rysworld
rysworld t1_j8sh9ed wrote
Reply to comment by zen-poster-34 in Meta's chief business officer is leaving after 13 years amid the company ramping up its focus on 'efficiency' by luxisa
You're like the invert of a luddite- someone who insists the march of technology doesn't change anything at all, actually, everything is the same as it was. Absolutely bizarre take.
rysworld t1_j8pdyrr wrote
Reply to comment by SentientMeat777 in Upon hearing recordings of wolf howls, older family dogs from more ancient breeds respond with longer howls — suggesting that genetic similarity with wolves affects dogs’ repertoire by marketrent
Something like more than 95% of the DNA of any given modern chihuahua is post-columbian. There was an ancient breed called a chihuahua, and then there was another breed later made to look kind of like them.
rysworld t1_j2btbty wrote
Reply to comment by Cautious-Bid-8117 in For people who already have (or tried to) read a bilingual book by Cautious-Bid-8117
I believe you are looking for the word "translation". "Traduction" is not a word in English, even though that works for most French words with the suffix -tion.
No disrespect meant, I just always find myself wishing people would correct me more when I made mistakes in my second languages.
rysworld t1_j22w1ma wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in U.S. to require negative COVID-19 test for travellers from China — but Canada not changing policy yet by stars_at_night_
There's one cooking right now, yeah.
rysworld t1_j21i80h wrote
You will gain fat if you eat a calorie
If you work out quite a bit but still eat an excess- consider as an example the novice sumo wrestler, eating 5000 kcals a day and expending 4000- you will gain mostly subcutaneous fat, or fat under your skin. This isn't completely harmless, but generally the effects detrimental to you are limited to a little bit of inflammation and a strain on your joints like knees and hips, which are only "engineered" to take a certain amount of weight.
If you are not working off a lot of those calories constantly, you will start to accrue fat around your organs, which is much worse for you. Your organs will have to work much harder to do their jobs in the middle of all that fat, and you will start to edge towards lipotoxicity as your body struggles to deal with free fatty acids, which seems to play at least partially a causative role in all sorts of nasty diseases, including the insulin resistance that leads to diabetes.
rysworld t1_j21dbyy wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Eli5: Would it be easier or harder for a pregnant woman to give birth in zero gravity? Apart from there being no gravity, would it be any different at all from giving birth while on earth? by The_Guy_Who_Wanders
You have a couple of recent posts which are of a much more rambly and long bent than your usual style, with a different tone to the writing and less capitalization and grammar errors. Have you been using AI to write your recent posts? Please don't do that on a place where people are trying to get actual answers like ELI5.
rysworld t1_j1zi4ud wrote
Reply to comment by Taikunman in Dall-E 2, ChatGPT to Push AI to a Tipping Point in 2023 by upyoars
Hmm, weighted algorithms recreating human efforts in granular enough detail it looks novel does not a sophont make. Maybe a little less millenarianism is warranted.
rysworld t1_it3jcke wrote
Reply to comment by Banea-Vaedr in Low-Dose THC Has Positive Effect on Morbidity, Quality of Life and Mortality in Geriatric and Palliative Patients by BoundariesAreFun
A lowering of stress and pain may well extend the life of even the dying. Cortisol is poisonous. I wouldn't be so dismissive.
rysworld t1_irm45zr wrote
Reply to comment by hobbers in AI tool can scan your retina and predict your risk of heart disease ‘in 60 seconds or less’ by Abhi_mech007
A translucent upper arm isn't part of MOST humans' biology? Who are you hedging for, Susan Storm?
rysworld t1_ir7q7ds wrote
Reply to comment by cent178 in How can we be sure that Neanderthal skeletons are Neanderthal skeletons and not human skeletons decomposing? by cent178
There is genetic evidence extant in the genomes of large populations of humans and in DNA we have been able to extract from Neanderthal remains:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4072735/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2860157/
It is also notable that while there was SOME genetic input from Neanderthals into the modern human genome, there are no Neanderthal genes on any modern human Y chromosome- suggesting that it was either impossible for male Neanderthals and female modern humans to breed at all or that any such offspring produced were sterile like mules- a genetic block to fully interbreeding that points to a genetic basis to call them a different species.
We also have a lot of examples of modern human remains that have spent time in a wide variety of conditions, and none of them seem to deform in ways that give them the morphological characteristics of Neanderthals.
rysworld t1_j9216qc wrote
Reply to I Watched Elon Musk Kill Twitter’s Culture From the Inside | This bizarre episode in social-media history proves that it’s well past time for meaningful tech oversight by Hrmbee
Good. Twitter is bad for people and discussion and should be replaced by something better, or we should go back to blogs.