That's not entirely true. Processed food requires less energy to digest and absorb. Nutritionally it can be exactly the same food but the net calorie intake will be higher for food that has been processed.
We should eat food that our pre-industrial ancestors would recognize.
>That's not entirely true. Processed food requires less energy to digest and absorb. Nutritionally it can be exactly the same food but the net calorie intake will be higher for food that has been processed.
What does this actually amount to though? You might be right in principle but if it's like 50 calories per day then it doesn't really matter in the grand scheme of things.
ETA: I think I see now, you're thinking that I am suggesting this is a comment on GitLab at large, when it's more likely an isolated incident. I would agree with that. I didn't mean to imply otherwise, but I understand how it came off that way.
You're saying that I am generalizing too broadly from my experience working remotely? Just linking articles like this is kinda unhelpful, I'd prefer if you stated what your objection was, rather than leaving me to guess and to make your argument for you. That might not be as dramatic as linking an article like a mic drop but it's more productive and prevents misunderstandings.
What I'm saying is that in a remote company (distributed across many timezones anyway), you encounter this situation regularly. So you'd expect the culture of those companies to be prepared for this situation. If I'm missing something in that analysis, I'm happy to be corrected on it.
(I'd point out this was exactly the kind of confusion I was talking about. We had different ideas about what argument I was making, so when I tried to interpret what your criticism was, I guessed wrong.)
Very impressive. The schema covers everything I need. This library desperately needs "Repeater" component which I assume would handle array of inputs. This would allow FormKit to handle the most complex forms which is where this library would help the most.
When I was younger, decades ago, I always wondered why investors keep saying we need to have customers and revenue first before plonking down millions; why would I need investors when I have paying customers?? Then we got paying customers, customers paying millions/year and we found out why we need investors. Not all businesses do but even little more than slow growth is pretty hard when bootstrapped; we exhausted bank loans pretty fast as they are too conservative.
if marketing / sales is free you can scale it up without funds. unfortunately, i came to experience first hand it is not. i doubt you can scale without paying for marketing somehow.
I have found that the more excited that a customer is excited about a product the more apt they are to be your best salesperson. This was especially true for
one of my consumer SaaS.
They could have been infected by locals in regions they've been travelling to. Many possibilities. Why do we have to speculate? Let's just wait for more data.
The timeline of HIV pandemic has been established decades after pandemic started. This will take time.
I'd assume that virus originating anywhere in SEA region would be detected in China first. Just like many other viruses originating in America continent would be first detected in USA.
We may have to wait for the fall of chinese communism to know what happened though, like for Katyn. Might take a few decades.
And assuming the chinese haven't destroyed the relevant Wuhan lab samples. That's what I would do in their place. Better never know than take the risk that a technician leak such sensitive information.
This is great but I've noticed newer regions do not have feature parity with older ones.
For example, me-south-1 and af-south-1 still do not support AWS DataSync fully automated transfers. When this feature has been announced, it was put into 16 regions. Why not all regions where AWS DataSync is available?
There is more. This is just last example I've noticed.
As a result, when building cross-region service on AWS, it's not enough to just check whether AWS product is available in desired region, you need to check whether every single feature you need within the product is available in desired region too.
Looking at historical S&P 500 to Gold ratio, stocks are definitely more expensive but nowhere near dotcom frenzy. Either we see market correction or gold is undervalued and will catch up. In that case there might be no stock market crash.
Gold is not a suitable comparison to stocks - it gets brought up on here all the time. Gold is not uncorrelated to the market. Gold is not a store of value. Gold is a speculative investment with a great marketing team.
Gold has two things going for it: there's a baseline of "real" value underpinning it (not just industrial use, but lots of fast-growing Asian countries relying on it for dowries etc), and historically gold holds up quite well when everything else is doing badly. However, it's also fundamentally unproductive (no dividends, no real capital growth), so it's going to be a losing bet most of the time.
We should eat food that our pre-industrial ancestors would recognize.