top of page

Groups Feed

View groups and posts below.


This post is from a suggested group

Small Hydropower – Big Energy from Tiny Rivers

HOOK

You don’t need a massive dam or a famous waterfall to generate clean electricity. Sometimes, a small stream is all it takes. Let’s dive into small hydropower.


HISTORY / ORIGIN

Water wheels have been grinding grain and sawing wood for over 2,000 years. But the modern idea of “small hydropower” (SHP) took off in the late 19th century when people started using turbines to generate electricity for remote homes and mills. By the 1970s energy crisis, governments and rural communities rediscovered SHP as a reliable, off-grid alternative to big fossil fuel plants. Today, small hydropower (typically defined as under 10 MW – and sometimes as low as 5 kW for “micro” systems) powers villages, farms, schools, and small industries worldwide, from the Himalayas to the Andes.

TYPES OF SMALL HYDROPOWER


2 Views

This post is from a suggested group

More Than Just Color – The Science Behind Paints & Coatings

HOOK

That smooth finish on your wall or the rust-proof layer on a bridge isn’t magic. It’s chemistry. Let’s peel back the layers of paints and coatings.


HISTORY / ORIGIN

Paint is one of humanity’s oldest inventions. Over 40,000 years ago, cave artists mixed crushed iron oxides with animal fat or water to create the first pigments. Ancient Egyptians and Chinese developed varnishes and lacquers using natural resins. The big leap came in the 19th century with the industrial revolution – mass‑produced oil paints, then alkyd resins, and later water‑based latex paints. Today, paints and coatings go far beyond aesthetics: they protect satellites in space, keep ships from rusting, and even clean the air around us.

TYPES OF PAINTS & COATINGS


2 Views

This post is from a suggested group

2 Views

This post is from a suggested group

Happy Mother's Day

Today, on Mother’s Day, we celebrate the mothers raising neurodivergent children, the advocates, interpreters, protectors, researchers, cheerleaders, and relentless believers.


You are often the first person to recognize that your child experiences the world differently. You fight for evaluations, accommodations, understanding, inclusion, and dignity, sometimes long before others see what you already know in your heart.


You learn acronyms that no parent expected you to master. You sit through meetings, therapies, sleepless nights, emotional victories, setbacks, and breakthroughs that others may never fully understand. And through it all, you continue showing up with extraordinary love and determination.


To the moms raising children with ADHD, dyslexia, autism, dysgraphia, dyscalculia, sensory differences, executive functioning challenges, and other neurodivergent profiles: your work matters deeply.

Thank you for celebrating progress that others overlook.


Thank you for creating safe spaces where your children can thrive authentically. Thank you for teaching the world that different does…


5 Views

This post is from a suggested group

ADHD Killers

Something I tend to do when it comes to doing work or similar things, is have everything up imaginable. I have several screens set up, one or two for work, and then my phone screen for youtube if I require one of my screens for something important. Sure, it may look chaotic, but if I'm procrastinating on one thing, I can work on another!

7 Views
Unknown member
Feb 24

What a great system to stay productive when you have a lot to get done! Thanks for sharing!

This post is from a suggested group

Relatable Post?

Does anyone else tend to relisten to the same song over and over in the same day, back to back, or even week to week? I've had this one song itching my brain that I think it's made its way into my ears and constantly plays no matter what I do.


6 Views
Unknown member
Feb 24

Great question ! Ido this when I’m trying to turn off my brain (e.g. sleep) but I see others do this when they are intentionally focusing on getting something done. It’s interesting how this stimuli can work differently for different wired brains.


This post is from a suggested group

9 Views

This post is from a suggested group

Winter Break!! QuQ

Imagine having classes from 8 am to 8 Pm for just about your whole week and then suddenly you are not forced to get up that early, and now you're tired after a few hours of being awake again. This is what I call motivation Burnout. Not a real thing as far as I am concerned but. Your motivation to get up at 7 am each morning and work like your life depends on it breaks down all your few spoons that you've barely managed to keep together.


13 Views
Unknown member
Dec 19, 2025
When my therapist asks how I’m feeling.

This post is from a suggested group

6 Views
bottom of page