h a l f b a k e r y"It would work, if you can find alternatives to each of the steps involved in this process."
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
|
There's also an obesity test based on the
colour of your urine stream. If you can't
see what colour it is, you're obese. |
|
|
My obese what? Stop leaving me in suspense with your sentence fragments! |
|
|
See link for an interesting colour chart that shows how different colours are perceived by colour-blind people. Useful for graphic designers, map-makers, and the like. And as a deuteranomalous (red-green colour-blind) person, I found it interesting to try it in reverse to see what you normal folk are seeing. |
|
|
Nothing new here, my urine has always been portable. |
|
|
Thoroughly Baked. However, it goes by the name "colorimeter", if made in China for sale in the US; or "colourimeter" if made in the US for sale in the UK. (Make sure you're looking at the Beer - Lambert - Bouguer [haven't I seen him befoure?] absorption colo(u)rimeter, not the emission version with a suction cup on the front for measuring the color of your monitor.) They come as portable, and as precise, as you want to pay for. |
|
|
In fact, in 1979, Brink & Slegers studied glomerular filtration rates (that's kidney function) in rat kidneys, using vitamin B12 as a marker, measured with a fiberoptic colorimeter. They showed results identical to the previous standard, vitamin B12 spectrophotometry. |
|
|
It was a good idea then; you just aren't up on reading research abstracts from the University of Nijmegen. No fishbone for you. |
|
|
//sentence fragments// Ooops. Fixed -
thanks. |
|
|
So [imaginality] try eating a meal of beetroot and then tell us what colour it turns your urine....go on, it'll be fun... |
|
|
Sure thing - any excuse to eat some beetroot. Yum. |
|
|
[normzone] I hope that wasn't sp: potable. |
|
| |