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Two meetings a day sounds like luxury to me! I don’t have ADHD but meetings still absolutely kill my productivity. The switching penalty for technical tasks is much higher than non-technical people realise.
Two meetings a day sounds like luxury to me! I don’t have ADHD but meetings still absolutely kill my productivity. The switching penalty for technical tasks is much higher than non-technical people realise.
This video has a great comparison of different locking nut systems and how they hold up against vibration:
Just a small note that the businesses only have to open source their version if they release it. If they just use it internally then they don’t have to distribute the source code. So it depends on the use case.
More similar to Sunak calling the current General Election. It’s very unlikely they will win but they have to do something rather than let it get even worse!
Your phone queries your home instance, your instance fetches comments from the other servers.
The questions I had are:
Yes we do use flash pasteurisation in the UK.
https://www.dairycouncil.co.uk/who-we-are/ni-dairy/field-to-fridge/pasteurisation
Residual risk for flash pasteurised milk is high enough to be concerning, but the study didn’t follow exactly the same process as industry does during pasteurisation, and those extra steps may also help to kill the virus. So we probably need another study to add in those other steps and see if the virus survives or not.
Not ideal though.
Heating the milk to 72 degrees Celsius, or 181 degrees Fahrenheit, for 15 or 20 seconds — conditions that approximated flash pasteurization — greatly reduced levels of the virus in the milk, but it didn’t inactivate it completely.
Milk samples heated for 15 or 20 seconds were still able to infect incubated chicken eggs, a test the US Food and Drug Administration has called the gold-standard for determining whether viruses remain infectious in milk.
“But, we emphasize that the conditions used in our laboratory study are not identical to the large-scale industrial treatment of raw milk,” senior study author Dr. Yoshihiro Kawaoka, a virologist who specializes in the study of flu and Ebola, said in an email.
That’s a good reason not to panic over the study findings, said Lakdawala.
Lakdawala said that commercial flash pasteurization involves a preheating step, which wasn’t done here. It also involves homogenization, a process that emulsifies the fat globules in milk so the cream won’t separate. Both of those steps would probably make it harder for the virus to survive, but she adds that the results of this study suggest full process of commercial flash pasteurization should be done “with all the steps in place.”
We have a while to wait before everyone has microdiamonds in their testicles, but one day we’ll get there!
Is this a thing in America?
Well I have to hand it to you, there’s a kind of mad logic to it!
(I think the heat is good when you ~~almost~~ feel it in your nipples.)
Sorry what?
Must be difficult for people who worked at Tesla for years before Musk bought it.
I’ve worked at my company for 10 years, I’d find it difficult to just leave straight away if some dickhead venture capitalist bought it and started fucking it up.
Are you taxed based on your yearly income, or month by month?
My wife hates it when that happens
You can’t really say it’s “their government” when the Palestinians in Gaza haven’t had free and fair elections in years. Hamas has fucked the civilians in both Israel and Gaza. Civilians of either country who don’t support the aggressive actions of “their side” (countinued settlement, terrorism) shouldn’t be suffering as a result.
Doesn’t Biden have a broken foot that hasn’t healed very well and makes him shuffle around a bit?