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proverbialbunny

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proverbialbunny
·6 か月前·議論
In Australia Coca-Cola isn't allowed to import coca leaf extract for flavor, so it tastes very similar to one of the 3rd party knock off brands you'll find in the US. In Australia everyone drinks Pepsi because of this. Without the coca leaf Coca-Cola tastes imo pretty terrible.

What makes this video revolutionary is he was able to find an alternative to the coca leaf that has a near identical flavor. If it's as good tasting as advertised this knowledge could empower 3rd party producers to make a coke drink that will finally rival Coca-Cola in popularity.
proverbialbunny
·6 年前·議論
You can still use your headphones, unfortunately you just need to get a $10 adapter.
proverbialbunny
·6 年前·議論
I have a strong suspicion it's come from user surveys, and is tied to data science or analytics.

Sales were down and the butterfly keyboard caused so much complaining it was impossible for Apple to not eventually take note.

If people are complaining and sales are down, the reasonable solution is to listen to your customer. They've done it for every product as of late, like the new Macbook Pro, the new Mac Pro, and while the Apple SE is more a budget project so it may have been inevitable for it to turn out this way, the iPhone 12 is supposed to be smaller, much closer to the iPhone SE.
proverbialbunny
·6 年前·議論
Steve Jobs was strongly adamant about the size of the iphone.

Likewise, Steve Jobs saw hypercard as the future, wanting it to sync up online between people, being like the future newspaper. It's no longer maintained because it's modern equivalent is a web browser. When Steve came back to Apple he pushed hard for advancing web tech instead.
proverbialbunny
·7 年前·議論
Here is an example: https://youtu.be/o9xP28pzQAA

A more detailed look: Most Buddhist traditions frown upon personal demonstrations of achievements and frown upon talking about personal achievements openly without a good reason.

Giving a closer look, a Theravada teacher might talk about their achievements to let students know if they have questions about those topics they have someone they can go to and ask for help.

But eg, on the Zen side of things, it's unheard of for teachers to talk about achievements.

On the other hand, Buddhism openly gives names for states and achievements, so people privately can talk about it and get help from teachers. This vocabulary is explained in detail, and can be used to give you an idea of what the experiences while meditating are like.

Brain scans today show that magic mushrooms and jhanic meditation both light up the brain in nearly identical ways. This implies heightened meditative states are closer to magic mushrooms than lsd.

An example of more anecdotal experiences: https://old.reddit.com/r/TheMindIlluminated/comments/cpybar/...
proverbialbunny
·7 年前·議論
Yes, but they're a distraction. The visuals aren't the point. At the end of the day the novelty wears off and the practitioner continues forward.
proverbialbunny
·7 年前·議論
It's unfortunately a complex issue.

There are multiple kinds of depression. Some qualitative, some quantitative, and some a mix.

We categorize diseases by their symptoms, but multiple different diseases can have identical symptoms. When this happens, we often label that group of symptoms as one disease. We start to give it multiple different names once we have multiple kinds of treatments, each treating each kind. Psychology has this problem where multiple diseases have overlapping symptoms, and because we haven't found out a single magic bullet, we often think of depression as one thing today, when really it should be thought of as a myriad of different diseases that each give a similar profile of symptoms.
proverbialbunny
·7 年前·議論
>just as Mindfulness has become a utility or a tool removed from its context or even it's original meaning whatever that may be

Meditation has historically been around longer than mankind was writing, and has historically always been used to end psychological stress. So much so, Buddhism exists as a program for one to get "enlightened" which is the end of dukkha, and dukkha means psychological stress. Enlightenment is the end of psychological stress. It's a prehistoric therapy that is so helpful it continues to live on longer than just about anything else we know today.

Calling meditation a tool is actually the original use for it, as far back as we have documented. It's how it's taught in Buddhist circles. It's only a tool.

However, you're not entirely wrong either. Half of the teachings that revolve around ending dukkha is in the western world reserved to word of mouth teaching or deep dives into suttas (https://www.accesstoinsight.org/). It is rare to find a meditation teacher that will teach the other half. The reason for this is that process towards enlightenment, that missing half, is being replaced with working with a therapist. However, modern day therapy still has a ways to go when compared to the ancient teachings that are meant to be taught along side meditation instructions.
proverbialbunny
·7 年前·議論
Alcohol is a crutch for APD.

Mushrooms are a proven cure for alcohol and cigarette addiction.
proverbialbunny
·7 年前·議論
You know you can get all that from meditation, and then some.
proverbialbunny
·7 年前·議論
This explains a lot. Thanks!

Hopefully USB 4 will make it possible.
proverbialbunny
·7 年前·議論
I had to stop for a second and look. I have a usb-c hub that outputs to gigabit and multiple usb 3.0 plugs.

A quick google search returns https://satechi.net/collections/usb-type-c/products/type-c-m... which isn't what I have, but it's more of the same.

My complaint about usb-c hubs, when I was looking for one a year ago is I couldn't find one that did 4k60, gigabit ethernet, and 2 or more usb 3.0 plugs. This has led me to plugging in two cables instead of one for years. If my monitor had a gigabit ethernet plug, I'd be set, because it outputs a bunch of usb (2) ports.
proverbialbunny
·7 年前·議論
15 years? Raku just recently came out.

Perl was the popular language once upon a time ago. But it stagnated while new technology came in to replace the old.
proverbialbunny
·7 年前·議論
For people who are curious as to why people moved to Python. Some will say because college kids are taught Python, but I think that is a side effect.

Perl is an old language, pre OOP. It's a language from the 90s, when everyone was hacking together code not knowing what the future would be like. There is a lack of organization. Perl is like C in syntax, features, and in speed. Python is like C++. Every failing you can find in Perl stems from it being a PP language first, from dirty code to kids not learning it in college.

Raku attempts to address every failing of Perl, yet be better than Python. If it succeeds, who knows, but I hope it gets at least a chance to make something of itself.
proverbialbunny
·7 年前·議論
Raku excels at slicing and dicing input data. So, if you need to read from a database or a csv or anything similar, Raku is amazing at taking that data and converting it into the format to do processing on.

Not only that, but when Perl 5 was at the end of its life, comparing its libraries to both Python and Ruby, you'd often find the best library was for Perl.

Raku should be far faster than Python and Ruby and may in the future have better libraries with excellent concurrency support, making it a good choice to do processing over the data, not just converting it to the format you need. It has an easy interface with C and C++, so you can import libraries from there too, if you need more speed.

Before Python came to fame Perl was primarily used by two groups: 1) sys admins who needed bash style 1 liners, but in a cleaner language (This is where the dirty code stereotype comes from.) and 2) Web devs. Much of the early pre PHP internet and even post PHP internet was written in Perl. When Perl on hiatus the web world turned into this mess of frameworks like it is today. It used to be a more unified world.

And then there is the rare 3rd group. I worked on earlier ML projects in Perl before Python was a thing. I enjoyed Perl more than Python and so did the people around me. Moving to Python / R was somewhat painful knowing it could have been better. I hope Raku takes up this torch and is good as it appears to be.
proverbialbunny
·7 年前·議論
More than that. I wrote my first machine learning project in Perl.

Perl 5 is better than Python in many ways, but worse in other ways. Raku seems to have none of the downsides Perl 5 had, but all of the upsides. Raku looks like it could be a valid replacement for Python in the ML space.

Also, back then, Perl 5 had better libraries than Python. Though, that was quite a while ago.
proverbialbunny
·7 年前·議論
He's being extradited to France, which probably has less bias, but still a bias. I doubt the US will get involved behind the scene in France, because they've phrased their reasoning for the heist as btc-e's users were money laundering, so even if he is found innocent, the US still gets to keep the money and not look bad.

Russia may have a bias, I'm uncertain. I'm not sure how happy Russia was about btc-e. BTC-e may have been in the Ukraine, but Russia implicitly requires neighboring countries to follow Russian law. Did BTC-e break Russian law? I have no idea. But because he is not being extradited to Russia, we'll probably never find out what Russia thinks.
proverbialbunny
·7 年前·議論
Far less anonymous than using a bank.

Bitcoin has and always will be a way to cut down transaction costs, cutting out the middle man ie cutting out the banks. To do that, everyone has to be able to audit every transaction and verify authenticity of a transaction. In this way bitcoin is anti anonymous, always has and always will be.
proverbialbunny
·7 年前·議論
That's a good point.

The court case is starting in a little over a week, so Alexander Vinnik (the one accused of the MtGox hack, who was a technician working at btc-e) has yet to be found guilty or innocent.

>On 25 July 2017, suspected BTC-e operator Alexander Vinnik was arrested at the behest of the United States Justice Department while vacationing with his family in Greece.[8][9] Wanted for money laundering by both France and Russia, in addition to the US[10]. Vinnik agreed to be returned to Russia, where he was charged only with fraud.[11] In October 2017 the extradition request by Russia was approved by one Greek court, but the request by the United States was approved by another.[12] The decision to extradite Vinnik to the United States was upheld by the Greek Supreme Court on December 13, 2017.[11] However, in July 2018 Greece agreed to extradite Vinnik to France instead,[13] giving precendence to the European warrant.[citation needed]A final ruling is scheduled for September 19,[14] though Vinnik's lawyer claims that "the decision on Vinnik's extradition to Russia has been made".[15]

source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BTC-e

It's good that he didn't end up going to the US. The US, while legitimate in many ways, has a history of corrupt court practices. If it's in the government's interest to keep the 2 billion, which it is, they will do everything they can to throw him under the bus.
proverbialbunny
·7 年前·議論
>He used it used to launder all of the stolen funds from the Mt. Gox hack (worth several billions, depending on when you measure the value), among other things.

It was not. Coins going in and out of btc-e were labeled making laundering through btc-e difficult at best.

>BTC-e was a cover to help criminals steal from Bitcoin exchanges and safely dilute the funds.

BTC-e was around longer than those exchanges.

The thing about BTC-e is every time bitcoin crashed btc-e would chug along just fine without going down. All other exchanges would become unresponsive. This made, at that time, btc-e the only "safe" program trading bitcoin platform. (Of course, in hindsight, with the us gov coming in and stealing all that money, safe is a bit of an over statement.)