I let my streaming radio sub expire, and have found using Youtube just for music playlists to be very effective, and fewer commercials than the non-sub streaming radio. The biggest downside is that the commercials it does play are usually very few in a loop, like when you watch a TV station's streaming channel versus broadcast.
Yeah I'm thinking we need a law like this on the books, they didn't pass the stupid wall budget when the R's had the whole legislature, I don't see why they should hold things up for it now.
If genes from bacteria from a petri dish get in the human germ line then there's lots of weird questions to ask regardless of if they were GMO or not. Anyhow, look up the amino acid coding sequences and you'll see why they are how they are: contingent chemistry. The third base pair of the triplicate doesn't even matter much of the time. https://upload.wikimedia.org/w...
Standard cell culture techniques help you there, genetic drift is a problem in any cell line so you generally get them behaving well, grow a huge batch and freeze them down, and then only passage lines pulled from storage X times until destroying them. Repeat when stores run out.
The adaptive immune system works by randomly editing the binding site and then culling self-reacting cells. There's no reason that novel proteins would be unbindable just because they had different constituent amino acids; you can use metal as an adjuvant and we obviously don't code for aluminum in our DNA. Diseases that the adaptive immune system has trouble with are ones where the accessible surface proteins change too rapidly, not ones that are non-interactive with the immune system. To achieve the latter, they'd end up inert enough not to be able to bind to your cells, either, and could therefor not cause much trouble beyond something like mechanically clogging you up like silica dust or so on.
I think one reason the sales of smart phones have flattened is that they aren't conspicuous displays of wealth anymore, everybody has a little black rectangle. These flip phones would look visually distinct, as how TV and movies still use flip phones often since it is easier for the audience to tell that the phone is being used by the character. Not exactly a risk free move, but I can see the appeal of the idea of making a phone back into a conspicuous luxury item.
I've found for me that the zinc oxide gets reduced by my sweat, I end up covered in gray, reduced zinc which does not interact with light, and a lovely burn. I guess I'll have to try the titanium oxide, but at that point I may as well stop at Sherwin Williams on the way to the beach.
Industrialized nations have been dropping to sub-replacement levels, but you do see this generally mentioned in more panicked rather than relieved tones in the media. From some of the models, we need to proactively remediate some of the damage that's been done rather than merely stop doing further damage. That seems to be a more intractable problem to get the public behind to me, but maybe if we can convince the plebs that The Other is trying to steal their CO2 we can get the money to do so.
I'm too lazy to look up the reference, but there has been similar decline noted in Germany. The reason the PR study was interesting was that it wouldn't be linked to agriculture. Still... ag in Germany and a hurricane in PR could play a role, but on the same note of all things I'd expect insects to be largely unaffected by a hurricane relative to larger organisms.
There's not enough time to recycle for another species to take over. When the huge coal seams and oil were buried in the carboniferous period, there were not microbes that could digest lignin. So, no successor of ours will ever get as much fossil fuel to jump start their development. If the insect population truly and irreversibly collapses, there won't be any vertebrates left anyway.
Kinda... you can't really undo the genetic damage that made it cancer, but you can force the 'be a fat cell' genes to get loud and in charge, apparently.
The idea is to make the cancer behave like a fat cell, so it'll not metastasize or grow uncontrollably. It'll still be well-behaved cancer so depending on where it is, age and so on you still may want to have further treatment but it is much easier to treat cancer if it isn't metastatic. Even if this was a light sci-fi comedy, it'd be better to get fat than to have metastatic cancer.
For an online game that depends on a threshold of motivated users, this sounds much more plausible that the culture warfare everyone else is blaming. If the most excited people about the game could opt to get it earlier for cheaper, and then were disillusioned... that pretty much ensures it is going to be stillborn.
Yeah, with Trumps beef with Bezos there's no way he'd do anything to make commercial drone flights easier, this is just normal governance rules tweaking. The priming expectations you point out is amusing... "Trump Admin states Water still Wet":: "Oh, no... what did they do to the water?"
Cancer is part of your body that stops doing what it is supposed to do and goes off and does its own thing until problems ensue. As such, there will always be cancer, although it will continue to get increasingly treatable and survivable.
That proves his point! I have also heard that it is a great show, and it sits in my queue while waiting for me to get around to it... I've also noticed that there is less "water cooler" talk about TV shows these days, they aren't the cultural touchstones they used to be because there are so many. GoT is about it, otherwise shows are talked about the way books are: oh yeah that one was great, how far along are you? vs the old "did you see that last night!"
They'll probably do something to goad people into connecting them. I got an Xbox One S to play 4K content to a new TV, and while I do enough gaming to have wanted to hook it up to the net and my account anyway, if I had mostly just been interested in it for playing blu rays, I would have had to do all of the connections to download the app, as it didn't come preinstalled. To MS's credit, this may save them fees to the Blu Ray association, but it wouldn't be far fetched to have TVs start telling you to download the broadcast tuner app if they went full Orwellian.
This is very true, the White House budget proposal each year would gut the research I do but after brief panic, we get bipartisan support to increase our budget. The GOP congress hasn't cared about the wall apart from perhaps getting primaried.
I let my streaming radio sub expire, and have found using Youtube just for music playlists to be very effective, and fewer commercials than the non-sub streaming radio. The biggest downside is that the commercials it does play are usually very few in a loop, like when you watch a TV station's streaming channel versus broadcast.
Yeah I'm thinking we need a law like this on the books, they didn't pass the stupid wall budget when the R's had the whole legislature, I don't see why they should hold things up for it now.
Hmm... so if we just wait 200 million years we can see if it is still there?
If genes from bacteria from a petri dish get in the human germ line then there's lots of weird questions to ask regardless of if they were GMO or not. Anyhow, look up the amino acid coding sequences and you'll see why they are how they are: contingent chemistry. The third base pair of the triplicate doesn't even matter much of the time. https://upload.wikimedia.org/w...
Standard cell culture techniques help you there, genetic drift is a problem in any cell line so you generally get them behaving well, grow a huge batch and freeze them down, and then only passage lines pulled from storage X times until destroying them. Repeat when stores run out.
The adaptive immune system works by randomly editing the binding site and then culling self-reacting cells. There's no reason that novel proteins would be unbindable just because they had different constituent amino acids; you can use metal as an adjuvant and we obviously don't code for aluminum in our DNA. Diseases that the adaptive immune system has trouble with are ones where the accessible surface proteins change too rapidly, not ones that are non-interactive with the immune system. To achieve the latter, they'd end up inert enough not to be able to bind to your cells, either, and could therefor not cause much trouble beyond something like mechanically clogging you up like silica dust or so on.
I think one reason the sales of smart phones have flattened is that they aren't conspicuous displays of wealth anymore, everybody has a little black rectangle. These flip phones would look visually distinct, as how TV and movies still use flip phones often since it is easier for the audience to tell that the phone is being used by the character. Not exactly a risk free move, but I can see the appeal of the idea of making a phone back into a conspicuous luxury item.
Suspense? Why would they know that yet? They've just barely confirmed there appears to be more than just a correlative affect.
I've found for me that the zinc oxide gets reduced by my sweat, I end up covered in gray, reduced zinc which does not interact with light, and a lovely burn. I guess I'll have to try the titanium oxide, but at that point I may as well stop at Sherwin Williams on the way to the beach.
Sears may well have died anyway, but this sort of thing was also used to drain it of money as well.
Industrialized nations have been dropping to sub-replacement levels, but you do see this generally mentioned in more panicked rather than relieved tones in the media. From some of the models, we need to proactively remediate some of the damage that's been done rather than merely stop doing further damage. That seems to be a more intractable problem to get the public behind to me, but maybe if we can convince the plebs that The Other is trying to steal their CO2 we can get the money to do so.
I'm too lazy to look up the reference, but there has been similar decline noted in Germany. The reason the PR study was interesting was that it wouldn't be linked to agriculture. Still... ag in Germany and a hurricane in PR could play a role, but on the same note of all things I'd expect insects to be largely unaffected by a hurricane relative to larger organisms.
There's not enough time to recycle for another species to take over. When the huge coal seams and oil were buried in the carboniferous period, there were not microbes that could digest lignin. So, no successor of ours will ever get as much fossil fuel to jump start their development. If the insect population truly and irreversibly collapses, there won't be any vertebrates left anyway.
Kinda... you can't really undo the genetic damage that made it cancer, but you can force the 'be a fat cell' genes to get loud and in charge, apparently.
It is certain, it had to do with requirements Disney put on the deal.
The idea is to make the cancer behave like a fat cell, so it'll not metastasize or grow uncontrollably. It'll still be well-behaved cancer so depending on where it is, age and so on you still may want to have further treatment but it is much easier to treat cancer if it isn't metastatic. Even if this was a light sci-fi comedy, it'd be better to get fat than to have metastatic cancer.
For an online game that depends on a threshold of motivated users, this sounds much more plausible that the culture warfare everyone else is blaming. If the most excited people about the game could opt to get it earlier for cheaper, and then were disillusioned... that pretty much ensures it is going to be stillborn.
Yeah, with Trumps beef with Bezos there's no way he'd do anything to make commercial drone flights easier, this is just normal governance rules tweaking. The priming expectations you point out is amusing... "Trump Admin states Water still Wet" :: "Oh, no... what did they do to the water?"
Cancer is part of your body that stops doing what it is supposed to do and goes off and does its own thing until problems ensue. As such, there will always be cancer, although it will continue to get increasingly treatable and survivable.
That proves his point! I have also heard that it is a great show, and it sits in my queue while waiting for me to get around to it... I've also noticed that there is less "water cooler" talk about TV shows these days, they aren't the cultural touchstones they used to be because there are so many. GoT is about it, otherwise shows are talked about the way books are: oh yeah that one was great, how far along are you? vs the old "did you see that last night!"
They'll probably do something to goad people into connecting them. I got an Xbox One S to play 4K content to a new TV, and while I do enough gaming to have wanted to hook it up to the net and my account anyway, if I had mostly just been interested in it for playing blu rays, I would have had to do all of the connections to download the app, as it didn't come preinstalled. To MS's credit, this may save them fees to the Blu Ray association, but it wouldn't be far fetched to have TVs start telling you to download the broadcast tuner app if they went full Orwellian.
Wouldn't that create a caste system?
So that plus an autodialer and a phone number/name database and an arbitrary person can have realish time data on everyone's location?
You're right, close the patent office, everything has been thought of...
This is very true, the White House budget proposal each year would gut the research I do but after brief panic, we get bipartisan support to increase our budget. The GOP congress hasn't cared about the wall apart from perhaps getting primaried.