I think it has healthy funding from his Patreon account, plus the $15 to buy the game, as well as serving as sort of inadvertent PR for his upcoming commercial game (1935.)
Once consumers become aware of the true differences between ICE vehicles and EVs, most auto manufacturers will need to do this, as the simple economics of owning an EV is so superior to an ICE vehicle, all else being equal. It remains to be seen however if the established manufacturers can match Tesla's lead in supply chain and battery production capacity relevant to EV manufacture.
Cautionary aspect: detecting mild and/or very long term deleterious effects of nootropics/drugs is extremely difficult empirically. Something like e.g. caffeine has been put through the ringer historically both empirically and in terms of secondary anecdotal cultural awareness (if that counts for anything.) But something relatively niche like this can't hope to have the necessary resources allocated to it for sufficient study.
Not qualitatively or remarkably different than 20s though, in the 30s, as Carl indicated. After all the decade distinction is arbitrarily chunked off, whereas actual change in these attributes is linear/gradual. In addition I've seen many cases where each of these experiences improve over time, e.g. someone in their 50s/60s being finally exposed to the wonder and reality of other cultures, whereas in 20s, it may not stand out as much compared to other youth/20s experiences.
This being a result of JavaScript's weapons grade weak-typing, I've always wondered of what benefit weak typing actually brings, once dynamic typing is assumed, over strong typing as in python/Ruby. Or at least stronger typing. Reasonable coercion from 11434 -> "11434" is one thing, but why not throw an exception when anything more ambiguous is encountered? It would seem even for an absolute newcomer to programming, or someone experienced who wants to rapidly prototype, the bugs resulting from this hidden coercion complexity outweigh any gains in productivity. Especially considering the alternative is simply a set of special unambiguous casting functions that could be easily looked up.
And any central database of this information is vulnerable to a one time leak. One period of vulnerability and potentially this information is out there forever. Once that happens automated identity verification becomes much less reliable/convenient and there will potentially be a need for a more Turing-complete and/or hardware dependent process.
True, but I believe a standard reply to this from a pro EV perspective is that it's still better to be using fossil fuel->grid->EV than fossil fuel->ICE because of the overall efficiency of the former's process over the latter's, to the extent that it results in less CO2 emitted per mile driven in an EV over an ICE vehicle.
"and even if you do go the experience won't be the same."
Off topic, but say someone is a late-20s/early-30s guy who for financial reasons wasn't able to do the "backpacking Europe/Australia/NZ/whatever" thing, how does the experience significantly change throughout the 30s/40s? I know a few people who still do this.
"maybe even poor people should have some fun and the push to save is part of a massive collective delusion to pretend we're not mortal."
This ties into something I've thought for a while and while reading the article. Basically "premium mediocre" is just another variant of materialism. That somehow material goods (of a sufficiently high caliber) are an intrinsic good, and that obtaining/consuming them brings about some intrinsic benefit to one's life, just a variant shaped to the particular existential angst of millennials. But there's an out: maybe the most lasting and significant experiences of one's life are one's that take place/are primarily a function of one's mind. From the outside it may seem much less substantial or obvious, but why can't millennials consider spiritual progress, mental self-discipline, grand experience, or cultural exploration (say bumming around Europe for a while) to be a primary aspiration, even if it leaves them relatively broke at the end of the day? To an extend they do, and I'm not sure that's such a terrible thing.