I got myself a Pulitzer Prize, which helps a lot. Well ok, the guy who shares my name and writes terrible books managed to get himself a prize, but it really helps with hiding myself in searches. Well that and the Florida man who also shares my name who caught charges for terrible things :(
I remember the distinctly mixed feelings I got in the late 90s to early 2000s watching a search of my real name go from nothing but me, to mostly me, to "hey I'm still in the top 10", to not even on the front page depending on what search engine you use. (I still see myself on Google's front page, but not Bing's. Bing suggests that if I want more information on my real name I should postfix it with the word "fired", so, hey, I guess things could be worse because that's not me....)
I agree... Medication Resistant bacteria is a problem everywhere. There's probably no money in a new antibiotic, but... Having something new to fight TB would be nice, and there's still prestige, even if you "just" brought it to market and didn't discover it.
I would think there are pharma teams in China or India, maybe even Russia that could replicate and further develop something like this, given the initial paper and PR.
Are you just sharing "this is something else on a TV program that amused me", or am I being dense in my failing to spot anything that's similar between the two situations?
Exvuse me, I've been doing drive by manual slop PRs for at least a decade.
I certainly didn't read a ticket; I ran into the problem myself. I probably didn't read documentation or write tests either. I just fixed my problem and tried to help others a bit.
Commodities are traded on type, quantity, and place. Oil of a specific grade at a specific port. Pork bellies (no longer traded) of a specific grade in Chicago. Etc.
If you want the commodities elsewhere, you have to provide for transportation. Same for electricity. Grids (or grid sections) where supply outpaces local demand and transmission to remote grids can hit negative spot prices even when neighboring grids haven't.
Hvdc in the ocean requires way less right of way than hvdc over land. Running oceanic hvdc from Spain to Germany might have some trouble in the English channel where it would be in territorial waters.
Coil whine is in a lot of places though. I was going to say follows us everywhere, but there are some places still without it. If you're particularly sensitive, it can be a problem.
One of the blessings of old age is my frequency response curve has diminished and it's been a long time since I went into a shop or a restaurant and noped out because of coil whine. But I did stay at a hotel recently with a noisy usb outlet in the headboard. I was able to block that out with the notepad, thankfully.
At least the WebRTC library (not sure about browser integration) can do some a/v sync. RTP audio and video both have timestamps; but of course they have different frequencies and epochs. RTCP sender reports include an RTP time and an NTP time, so you can correlate them.
Personally, I'm not thrilled with how webrtc modulates playback to try to synchronize the two streams, so the SFU I work with doesn't send NTP timestamps in the sender reports or we just don't send sender reports; I can't recall the details atm. Part of the problem may be that our SFU always send audio immediately, but video gets buffered and paced.
For 1:1 calls not using the SFU, a/v sync seems to work and was not controversial when we enabled it.
Uncirculated notes feel weird and also tend to stick together. Thankfully, it doesn't take much handling for them to wear in enough to not stick.
I did have a food stand on the boardwalk in New Jersey once refuse a worn bill, which was wild. I think it was a $1 and it may have been slightly torn near a corner. I'd expect that if using USD outside the US, but I guess Jersey is different.
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