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There's a typo in the post:

> Anyways

I think you obviously meant "anyway".


"Anyways" is not a typo. It's a well used term in informal contexts.


I'm colorblind and this looks way better, thanks!


It's confusing for native English speakers as well.


I'm a broadcast engineer with 15 years of experience, and before that experience doing web broadcasting before things like youtube existed.

I still get confused by the terminology.


> It is ironic that the person who first described how hard spaceflight by rocket is, due to the exponential nature of the deltaV equation, is also the person who described the best way to side-step that problem with non-rocket launch.

That's not ironic at all!!



It could also be used for recreating voices for people that have lost theirs, like Roger Ebert. I think he benefited by having so much of his voice already recorded, this would make it much easier for regular people.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hMyxgSLESz8


Great use case!


I think we used to call it Pink Panther.


> In fact, health officials say the virus is so contagious that if an unvaccinated person walks through a room two hours after someone with measles has left, there’s a 90 percent chance that an unvaccinated person will get the disease. People can spread measles for four days before the rash appears and for four days after.

Yikes!


Seriously. I'm an infectious disease epidemiologist, and measles is amazingly transmissible.


As an infectious disease epidemiologist, could you elaborate on that? What is it that makes it so contagious?


A couple reasons:

- While it enters via the lungs, the virus emerges in the trachea, which positions it really well to be aerosolized through coughing. This aerosol and droplet transmission is really efficient.

- Measles is relatively stable in the environment, so lingers for a fair amount of time.

- It also appears to have a relatively small infectious dose.

Other highly contagious diseases, like norovirus, share fairly similar properties - you make a lot of virus, it hangs out for awhile, and you don't need to come in contact with much of it.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4997572/



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I just set up with Stripe. I'm looking forward to getting Buy Me a Coffee set up tomorrow night. Thank you so much!!


I read the first Malazan book but it never really gripped me. I've heard that it really gets good at book three. Do you agree?


Still on the 2nd book. Just love how he obfuscates so much of the plot and drips it out very sparingly, while focusing very heavily on character development. It feels like he is comfortable at revealing details at his leisure rather than clumsily throwing predictable tropes at the reader.


Book two is very intense and gripping, but it features a different cast of characters from the first which some people find jarring. The third book returns to the characters from the first, and is definitely where most people find that they've really gotten sucked into it :)


It is very jarring, that's why I love it. He isn't at all bothered about following generic fantasy patterns, it does seem like a labor of love in that he just does what he likes when he likes. The only weak part I felt so far was the culmination of Book 1, it could have been better I guess.


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