This is fascinating! I'm going to try this on a certain clip from Jurassic Park.
They are literally on vacation and will do absolutely nothing.
I TA’ed for Harriet, she’s awesome!
As someone who raises horses and other animals, I can say with pretty high certainty that most of the horses were not allowed to "retire". Horses are expensive and time-consuming to care for, and with no practical use,…
Was wondering about that but then came across this passage in the paper: “ The last date on which a transient was observed within a nuclear testing window in this dataset was March 17, 1956, despite there being an…
I think this expresses how many of us feel very eloquently.
Professor Felleisen, is that you?
Far more coherent write up of the initial charges: https://dailymontanan.com/2024/02/07/montana-man-charged-by-... Also note the charges of conspiracy. He and his co-conspirators knew what they were doing was illegal…
My solution when I lived near a museum I liked (the MFA in Boston, USA) was to get a membership and go once every week or two and only spend half an hour to an hour, in one specific room or exhibit. When I'm visiting, I…
I can't be the only person to think the correct universal number should be 0118.999.88199.9119.725...3
okay ... sure: https://mediabiasfactcheck.com/972-magazine/
I am really appreciating the IANAH and TINHA side effects of your post :)
Oh my brain edited out the "unfair" part in the original question, I assumed it was just asking about higher value/tax. I think that an urban farm, baring some very extenuating circumstance, is an enormous waste of…
So in the article, it actually says "U.S. auto dealers will be able to sell vehicles on the tech company's platform". This implies dealers aren't out of the loop -- but the only thing I care about is : is pricing going…
If you own a farm in a city or area with high housing demand, yes, I think it would. (edit: and I'm not meaning this to be a sarcastic response -- there are urban farms).
I know that these kind of write-ups by universities tend to overstate the importance of research. However, it's nice to see a write up that at least on the surface goes into some fairly interesting detail and actually…
Right, network effects -- benefits accrue as power of population size. That's a good point. And the stagnation is a depressing thought. I naively hope that if we can survive this phase of our existence we will find a…
I'm one of those people who often says "the problem is that there are just too many people." But I hadn't ever really thought about the hypothesis that the "good idea" yield was low enough that you needed a large number…
That's how it always starts! :) I think the origins of the state in agrarian societies is super interesting. Does it start organically (like you and your neighbors agreeing paying a small % for a security service) and…
I think this idea is also present in the work of James C. Scott, author of "Against the Grain". But I think he was talking about this in the context of it being easier for governments to "steal" grains (and just…
Perhaps this tree will get its own "Golden Spruce" story. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kiidk%27yaas
Yeah, beech bark disease was actually introduced from Europe, to Halifax in the late 1800's. (well, i should say, the insect part was. The mechanism is that the scale insect creates an opening for the native-to-North…
How long did it take between when you first noticed something and the decision to try to treat and then remove?
Some "pop"-sci books that have inspired me: 1."Uncle Petros & Goldback's Conjecture" & "Logicomix" (both by Apostolos Doxiadis), 2."Chaos" by James Gleick, 3. "The Man Who Loved Only Numbers" by Paul Hoffman 4. "A…
That would be ... scary for me. The closest I could find was some limited evidence of an association between cyanobacteria blooms and odds of ALS in the surround population:…
This is fascinating! I'm going to try this on a certain clip from Jurassic Park.
They are literally on vacation and will do absolutely nothing.
I TA’ed for Harriet, she’s awesome!
As someone who raises horses and other animals, I can say with pretty high certainty that most of the horses were not allowed to "retire". Horses are expensive and time-consuming to care for, and with no practical use,…
Was wondering about that but then came across this passage in the paper: “ The last date on which a transient was observed within a nuclear testing window in this dataset was March 17, 1956, despite there being an…
I think this expresses how many of us feel very eloquently.
Professor Felleisen, is that you?
Far more coherent write up of the initial charges: https://dailymontanan.com/2024/02/07/montana-man-charged-by-... Also note the charges of conspiracy. He and his co-conspirators knew what they were doing was illegal…
My solution when I lived near a museum I liked (the MFA in Boston, USA) was to get a membership and go once every week or two and only spend half an hour to an hour, in one specific room or exhibit. When I'm visiting, I…
I can't be the only person to think the correct universal number should be 0118.999.88199.9119.725...3
okay ... sure: https://mediabiasfactcheck.com/972-magazine/
I am really appreciating the IANAH and TINHA side effects of your post :)
Oh my brain edited out the "unfair" part in the original question, I assumed it was just asking about higher value/tax. I think that an urban farm, baring some very extenuating circumstance, is an enormous waste of…
So in the article, it actually says "U.S. auto dealers will be able to sell vehicles on the tech company's platform". This implies dealers aren't out of the loop -- but the only thing I care about is : is pricing going…
If you own a farm in a city or area with high housing demand, yes, I think it would. (edit: and I'm not meaning this to be a sarcastic response -- there are urban farms).
I know that these kind of write-ups by universities tend to overstate the importance of research. However, it's nice to see a write up that at least on the surface goes into some fairly interesting detail and actually…
Right, network effects -- benefits accrue as power of population size. That's a good point. And the stagnation is a depressing thought. I naively hope that if we can survive this phase of our existence we will find a…
I'm one of those people who often says "the problem is that there are just too many people." But I hadn't ever really thought about the hypothesis that the "good idea" yield was low enough that you needed a large number…
That's how it always starts! :) I think the origins of the state in agrarian societies is super interesting. Does it start organically (like you and your neighbors agreeing paying a small % for a security service) and…
I think this idea is also present in the work of James C. Scott, author of "Against the Grain". But I think he was talking about this in the context of it being easier for governments to "steal" grains (and just…
Perhaps this tree will get its own "Golden Spruce" story. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kiidk%27yaas
Yeah, beech bark disease was actually introduced from Europe, to Halifax in the late 1800's. (well, i should say, the insect part was. The mechanism is that the scale insect creates an opening for the native-to-North…
How long did it take between when you first noticed something and the decision to try to treat and then remove?
Some "pop"-sci books that have inspired me: 1."Uncle Petros & Goldback's Conjecture" & "Logicomix" (both by Apostolos Doxiadis), 2."Chaos" by James Gleick, 3. "The Man Who Loved Only Numbers" by Paul Hoffman 4. "A…
That would be ... scary for me. The closest I could find was some limited evidence of an association between cyanobacteria blooms and odds of ALS in the surround population:…