Showing posts with label physical. Show all posts
Showing posts with label physical. Show all posts

Thursday, September 4, 2025

Do You Have These Unusual Physical Traits?

 With more than 8 billion people on the planet, there’s bound to be a lot of variation among human bodies, and of course some traits are more common than others. For instance, while a large percentage of the population can curl their tongue, only 200,000 people in the U.S. have two different-colored eyes. Genetics play a big role in these differences, but these traits can also be the result of environmental factors or random chance.

From the prevalence of tongue curling to the rarity of heterochromia, here are six traits that demonstrate just how diverse and interesting the human body can be — and how unique we are.

Credit: Mironmax Studio/ Shutterstock

1. Tongue Curling

Around 65% to 81% of people can roll up the sides of their tongue to form a tube-like shape. Tongue curling was once believed to be a genetic trait, passed down through dominant genes — meaning if one parent could do it, there was a good chance their child could, too. Once used in classrooms as an example of a simple genetic trait, tongue curling has been suggested by recent studies to only be partially genetic and that environment may also play a role, as some people can learn to curl their tongue over time even if they couldn’t do it instinctively.

Credit: Everett Collection Inc/ Alamy Stock Photo

2. Widow’s Peaks

A widow’s peak is a V-shaped point in the hairline at the center of the forehead. This genetic trait got its name in 17th-century England, when it was believed (inaccurately) to be a harbinger of early widowhood. Influenced by dominant genes and passed down from parent to child, a widow’s peak is not the same thing as a receding hairline, which is a genetic trait that occurs with age. Widow’s peaks are seen in both men and women, and while different studies have reported varying numbers, one 2021 study in Japan found that 29.6% of women and 32.8% of men possessed the distinctive hairline feature.

Credit: Jill_InspiredByDesign/ iStock

3. Facial Dimples

Facial dimples, which can be present in the cheeks and/or chin, are generally an inherited genetic trait passed down through dominant genes, though some people may still have them without a family history. Cheek dimples develop as a result of variations in facial muscle structure; they can be present on one or both cheeks and their prominence can vary over the course of a person’s life. Chin dimples, also known as cleft chins, are indentations in the middle of the chin that are caused by the improper fusion of the lower halves of the jawbones. Globally, around 20% to 30% of people have facial dimples, with cheek dimples more common among women and chin dimples more common among men.

Credit: Tuisku Laakso/ Shutterstock

4. Morton’s Toe

Morton’s toe, named for the American orthopedic surgeon Dudley Joy Morton, who first described the condition in the early 20th century, is a trait in which the second toe is longer than the big toe. It’s often genetic, caused by the relative lengths of the bones in the foot. A study of American college students found that 42.2% of participants had longer second toes, with 45.7% of men and 40.3% of women reporting the trait. Other studies around the world report a wide range of prevalence, from just 3% in one Swedish study to a whopping 90% in a study of the Indigenous Ainu population of Japan.

Credit: 22Images Studio/ Shutterstock

5. Hitchhiker’s Thumbs

Also known as flexible thumb or hypermobile thumb, hitchhiker’s thumb is a condition in which the thumb can bend backward at a greater angle than normal, typically more than 50 degrees. A 1953 study determined hitchhiker’s thumb to be a recessive genetic trait related to variations in the anatomy of the thumb joint and its surrounding ligaments. Hitchhiker’s thumb isn’t typically painful and doesn’t inhibit the use of the hands. There aren’t many studies about the prevalence of this trait, but researchers who conducted the study in 1953 determined that between 24.7% and 35.6% of people in the United States have this trait.

Credit: Marina Demeshko/ Shutterstock

6. Heterochromia

Heterochromia is the technical name for when a person has two different-colored eyes or different colors within the same eye. The trait can be genetic, often caused by variations in melanin distribution, or it can result from an injury, illness, or even certain medications such as those used to treat glaucoma. While the trait is more commonly seen in certain animals including cats and dogs, around 1% of the human population has some form of heterochromia, with complete heterochromia (two distinctly different-colored eyes) being the rarest type.

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Understanding the Difference Between Physical and Virtual Networking


Introduction

As Windows Admins, we have become comfortable with connectivity to the physical network. You can go to any physical server (or desktop PC for that matter) and check the status of the network connection by seeing the “media state”, if it’s enabled, it’s speed, how long it’s been up, and what it’s connectivity state is, as defined by the Windows OS on that server. We are comfortable with network monitoring tools and agents for physical severs and their physical network connections. So how do things change when a physical server is converted into a virtual machine, run on top of a hypervisor (like vSphere or Hyper-V) and connected to a virtual network? With more and more servers being virtualized (greater than half of all servers in the world now), it’s time for Windows Admins to gain comfort with virtual network connections and the virtual infrastructure.

Physical Server NIC Review

We all know that physical servers have at least one (usually multiple) physical network interfaces (usually called NICs). Those physical NICs connect to physical switch ports. Virtual LANs (VLAN) configurations may or may not be in use to further segment the network (but I’ll leave that out of this discussion). One of the benefits of physical network configurations like this is that you have this 1:1 ratio between the physical server and the Ethernet switch port. This relationship makes mapping switch ports to servers simple. In fact, I have, many times over the years, created switch port mapping diagrams or spreadsheets to show these 1:1 relationships for troubleshooting and documentation purposes. We would print the diagrams and spreadsheets, put them in sheet protectors, and store them in binders in the wiring closet or a cabinet in the datacenter. Not only is mapping and documentation simple but troubleshooting is as well. If the media state on the server is down on the switch or on the physical server, you know that that server is down (and only that server). For example, if someone unplugs a network cable (maybe it has a tie-wrap cable identifier on it with the server’s name), you know which server just went down. Finally, if an Ethernet switch shows high utilization on a port, you can look at the server name on that port and determine quickly which server it is.

Virtual NIC Review on a Virtual Machine

On the other hand, with virtualized servers, each virtual machine has a “vNIC” or virtual network interface that connects that virtual machine to a virtual switch. There may or may not be any real connectivity from the virtual switch to the real physical network (and the physical switch) but in most cases, there are (as there virtual machines need network access). That physical network access is provided by an “uplink” (as it is commonly called) from the virtual switch to a hypervisor host server’s physical NIC that is then connected to a physical Ethernet switch. Still, keep in mind that it is entirely possible for test and development situations to have virtual machines connected to a virtual switch that has no uplinks and is, thus, a “private network”. These would allow the virtual machines to only communicate with other virtual machines on the same virtual switch (there are also configurations where VMs are allowed to only talk to the host server).
With these changes related to the virtual network (once servers are virtualized), the results are:
  • A single physical network connection from a physical server to an Ethernet switch can cause massive virtual machine network outage, or slowdown if it goes down
  • A single physical Ethernet connection on an Ethernet switch may go to hundreds of virtual machines
  • Just because the media state of a virtual machine network connection shows as “enabled” doesn’t mean that it has a real Internet or local Intranet network connection. That virtual network connection could be going to private switch/network.
So there are big changes for you in between using physical network adaptors on physical servers and virtual network adaptors on virtual machines. What causes the biggest change is the virtual switch in between.

How a Virtual Switch Changes Windows Networking

The part of the Windows OS that provides networking knows nothing about virtualization. Your Windows OS doesn’t know if it’s running as a virtual machine or on a physical server. The Windows OS just knows that it still has a NIC (it doesn’t know that it’s a virtual NIC), it knows the speed of the NIC and whether it is up or down. That virtual NIC is connected to a virtual switch, provided by the hypervisor that the VM is running on. There are various forms of virtual switches – the VMware distributed virtual switch, VMware standard virtual switch, Hyper-V virtual switch, and there is even an opensource vSwitch.
Here’s what this looks like:




Figure 1: 
Virtual Switch Connection Between Hosts and OS Running in Virtual Machines (Graphic Thanks to VMware.com)
As long as the hypervisor has the virtual NIC of the VM configured to be in a “connected” state to the virtual switch, the network inside the Windows OS will appear to be “UP” (or at least the media state). Just because the media state is up, doesn’t mean that the Windows OS will be totally fooled. Today, the Windows OS looks actually tries to connect to the Internet to see if “the Internet” is really up or down.
For example, in the graphic below you can see that this Windows 2012 Server virtual machine has a “vEthernet Connection” to a “Virtual Switch”. That’s your first indicator that this Windows OS is running as a virtual machine instead of directly on a physical server.
You can see that this connection is enabled but that it has “No Internet Access”. It knows that it doesn’t have Internet access because it can’t really talk to servers on the Internet. Thus, just because the virtual machine’s network is “enabled” doesn’t mean that it’s “usable” if it can’t really talk to the Internet. Certainly you have networking applications that may work just fine (virtual machine to virtual machine on the same hypervisor) or local networking apps that don’t need DNS but Internet applications that need DNS aren’t going to work.




Figure 2:
 Virtual Network Status From the Windows 2012 Server OS Network and Sharing Center
Another way to look at this is by looking at the network connection properties. You can see that this vEthernet interface has “no network access” for IPv4 and IPv6 even though the media state is “enabled” and the speed is set to 10Gbps (that’s fast!)




Figure 3:
 vEthernet Network Connection




Figure 4:
 Network Connection Details for vEthernet
If you dig deeper, you’ll find that even though this virtual machine has “No Internet Access” for IPv4, it still has an IPv4 IP address, subnet mask, DHCP server, and DNS server. Thus, don’t be fooled into thinking that the VM has no IP address by the “No Internet Access” indicator.
Keep in mind that you can configure VLAN network configuration on each of the virtual machine network interfaces (in the hypervisor) if you are using VLAN networking. Also, keep in mind that the virtual switch is an OSI layer 2 networking device (albeit a virtual device) that is switching Ethernet frames based on Ethernet MAC addresses. The virtual switch has nothing to do with OSI layer 3 IP networking or IP routing.
In summary, things change when the Windows OS is moved from a physical environment to running as a virtual machine. These changes include your view of network connectivity and can easily confuse network troubleshooting and documentation. Make sure that you know the differences between running the Windows OS with physical vs. virtual networking.