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That whole album is an absolute banger.


I'm on Firefox with ublock origin and it works just fine.

Either way... the site is a store.. of sorts... for Greenday's "Dookie" album, where the songs are mixed down into various bizarre formats. They said de-mastered, and I was hoping that they were actually releasing the individual tracks. Sad.


Yeah, but how much did that actually change? I mean, the media sensationalized every little thing that happened, to make people feel as if the world was ending (or being saved, depending on the news outlet). However, Corporations still ran the country through their bought-and-paid-for U.S. and state representatives, just as in administrations before and after.


<jest> Well the baby was neither a founder nor a female, sooo... </jest>


- "baby was neither a founder"

"Show HN" is way more exciting when you don't yet have object permanence

Where'd the startup go?! :D Now you see it–now it's been acquired by Google


ROFL!

(typed from my phone while still rolling)


Surely a baby would have better ideas than some start ups...


And so we come full circle to "Goo-gle".


Yet!


>Why do so few researchers study them?

Because they're the ones funding medical research! nyuk nyuk!

Seriously though, as a health nut who tries to stay on the science side of things, I still see a lot of "It's Parasites!" stuff from the pseudo-science health community. As well as bizarre cures. Walnuts, Cloves and electric shock seem to come up the most.

I have tried to find any practical advice regarding detection, symptoms and such, and beyond tapeworms, heartworms and hookworms, there isn't much information.


In other news, guns don't kill people. People do. etc etc.


I dislike guns or arguments that because there are guns we need more guns. I expect we’re ideologically aligned on guns.

Except you’re supporting the point.

AI is more like the state with its army and high tech rifles than a predator with a pistol.

AI will deeply centralize power if computing resources and data availability dominate.


>> guns don't kill people. People do.

> I dislike guns or arguments that because there are guns we need more guns.

If people are ones doing the killing with guns, not guns in itself, it means that owners of guns are the ones responsible for killing. So it sounds like argument for regulating gun ownership. Like with driving license.


Guns make violence worse, so regulate them.

The prime actor in violence is a person, and that person still has the capacity for violence without a gun.

But let’s still prefer they don’t have one.


> AI will deeply centralize power if computing resources and data availability dominate.

I'm sure the compute resources will remain centralized, but I'm growing increasingly doubtful of the current data landscape's ability to keep the data "clean" and not prone to Hapsburg AI scenarios or threat actors working to corrupt this data.


I'm curious what the motivation was for linking this now. This repo hasn't been updated in two years. Meanwhile, there are at least five other Rust MPMC queues in use that have been recently updated.

Is there something unique about its algorithm? I'm afraid the repo is low on documentation.


Is this effected by Microsoft's patent on various rAns coding and decoding?

If not, how does it avoid the (rather vague) claims?

https://patents.google.com/patent/US11234023B2/en


> Anyone got any other experiences with things that cause brain fog?

Allergies and Food sensitivities.

These are often incredibly hard to diagnose because there are foods that we eat so commonly, we don't have a good control/variable separation for experimentation. In addition, allergies and food sensitivities don't develop all at once. They increase over time. This makes discovery even more difficult.

But it's almost always this.

As for myself, I had severe brain fog and fatigue. It turns out I was allergic to coffee. Looking back, I now see that it was something that became more and more severe over about 10 years.

It took me quitting coffee for several weeks for an unrelated reason to discover that it was the problem. When I started again, the stark difference in how I was felt made it much easier to diagnose. I got lucky really.


I'm a bit concerned that they don't mention a particular strain of B. Subtilis.

There are hundreds of documented strains, and they don't all eat/produce the same things (at least not in the same ratios)

Some have been documented to reduce inflammation and restore tight-junction function in epithelial walls (where other strains did not).

Others have been shown to reverse the accumulation of α-synuclein. That has been implicated as a cause or symptom of Parkinson's disease.


The reference paper says it's MB40: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36646104/


Are you saying that some are good and some are bad strains?


like many, many bacteria, b.subtilis can infect you in bad ways, particularly if you are immune-compromised. in general, it is probably not a good idea to mess with your body's microfauna, which normally balances itself, unless you have a patent infection, in which case you want antibiotics.


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