Nobody has died taking these peptides... yet!
Horrifying to see this happening so broadly
Nobody has died taking these peptides... yet!
Horrifying to see this happening so broadly
A wooden box sitting on a table.
An open box with six compartments.
A cheese board with a wire slicer.
Got into woodworking this year, so naturally cranked out a few projects to give as gifts over the holidays. Pictures are a watch box and a cheese board/slicer. Really happy to be able to give handmade gifts
I had never heard of this movie until a friend had us watch it at a holiday hang this year.
It was absolutely delightful! Definitely will be one I go back to.
People probably want to believe that the medical establishment is holding back miraculous cures and whatever else. The whole "we are sharing what THEY don't want you to know" schtick. Like... no this is expensive because it's really hard and we're trying to keep you safe.
You would not believe the amount of time, effort, and money that big pharma companies spend to ensure their drugs are safe. The regulations that bind that industry are written in blood. People died because those standards weren't met in the past. People are determined to repeat history, I guess.
My intention was to explain the message above. I was never trying to comment on McCain's character. But it sounds like you weren't asking in the first place. Sorry about that
He voted to keep it intact in a very famous 51-49 vote where he defected. My mistake. www.npr.org/2017/07/27/5...
John McCain sided with the Democrats to originally pass the ACA
The district failed to acknowledge that the teacher's answer violated scientific fact as well as the publisher's answer key, which confirmed the correct answer was heat and light, since "combustion is a chemical reaction that typically releases energy in the form of heat and light, which makes it an exothermic process."
I'm married to a teacher so I do get the teacher's frustration with parents trying to fight them on grades. This is pretty outrageous though, especially this choice quote. Pretty insane failure on a shocking number of levels
Hatch and my cat Daisy could be twins! They have almost exactly the same face ๐ฅน๐ฅน
In short, if you want to give your chemistry the best chance for reproducibility, use overhead stirring.
Even after just a few months working in a group dedicated to scale up and process transfer, this absolutely tracks. If your reaction is at all heterogeneous, it's likely there is a strong mixing component at play that will affect the chemistry across different batch sizes if not controlled.
It's not a solution per se, but I've been making homemade yogurt for a couple years now and have not bought it from the store since. Everyone I tell is really surprised at it, but it's actually extremely simple, especially if you have an instant pot.
There's a difference between AI being used to analyze well curated datasets and "gen-AI" which is being broadly peddled as the next big thing. The former has been in use for the societally useful things you mentioned far longer than chatGPT has been around too.
If a drug doesn't make it to market then the company has no way to recoup the substantial amount of money spent developing that drug candidate. So think of it as the successful drugs (<<1% of all drug candidates) subsidizing research into the entire rest of the company's pipeline.
Oh yeah there's plenty of opportunism out there to be sure! But I'd just push back on discounting a whole field because it's occasionally over-hyped.
That's a pretty cynical way of looking at it. There's tons of value in optimizing older results and turning them into useful methods. Just because it showed up in a 1970s paper doesn't mean it's a reaction that someone would actually use.
Obviously you should only do so with proper acknowledgement
Boring chemistry is great! I also think further emphasis should also be put on techniques that use quotidian "off the shelf" materials. The barrier to me trying chemistry I'm not 100% sure about is wayyy lower if I don't have to wait for/make a fancy ligand/reagent.
Where's the dislike button on here ๐
Back when I was an undergraduate we had a laptop repair/loaner system for situations like that. If your computer crapped out for whatever reason you could bring it to them and they'd fix it for just the cost of parts. Granted we also had well equipped computer labs as well.
Proposing this as a solution to poor pharmaceutical availability is like proposing burning down your house to get rid of bed bugs. This "solution" will literally kill people.
Haber Bosch process, water gas shift reaction, Ziegler Natta - big industrial processes basically.
Lanthanide mining/separation is an interesting one too
The chimney swifts have arrived in force here in #Chicago! No good photos yet but they've maybe even supplanted the sparrows as the most-heard calls in the neighborhood
#birds
A male downy woodpecker looking off to the side while perched on a tree
A downy woodpecker looking off to the distance. One imagines pensively?
A common yellowthroat in the brush
A black and white warbler perched on a tree
A productive afternoon yesterday at Montrose Point Bird Sanctuary! Lots of people out sharing sightings with each other which was so nice!
Some photo highlights for me were this *dramatic* downy woodpecker, a very cooperative common yellowthroat, and a lovely black and white warbler.
#birds
took a swing past Jackson Park and had some fun sightings - a Caspian tern swooping over the lagoon, a grey-blue gnatcatcher, an orange-crowned warbler (I think!), and a northern flicker, among others
#birds
#birds
A photo of a peregrine falcon flying over grass with Lake Michigan in the background
A common yellowthroat perched on a dead branch
A yellow warbler perched in a flowery tree
A black-capped chickadee perched on a branch
Visited Montrose Point Bird Sanctuary today and was not disappointed - got some beautiful shots of a yellow warbler, a black capped chickadee, a female downy woodpecker, and a common yellowthroat, and a less beautiful shot of a peregrine falcon (!!) in flight!
#addbirder
Thank you!
A song sparrow eating a dragonfly
A sparrow sitting in a budding tree with a patch of marram grass and Lake Michigan in the background
Took my camera out for a spin at the beach. These were two of my favorite captures. I saw sparrows (song, house, and field sparrows), mourning doves, robins, red winged blackbirds, gulls, , ducks, cormorants, and, of course, pigeons on this particular outing.
there's a slippery slope between wondering what bird that is you're seeing to impulse-buying hundreds of dollars of camera equipment