Just found out that
J Craig Venter died. Wow, hardly any mention of this in the news. He's the guy that first sequenced the human genome, back when it cost about $100,000,000 to do so. Now you can do
whole genome sequencing at home for about $100. But Venter was a true pioneer. Should have won the Nobel Prize, but somehow never did.
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Google is planning to implement AI Overviews in their GMail product. You already know that Google reads your GMail, right? So it's no surprise that now they'll have AI read it for you, summarize it for you, and tell you what it's about so you don't actually have to read the email itself. Convenient, huh? Because who wants to read their own email, right? They call it a "smart feature" so it must be a good thing, right?
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The ZFC axioms are often regarded as perhaps the most universal truths that humanity has managed to articulate — for while it may be possible for physicists to imagine universes in which physical laws are turned inside out, mathematical laws will remain constant.
It is a paradox without resolution: The foundations of mathematics are as universal, as solid as anything humanity knows, a core part of nearly every mathematical truth. And yet they remain simply what we choose to believe.
I took a class from Paul Cohen – closest I got to a truth math celebrity.
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And now
ElevenLabs is developing their own AI Music factory,
ElevenMusic. Great for coding, I suppose.
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"
If it feels like the world is rejecting science and truth, here are five ways to fight back" I hate articles like this. It's on The Guardian, so you already know it's woke. The writer starts with the premise that doctors objected to "evidence-based medicine" with "fierce protest". First of all, it wasn't fierce – more like Socratic dissent. Doctors were reacting to the perceived sense that individual care would be replaced by population-level data based treatment recommendations/. They were worried that cookbook medicine would be encouraged and that this would percolate from guidelines to audits and payer requirements. In some sense that has happened and is a major source of grief for physicians.
But her beef is that the Trump administration is rejecting climate science. But remember when Al Gore was warning us about global warming and the disappearance of glaciers? Well now
he's warning about a coming Ice Age! I kid you not. We just need to panic about the latest thing that climate change panicans want us to worry about.
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The
physics of coffee. So now I'm going to pour my drip coffee from 20 cm up. Going to splash more, but supposedly it makes for a stronger more robust brew.
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The Sad Story of Heisenberg's Doctoral Oral Exam. He could have wallowed in depression and self-loathing. But he continued to work and developed the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle, and help Niels Bohr construct the Copenhagen Interpretation of quantum mechanics. And we still remember him, and forget the other guys!
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From the insurance side] the tradeoffs here are individual versus macro scale optimization of health outcomes + patient comfort, while optimizing and operating under constrained resources ($, limited numbers of medical machinery, limited numbers of providers, limited numbers of providers with the appropriate specialty).
The idea is that we only dedicate resources at scale to the things with high signal to noise ratio, and the highest signal is patient discomfort.
In your case, that discomfort requirement is clearly met. But that doesn’t mean jumping straight to a test is best for society as a whole -- the symptoms may resolve on their own / with medication before you’d even get the results back, the test may/may not find anything, etc.
“Do the thing cheapest/least resource intensive thing that’s likely to work first, then move on to the alternative.”
The art is determining when it's reasonable to wait a bit. That's when experience counts.
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Someone wrote a book describing how Oregon lost its way:
Oregoners. Too depressing to read.
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