In this case it also relies on the resistant cancer cells having altered metabolic pathways compared to your average cancer. It's not an universally applicable strategy. Remember, fasting didn't work out so well for…
Compostable does not mean it decays under your eyes. E.g. polyurethanes are marginally biodegradeable by fungi and still last years when the conditions are not ideal for them.
China skipped straight ahead to post-cyberpunk dystopia
Most renderers support near-realtime preview. If fusion360 doesn't maybe write a script that watches for file changes, converts the CAD data into whatever your renderer of choice takes as input and then display in…
I was quibbling about semantics. I am aware that cars can be dangerous. > and the damage it can cause on accident You are conflating (un)safety of a tool used in the way it is intended (kitchen knife = cutting a steak)…
In the same sense that any object that can potentially kill someone (hint: everything) is a weapon. Which is technically correct but a useless observation. If we use a more narrow definition of weapon, e.g. a tool…
Some people may depend on them, but the difference between API guarantees and implementation details is that developers are far less reluctant to break your legs... I mean your application if you depend on the latter.…
In this case it also relies on the resistant cancer cells having altered metabolic pathways compared to your average cancer. It's not an universally applicable strategy. Remember, fasting didn't work out so well for…
Compostable does not mean it decays under your eyes. E.g. polyurethanes are marginally biodegradeable by fungi and still last years when the conditions are not ideal for them.
China skipped straight ahead to post-cyberpunk dystopia
Most renderers support near-realtime preview. If fusion360 doesn't maybe write a script that watches for file changes, converts the CAD data into whatever your renderer of choice takes as input and then display in…
I was quibbling about semantics. I am aware that cars can be dangerous. > and the damage it can cause on accident You are conflating (un)safety of a tool used in the way it is intended (kitchen knife = cutting a steak)…
In the same sense that any object that can potentially kill someone (hint: everything) is a weapon. Which is technically correct but a useless observation. If we use a more narrow definition of weapon, e.g. a tool…
Some people may depend on them, but the difference between API guarantees and implementation details is that developers are far less reluctant to break your legs... I mean your application if you depend on the latter.…