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I don't agree. As with everything, it requires care. Taking a multivitamin and thinking you're good to go is delusional.


For most people just eating a good balanced diet and they are good to go. There are a few with genetic/biological issues and they need more - ask your doctor. Vitamin D is one that modern lifestyles likely don't get enough of and so probably worth it - again talk to your doctor.


If eating a "good balanced diet" were easy/normal, we'd have close to zero disease. Supplements are definitely a way to get as close as possible to balance when day to day food intake is chaotic.


there is no reason to think a good diet will prevent disease, nor that supplements will help in most cases. Good diet will prevent some disease, but disease is natural in the environment and good diet is mostly your immune system has what it needs to fight it off after you get it.


ErikCorry, bluGill and others like them get people killed with their exceedingly harmful assertions. It is pointless to argue with them since they're here to spread harm, also probably working for big pharma. The best that one can do is ask the reader to find the evidence for themselves.


Use foam, problem solved.


Use normal ass headphones that cost $5, problem solved even better. I think wireless earbuds are the dumbest product ever made. They are worse than normal headphones in every way.


Not every way. For one thing, I've never had a pair of wireless headphones get ripped out of my ears because the cord got snagged.


This is how I feel about some LinkedIn folks that are going all in w/ AI.


Is this the proverbial writing on the wall then?


Feels to me a combination of old web with new web tricks is the key. People used to update obscure hobby details but there really was no way to donate. Creators didn't even think to bother to ask. All this democratization talk seems to be the solution.


I don't think crowdfunding is a good funding source for science in general. Crowdfunding's going to overemphasize already popular and easy to explain science at the expense of everything else. Boring sounding and unfamiliar stuff like the research I'd like to do would not succeed.


I disagree. There's a guy that doesn't have much attention that's creating fuel from burning plastic. He got crowdfunded. I also recall finding a website way back when of a dude that explored the old railroad tunnels of downtown Chicago. I would have 100% funded that guy for content.


This guy?

https://www.gofundme.com/f/support-solarpowered-plastic-to-f...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julian_Brown_(influencer)

He gets $36K from about 800 donors for a project that seems pretty easy to explain ("creating fuel from burning plastic") and is something probably millions of people are interested in. Wikipedia says he has millions of followers!

The stuff I'd like to do would probably not have even 800 people interested in it after I carefully explained it. And $36K is not a lot when it comes to experimental research in the physical world.

In my view, working a day job and taking periodic sabbaticals would have better ROI for this guy and myself.


> "Boring sounding and unfamiliar stuff like the research I'd like to do would not succeed."

"Boring sounding" to anyone who don't have a "passion" for that particular area of science as you must if you're wanting to research it. The (hard) trick is to get your crowdfunding request in front of the specific eyeballs that will understand (and be excited by) your motivations and interests enough to want to finance advancing that research.


This is sort of what I'm afraid of. I reflect on a lot of people I worked with in the past that are a little older than I am now and things were rough. They'd basically try and find side work and make a living off of it but nearly all of them returned to the workforce. Now, jobs are scarce so I'm really thinking that a career change might be in order. With self driving cars posed to take out a chunk of low skilled jobs and with the self imposed AI that will likely cost 25% of IT job shrinkage, the future looks really grim.

Crass's song from the 1981 Systematic Death last verse seems prophetic, "They'd almost paid the mortgage when the system dropped its bomb".


Log out and you’ll be even more ashamed.


Turn off Watch History and enjoy bliss.


Yep! I actually mentioned this as well. I did it recently and though I miss some of the recommendations, I can't say I miss them that much.


Regarding recommendations. I recently disabled history and recommendations and the subscribed tab has everything I’d expect. No more surprises and no more political garbage.


That’s crazy, when I am logged out I only get political garbage and the most insane braunrot you can imagine. My recommendations are really good on YouTube, I find a lot of interesting stuff


You must fight the urge to click on controversial topics. If you mentally subscribe to any fringe idea, the algo immediately feeds you echo chamber / bubble content. It's crazy.


I usually open videos of any topic I don't want in my recommendations in a private window.


Ye if you watch some woodworking bench videos YT spams them at you.

I guess that is what PCA gives you. Lunatic videos is some distinct component too.


I'd be interested in knowing if he was multitasking and using a lot of memory. I know wedding photos are usually something you feel rushed to upload so maybe this issue can be made worse depending on system resource availability.


yeah copying can take a loooooooong time and so you multitask.

maybe the randomness is based on the other apps he's using at the same time.


I have Apple Photos but I never thought to use it to automatically import my photos and clean it up. My process is very similar to where you've ended up. Thanks for validating it--I'll never change it.


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