I have read the same thing about Greece's Ikaria island centenarians.
As an anecdote my grandfather born in remote mountain village in mainland Greece in the 1900 was actually registered by his father having been born in 1906 as to avoid being drafted as long as possible to fight in the multiple wars fought at the time.
So birth records and certificates from that time are not really trustworthy.
Oce you upload the image, you get immediately suspended with the justification that the post contains personal information. The weird thing is the image contains no text whatsoever, or anything for that matter that could associate the image as a genome.
This is the COVID genome btw.
I think that one sector that has not been given much spotlight is space.
I feel that space will get lots of more startups leveraging LEO in unexpected ways.
The current rate of progress for the different launch systems, bring the cost/kg to orbit further down, as well as further satellite miniaturization/mass production will prove space as a new breeding ground for ideas that we cannot still think about, but I think in a decade from now we will be looking at space as on of the sectors pushing economic growth across the planet.
Funny how this thread surfaced now. I'm in a similar place.
I didn't use to fear flying until I got my first (and only) panic attack (not in a plane).
The trick I used to fight anxiety was walking around and it always worked for calming me down. But guess what, you cannot get for a walk on a plane so I started fear flights for a fear I might get a panic attack.
Long story short after lots of workarounds and googling I found that there's a company called psious[1] (not affiliated with them other than using their product).
You cannot use their system on your own (I asked) you only use it with a psychologist/psychotherapist.
Basically it works by exposing you to a simulated flight through VR and the psychotherapist helps you with tools like diaphragmatic breathing [2] and cognitive behavioral therapy [3] to ease your anxiety levels.
To be 100% open/clear I haven't flown yet since I started the therapy but I can tell my mindset has changed from trying to avoid flights at any cost to having booked flights and waiting (a bit anxiously :) but nowhere near at the paralyzing level) to actually fly.
So the key takeaway for me today compared to 1 year ago, is that Elon has put a lot of thought on how to make this plan economically viable compared to just the vision last year.
Multiple potential streams of revenue:
- Government/intragovernment contracts to cleanup space debris.
- Government/Private satellite launches.
- Earth to earth transportation which Elon announced on Instagram that the cost would be comparable to an economy fare. https://www.instagram.com/p/BZnVfWxgdLe/
I think this is a nod to ESA who has stated they want to build a base on the moon:
http://www.esa.int/About_Us/Ministerial_Council_2016/Moon_Vi...
Elon's message: "Here's the rocket, it costs this much, go build it".
Basically trying to find more ways to monetize BFR.
My question when I first saw this was where do you get such jet engines? They look small enough to be from any kind of plane/UAV, but also quite large for any small model aircraft.
I wonder how easy it is to get one, do you by any chance need any sort of special license to operate them?
"So what facts am I missing? What makes it even remotely okay that Musk and Facebook are promising the public telepathy within a few short years?"
The author probably didn't read Tim Urban's WBW article[1]. Elon Musk never claimed that we were going to have telepathy n a few short years but rather that he was hoping that he would have some sort of BCI that would also be used by people who don't have some sort of disability.
"I think we are about 8 to 10 years away from this being usable by people with no disability … It is important to note that this depends heavily on regulatory approval timing and how well our devices work on people with disabilities."
"And Mark Zuckerberg gave a timeline of about 25 years.
Mark Zuckerberg said: “I would be pretty disappointed if in 25 years we hadn’t made some progress towards thinking things to computers.”"
So I think the whole article has a clickbait-y theme, I would expect something more objective from the MIT Technology Review.
Finally as the author said Musk has indeed missed the deadlines on his achievements, but nonetheless also he manages to go through with his plans, both with SpaceX and with Tesla.
So even though I don't expect the neural lace in "a few short years" I think it will come eventually.
I had asked a question[0] regarding books a few months ago which ended up in the following list[1].
From those so far I have read the following:
- Elon Musk: Inventing the Future - Ashlee Vance
Totally worth to get insight into the Elon. Kinda changes the superhero/good guy image everyone has but you end up with more respect for him whatsoever.
- Thinking fast and slow - Daniel Kahneman
Awesome book presenting modern psychology. You'll get insight into how humans work.
- Rework - Jason Fried, David Heinemeier Hansson
Nice, albeit small book regarding how the creators of rails manage their company. So very nice insight.
- The Hard Thing About Hard Things: Building a Business When There Are No Easy Answers - Ben Horowitz
I started reading this but it was too business centric for me so I stopped, however if you're a business owner it might be worth it.
- Vagabonding: An Uncommon Guide to the Art of Long-Term World Travel - Rolf Potts
This is a nice/into book if you're interested into digital nomading, long term travel in general.
- The Black Swan - Nassim Nicholas Taleb
This in my opinion is a superb book if you are interested in statistics/philosophy. He presents the chaotic structure of our world and why extreme events are more common than we think.Definitely suggested.
- The art of Learning - Josh Waitzkin
This is a book that presents the Author's (Chess and Tai Chi Chuan World champion) way of learning. Has some pretty useful insight.
Not looking to hijack the OP thread here but could you provide some additional information on your case?
I'm thinking of attempting this next year (try to get a J1 visa) when I finish my Data Science MSc, so could you let me know how easy it was to find a company, how long it took you to find the position, what was the reason for your work (thesis, internship), what's your salary level compared to a normal position in the company etc
Also regarding the J1 visa it was my understanding that you have to return to your home country for 1-2 years before being able to apply for a H1B, is that not the case?
While I think that the Dell XPS is the most beautiful of the Dell machines, I think that the lattitude, especially the e7470 model[0] is a better development machine as they're more easily upgradable (at least regarding the RAM and SSD).
No, because if you read the twitter post it says:
"Something is very very wrong."
Where is that derived from? What the scientific theory that predicts that such a drop in the global ice sheet is very wrong?
I'm not saying that something could not be wrong, but giving a graph and claiming that something is wrong is not very scientific.
For all we know this could be very wrong, mildy wrong, no wrong, good etc
EDIT:
For a) I took a quick look at the site but couldn't locate the graph. Again I'm not saying it's falsified, but pointing to the original source is always nice. If nothing more we could get some additional details.
a)Where are these data from? Why does this gentleman that defines himself as an environmentalist (possible conflict of interest?) not post the original source?
I'm not saying these are false but it would be nice to know the source.
The image reads NSIDC, where's the relevant link, and the relevant analysis from them?
What's the chance of error?
b)What does this mean?
Will we get some super-storm or something similar?
A graph without the scientific theory that leads to an explanation is just an opinion at best.
Again I'm not trying to say that this is not happening but the way this is posted, to me seems to only grab attention, click-bait style.
Though it's always fun to read/watch such predictions, chaos theory suggests we have absolutely no clue as to what the future will look like.
The black swan is a nice book explaining why predictions generally fail.
As an anecdote my grandfather born in remote mountain village in mainland Greece in the 1900 was actually registered by his father having been born in 1906 as to avoid being drafted as long as possible to fight in the multiple wars fought at the time. So birth records and certificates from that time are not really trustworthy.