Chop into fries, wash, quick boil 3 minutes, rinse with cold water, dry ( salad spinner works well). Fry in beef tallow and never use veg oil. Remove when crispy and place in drip basket. Season
very cool, my only reason for not using it is latency. recommendation: look up user's ip and geo location, spin up VM in a datacenter with lowest latency.
Try using a microphone and closed loop generating sound and measuring the result in realtime. Randomly mutating and layering noise to find the best fit.
> After 87 launches, in August 2021 ULA announced that Atlas V would be retired, and all 29 remaining launches had been sold. As of July 2024, 15 launches remain. Production ceased in 2024.
IIRC they only have enough reserved Atlas V to fulfill all the manned missions they promised to NASA, so there is no room unmanned for test. (And that's a huge problem!)
having typesafety out of the box between backend and frontend is a game changer.. not having to do fetches manually and your api autocompleting is awesome.
fat is stored energy. To use this energy your body must be in fat burning mode, to get into this you must stop eating sugar/carb based foods, you can eat fat based like meats, avo, yogurt. Less than 20grams of carbs keeps the body ready to use stored fat as energy. Then its mostly just reducing intake and using more of the stored fat... so fasting for extended duration and skipping meals.
Actually, they are correct. The only nuance I would add is that, from reading the scientific literature, we are not exclusively in fat or carb burning mode, it's usually a mix of the two. The mix depends on how well your body is adapted to fat oxidation, your blood sugar/insulin levels, etc.
The podcast you linked is very interesting but doesn't necessarily refute the parent comment? You can improve fat burning in a multitude of ways but I believe the best ways are to avoid carbs/sugar and do quite a bit of training below your aerobic threshold. Most people have such a low aerobic threshold that any exercise they do is above the aerobic threshold, so they won't "burn fat" by exercising, instead they use liver/muscle glycogen.
I've always been a runner but a few years ago discovered the low carb diet. I eat less than 50g carbs a day now. I'm very well adapted to be a fat burner and have very little body fat compared to most people < 10%. I did a metabolic test recently and at my aerobic threshold I was burning 2g of fat per minute (which is alot), at an aerobic threshold HR of 158 bpm (lactate threshold at 177bpm), which enables me to run at 6.30min/mile pace and I can keep that up for hours without bonking.
If I eat a piece of bread and go running, my aerobic system never really kicks into gear because blood sugar/insulin levels are too high and the above doesn't hold.
If your insulin is high, you can't utilize your fat stores. They are essentially locked away. You must use your glyocgen stores and glucose to fuel your brain and body. When your insulin is low and not stimulated by carbs/protein, you can utilize your fat stores and produce ketones. Your brain and body use the ketones for energy. Our brains prefer ketones over glucose when it has the choice. This is the point OP is trying to make. The article doesn't bother to mention basic human physiology of being in a fasting state vs a fed state.
If you have hyperinsulemia (massively ignored and undiagnosed in western countries), or are eating 3 meals /day + snacks with carbs and proten, or such... it is very hard for your body to have a chance to burn fat stores. Your body becomes adapted to storing energy, not burning it. Your insulin is too frequently elevated.
This huberman pdocast you link is more about athletic performance for low carb vs high carb. There's huberman podcasts covering the fact that metabolic disease and obesity is driven by high insulin too
childrens books are unique in that the content is simple and easily generated by AI. highschool educational books would be much harder to do as it requires more research and checking for accuracy.
any technology that saves people hours of labor is worth promoting especially if its recent.
Very unlikely, because the stuff in the vaccines doesn't stay around for very long. Monkeypox isn't exactly new. It is around for several decades, with the occasional outbreak. Pretty much every outbreak is linked to Africa. It's a tropical disease after all.
There are some thoughts, that the stop of routine smallpox vaccination might be one of the reasons why it spreads so easily now. The vaccine would be effective up to 85%.
monkeypox is an orthopoxvirus, which is a completely different virus family from adenoviruses (which are used as the delivery vectors in the J+J and AZ vaccines.)
it's also like, an existing virus, with a long history of outbreaks. why would it be a side effect? how could it? how are people so gullible? it's like asking if climate change is caused by chemtrails or something..
- By weakening the immune system in general ( i have no idea if it's plausible, but i've seen people saying vaccines were also having detrimental side-effects for ages, even before covid)
- by having the body produce facilitating antibodies
once again, not saying those hypothesis are true. Only that it seems to me it's super hard to predict side-effects of anything in the fields of biology, especially when you're talking about rare occurrences.