That word is empirically - by experiment or observation
I wouldn't be surprised if starlink was enough to keep them solvent
The rocket plume. It's cartoonized
"spider" as if there's only one sort. Presumably likewise scorpion.
Is a black widow bite comparable to a redback bite (very painful, unlikely to kill an adult)?
I'm worried that when the bean counters see the price difference between AWS and self hosted stuff they'll find AWS more expensive and we will have to deliver a year's work for 10 scaled agile teams again, but in our machines
It's nice that they brought Minecraft to practically every device. It sucks that they didn't replicate redstone
The very long term carnivores on Reddit are pretty strict and have been for decades. I don't think they see problems from this except that they find the advice to bring in some carbs days before a glucose challenge test to avoid the very slow response you get after years on just meat. I guess that's them being insulin suppressed (which they fix with a small dose of carbs when their insulin response is going to be measured)
I do get a little lactose from Greek yoghurt every couple of weeks, but doesn't everyone get a little exercise for their insulin each morning when blood sugar increases with dawn?
Watching this now. And my first thought: "of course our insulin system isn't like a lion's as we evolved pretty recently from a herbivore"
Funny that he thinks our gluconeogenesis won't work because our insulin is too suppressed, and yet if I get a blood test at 07:00 I get a pretty high (border normal/prediabetic) reading. Whence cometh that glucose? If my insulin is insufficient how does it stabilise that high blood sugar by 9am?
It seems like his belief is that without regular carbs our insulin spent be there when we decide a load of carbs would be a good idea. Those long term Reddit carnivores reckon it takes less than a week to bring your insulin response back to normal
It's funny. I recall on Reddit interactions with people promoting carnivore. You'd say something about protein targets and they'd say "or don't worry about targets, eat enough meat and you'll have enough"
Steffansons book (the fat of the land) was the straw that broke the camels back for me
Low carb was hard in the yo-yo diet way
For me it was that low carb wasn't working (it was too hard), and zerocarb seemed less threatening than carnivore. The words mean the same but they hit differently
But since we don't have the population to support both (even Reddit shares mods between the two) and carnivore is the popular term, I agree that carnivore is the best option
Perl.org now has a stylised camel emblem
CPAN.org doesn't use a camel
It deletes your name from the content