In all seriousness, if you have the patience and glasnost you should reach out to a scientist or related professional who can document this behaviour via bloods, x-rays, genomics or other means.
I study oral history and you’d be surprised what mundane information amazes people 50 years after the fact. Regrowing teeth would definitely fall into such a category, even if the evidence is unintelligible to present day dentists or you want aspects embargoed.
It might be the narrative bias of revisionist history but it seems like there’s a trend of bombastic good-for-nothing leaders against get-stuff-done lackeys and quiet leaders.
I almost despair at hearing what i want to hear now because it probably means what i want isn’t actually being done.
This is actually on my current todo list - replacing textedit with Helvetica to make notes on MacOS, with Featherpad and ??? font on Debian. Didn’t seem important but the default is so damn ugly.
It seems very simple, more romantic than a dating app and would massively recoup my net worth because I’m sharing expenses, being motivated by my soulmate, and married people out-earn single people statistically especially over a longer time period. The 6 month ‘wait’ also implies i’m skipping any messy divorces. The only downside would be if they die soonish and i spend the rest of my life knowing no-one will compare, but that would still beat never meeting them (at least according to Alfred Tennyson).
You would need to ramp that percentage well up to triple figures before it became a problem.
I have a ten year old laptop - bought a replacement battery, good as new - for 15 minutes. Now it dies in 2 minutes when unplugged. Maybe a trustworthy brand will emerge to handle the different battery sizes available.
I'm pro-everything. From my flawed knowledge of economic history, energy rules all and is the single best thing to invest in for a country or civilisation's future. [1][2][3][4][5]
Any advantages individual technologies have in energy generation, transportation or storage is probably worth exploring.
I hope to have more insight in this when I get around to reading Vaclav Smil, or better yet work in the energy industry as it seems to be one of the few industries I've looked at that definitely needs to exist.
The jaw-dropping moment for this point is the section about bees, even if the author himself said it was very hard to understand. It reframed my understanding of a 'queen' bee at least.
Until paint was produced commercially during the Industrial Revolution (circa 1800), painters had to make their own paints by grinding pigment into oil.[1]
Photography drove painting deeper towards abstraction. [2]
I'm not unsympathetic but the AI revolution might be a similar revolution despite fiddling with code currently being much less pleasant than flinging industrially mass-produced paint from mass-produced tools in a sunlit studio. At least in the medium term, someone will still have to manage the machine.
My tech company's office is close to the BT office in London. I can see arguments for (separation of environments) and against (job market liquidity) office-working but the hybrid model for offices in the middle of London is a Hobson's choice between an expensive flat with no home-office or an affordable flat with a home-office, plus a very long commute 2/3 times a week.
Additionally you will find plenty of people who just don't turn up when you make the effort to come in.
Presumably it works well for everyone with fixed homes and families.
I study oral history and you’d be surprised what mundane information amazes people 50 years after the fact. Regrowing teeth would definitely fall into such a category, even if the evidence is unintelligible to present day dentists or you want aspects embargoed.