Wife and I did Dorf Romantik on a recent long train ride and we had a great time. It’s very cozy/calm which helps when you want to stay low energy and not bother your neighbors. And I fully agree with the battery pack idea - it gives me a ton of peace of mind when I’m traveling.
What in the world is the original context here? Have these people never encountered a puddle before? Her foot is completely immersed in gutter water and his white pants are about to be soaked and gross.
According to the article they're spending $17 billion to increase production.
You would really like the Three Body Problem.
Good catch. I've updated it. Thanks!
(somehow got 12 upvotes without a working link... hmmm)
A very cool idea, however the headline is misleading - NASA has not even remotely committed to running this mission. They've selected the swarm project as one of 13 projects in their innovation program and given it up to $175k to study feasibility. That's roughly a postdoc for two years. This is far, far from committing the hundreds of millions or billions needed for the execution of this mission.
On Mander, fighting the clickbait pop science menace is every citizen's duty. Are you doing your part?
I'd love for the HSR corridor between LA and SD to begin work ASAP. It's planned to follow the 15, which should satisfy folks who don't want tracks on the coast. Right now it's planned to come after the LA-SF connection but I don't see why it couldn't start sooner.
Source? I want to believe this but the first page of my search results is all articles saying that WIC will shut down within days and SNAP is unlikely to last much more than a month.
The Surviving Mars OST is spectacular, though the gameplay is just good.
New construction sometimes doesn’t even help, when developers knocks down an old affordable 12 unit apartment building and build a luxury 36 unit building, you’ve created -12 units of affordable housing.
The argument I hear against this is that the 36 people who move into the luxury apartments moved from somewhere, and so 36 other apartments become available. The reduced demand for the vacated apartments then drives their prices down.
Of course, housing as a market is super distorted for a bunch of reasons so this effect is muddled. But I think it would be a net negative to fully disregard supply and demand in a market-based economy and preserve 12 affordable units in favor of 36 luxury ones.
Largely agree with all your other points though.
Maybe I'm missing context, but why the downvotes on this?
The transit agency's board of directors voted to allow fare payment by tapping a credit card or smartphone.
![It's about to get easier to pay MTS bus and trolley fares](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/ffaf9530-234b-404f-9f21-409769fd2f25.jpeg?format=webp&thumbnail=256)
This is a really cool read with lots of very strong results, but "show" doesn't seem like the right word for the specific claim the article makes from the paper. In grad school we had a professor who led the first year seminar who drilled into us the importance of using the right word to communicate inferential strength. "Is consistent with" is weaker than "suggests" is weaker than "shows" is weaker than "proves" (really only mathematicians should use "prove"). Section E3 on this website has a similar hierarchy.
My "speak up in seminar" reflex was going off here because this article jumps one - possibly two - whole levels of inferential strength from what's actually written in the paper.
In the paper, the inferential claims in the "communal effort' part are:
These differences clearly suggest a lack of evident social stratification...
further revealed no clear signs of social stratification
It's possible I missed a stronger inferential claim about the communal aspect - Please correct me if so!
I think "are consistent with" or "suggest" would more accurately communicate the strength of the results. The evidence presented that the drainage system was a communal effort is that the houses were the same size and the graves didn't seem to be differentiated. This seems like absence of evidence for a state authority/hierarchy, not evidence of absence.
I love that more and more open source science projects are streamlining deployment and encouraging folks to just try it. This one has a binder link in the README (though it seems to be failing... may need some TLC). I really think this is a positive template for what academia could eventually become!
Man, sorry you had that experience. Stuff like this bums me out. I moved to San Diego largely because of my experiences coming to the beach when I was growing up, and after living here 10 years I rarely ever go because it's so stressful to get in and out on nice beach days. When I do go I either pay for a rideshare or waste a bunch of time on the bus.
I don't hold any particularly exciting political views, but I'm starting to see a lot of the reasoning for people questioning the modern state of cars. Looking at your situation, there was nothing actually wrong with the shuttle system - it came on time, 25mph was plenty fast for your trip, it was an efficient use of public space, and it didn't require 50 sq ft of beachfront San Diego real estate for parking. The problem was other vehicles and the way they were driven. PB would be a safer place that could be enjoyed by far more people if the shuttles replaced most of the car traffic. But when the starting conditions are "this street must accommodate 3000lb+ vehicles that exceed the speed limit when they feel like it, and are driven by people who are often drunk or unfamiliar with the local roads", no sane person will travel without their car :-/
Ahhh, I thought I seemed rain this afternoon. Looking forward to a few cooler days!
Not a huge fan of the Israel situation but it does seem like they often stay out at the US's request:
During the 1990–1991 Gulf War, Iraq carried out a missile campaign against Israel, in which it launched 42 modified Scud missiles (designated Al-Hussein) at Israeli cities with the strategic objective of provoking Israel into launching retaliatory attacks and potentially jeopardizing the multinational coalition formed by the United States against Iraq, which had full backing and extensive contributions from other Muslim-majority states; Israel did not respond to the Iraqi missile attacks due to American pressure, and Iraq failed to gather support for its occupation of Kuwait.
The First Room-Temperature Ambient-Pressure Superconductor?
Reposted from HN, discussion here: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36864624
They successfully converted β-pinene into two everyday painkillers, paracetamol and ibuprofen, which are produced on ~100,000 ton scales annually.
At first I couldn't believe that we make 100,000 TONS of paracetamol (acetaminophen) a year.
1E5 tons per year / 6E9 people on earth = 17 grams per person per year
My tylenol pills are 500mg, and ~34 pills per year seems about right.
Wow. At a density of 1.3 g/cm^3 that's about half an olympic swimming pool of acetaminophen a year.
but like everyone else who leaves academia I lost access to journals after finishing my grad program.
I still have my academic account but the sci-hub experience is so much easier that I just use that anyway.
A completely random event based text game. Simply make your choice at the beginning of each month and see if you can graduate in time. All outcomes are determined by the random number generator and do not take them seriously. Sometimes the RNG can be brutal :)
FDA Approves First Gene Therapy for Treatment of Certain Patients with Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy
![FDA Approves First Gene Therapy for Treatment of Certain Patients with Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy](https://mander.xyz/pictrs/image/97a049d7-9e88-4fe2-966a-880932820ef3.png?format=webp&thumbnail=256)