while back works great - but it smells

Abhishek Viswanathan12:23 PM
I was recently exploring how citizenscience might fit into the GIS realm - especially with tons of civic data and satellite data out there for free. Feel like it would be fantastic for local scale environmental monitoring. Other than the somewhat steep learning curve, it would be a good way to introduce people to CS. Any easy tools out there? I know NASA has a couple of online interfaces to produce timelapses of an area.

alexwhittemore12:24 PM
@Sam Zeloof What was the ultimate outcome? I was lucky to live in an extremely hands-off corner of campus where just about the only thing you'd get nicked for was throwing stuff out the window, which the administration looked down on VERY harshly.

me12:24 PM
biohacking too

Ben Krasnow12:24 PM
I hadn't heard of Gingery home workshop. Looks cool.

alexwhittemore12:24 PM
@Sam Zeloof but then, don't you now have a lab on campus you could stuff it in anyway?

alexwhittemore12:25 PM

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