If you’re expecting to have a 25 year old physic at 50 you’re in for a lot of depression long before you reach 50.
Meanwhile, Ernie Hudson at 78 years old.
Do you really want to work for a company that allows their HR department to abuse AI as a tool?
maintaining a property
Your mistake is in framing "owning a property" as "maintaining a property".
I sure as hell can’t keep up with my own home, let alone another.
This is exactly the problem. Many people will rent out their building, and not be up to the task to keep it habitable.
the world
Nah, just the US
Except for that one hippie guy allowing a women to touch his garment unsolicited. /s
The bears can smell the vaccinations.
To be even more pedantic, isn't it the impulse?
Ah, thank you, young lad for helping this old person cross the language road today.
I don't understand the reasoning. The serving class has never been pretty to behold. Wealthy people are the pretty ones.
We know that they're wealthy because they haven't got shit all over them.
Unfortunately being aware of the dead cat is part of the dead cat strategy. It's only alive if you aren't aware of it.
True, and the name calling is directed towards the individual's actions.
Fight bigotry, friend.
Just swap crocodile for dragon and we have the beginnings of a great fantasy story.
This is a dead cat.
Nice guy. except boomer.
Intergenerational bigotry is part of the culture war. Be careful what you listen to, friend.
basically no noise
Cars generate most of their noise from rolling when at road speed.
He sues the agency to tie everything up in the courts. It's a power move that only the wealthy can do.
Do they have offices in Russia?
Are you implying that if my office isn't in a certain country, that means my software doesn't have to obey that country's regulatory agencies?
What year is it? The 737 Max was a certified death trap since 2018.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maneuvering_Characteristics_Augmentation_System
Intergenerational wealth is a major determinant for an individual's wealth.
Do you want to know more?
https://scholar.harvard.edu/files/akillewald/files/generations_of_advantage.pdf
Page 23 is the conclusion, start there.
Libraries are really good friends.
![](https://programming.dev/pictrs/image/9e5a8837-8967-412e-b835-8886555194b0.jpeg?thumbnail=1024&format=webp)
I just finished listening to Iron War by Matt Fitzgerald. I loved the descriptions of the history of the event, the history of each of the racers, and their future after the race. It helped me feel amped for my own exercise sessions. Are there other books like this?
Excluding Matt Fitzgerald's other books, of course.
![](https://programming.dev/pictrs/image/a39a1fa0-fbf9-4d86-b121-5a9b92c4d8cd.jpeg?format=webp&thumbnail=512)
YouTube Video
Click to view this content.
Maria Nattestad just dropped a new introduction to the field of bioinformatics.
Foundation skills for bioinformatics:
- Python
- Use the Command Line (e.g. Bash, scripts)
- Statistics - p-values, multiple hypothesis tests
I've used Rosalind in the past to learn about bioinformatics. I solved about 17 of the problems, which is about 6% of the problems on the site.
I think it gave a decent mix of guided learning and letting you figure things out on your own. I would say having some background knowledge in biology and coding would be necessary. It doesn't do a lot of hand holding, but there is some.