As a side note, if you go to conerts/festivals or any place with loud music, I absolutely cannot recommend how important it is to protect your ears. I use these and it doesn't hinder the experince at all, there are other similar types, but this is the one I got recommend over 5 years ago, and they work great. It actually improves the experience IMO, some places have such loud music, you end up leaving with some really weird headspace thing going on and it can be hard to hear for the next few hours. They don't mask the sound of the music, it just reduces the amount of decibels your ears take in, which is one of the ways your hearing can be damaged. You can talk to a person normally and hear them just fine, you don't have to take them out to have a conversation. I hope this helps even one person, hearing loss is no joke and it's so easy to protect yourself. It's on a similar level to me as how important sunscreen is during extended periods of being in the sun.
> You've probably heard the advice, "Drink eight 8-ounce glasses of water a day." That's easy to remember, and it's a reasonable goal.
> Most healthy people can stay hydrated by drinking water and other fluids whenever they feel thirsty. For some people, fewer than eight glasses a day might be enough. But other people might need more.
Yes, it's BS.
Truth. Around $20 for a decent razor, $11 for a box of 100 blades. Very good shave and 11 cents per refill.
Edit: Since everyone's asking what I have: WEISHI Nostalgic Long Handle Butterfly Open Double Edge Safety Razor https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00PKHIDRA/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_9pHzBb521CC24 only $16 now. Very happy with it, great quality. The butterfly opening costs a little more but is worth it for the quick and easy blade change.
Also from the Mayo clinic: https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/dehydration/symptoms-causes/syc-20354086
>Thirst isn't always a reliable early indicator of the body's need for water. Many people, particularly older adults, don't feel thirsty until they're already dehydrated. That's why it's important to increase water intake during hot weather or when you're ill.
Here's what you're referring to: the book The Myth of Millionaire Tax Flight: How Place Still Matters for the Rich by Christobal Young. Here's a short version of the book. Millionaires and billionaires in the US and Worldwide don't actually leave their homes that much and stay where they have jobs or businesses, in general where they live. The thing is, that the US and other developed nations should pursue not simply taxing the richest of the rich, but also the crackdown on tax havens.
No. The gum itself doesn't really do anything, except maybe give you something to think about, but it makes people swallow which is what helps airplane ears. You could also suck on a hard candy or drink something, which is what I usually see recommended for little kids or babies.
https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/airplane-ear/symptoms-causes/syc-20351701
This article will tell you that washing your hair with shampoo too often will remove the natural oils from your hair. If done a couple of times a week, this is good.
But if shampooing your hair every day can result in dry hair (split ends, etc.).
Therefore; you can rinse your hair out everyday, but try to soap it through maybe once or twice a week
I had my suspicions as well but I guess they don't risk getting sued for huge amounts of money so they probably don't. They have a thing with ads which still makes me suspicious. You just have to be paranoid with the internet and don't believe anything that sounds too good to be true. Remember HideMyAss.
That's what I always took it to mean. There is an anecdote in the popular economics book The Armchair Economist which talks about the same thing, it was something along the lines of asking if the sign actually change other drivers' behavior or not, and if it did, should everyone logically put one up in their windows to make everyone safer, and if they did, would that mean that people would start ignoring them?
The phenomenon is real, but as far as we know the pain is not related to growth. The medical term is "non-specific limb pain in children" and is widely recognized, but little understood. The pain manifests in the legs at night, quickly recedes, and leaves no physical indicators. Some doctors postulate that it might be related to athletic activity, some think it's psychosomatic, but there's a dearth of evidence relating it to anything.
Read more here:
https://news.psu.edu/story/141240/2007/11/05/research/probing-question-are-childrens-growing-pains-real.
https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/growing-pains/symptoms-causes/syc-20354349
According to the book The Myth of Millionaire Tax Flight: How Place Still Matters for the Rich by Christobal Young it is bullshit actually bullshit. Here's a short version of the book. Millionaires and billionaires in the US and Worldwide don't actually leave their homes that much and stay where they have jobs or businesses, in general where they live. The thing is, that the US and other developed nations should pursue not simply taxing the richest of the rich, but also the crackdown on tax havens.
I stick with fluoride as it helps so much in dental health, but something to avoid is sodium lauryl sulfate (SLS). That is a foaming agent and detergent that can have some nasty side effects but is put into a lot of toothpaste. My gf battled with getting canker sores in her mouth for many years, just thought it was "something that happened to her." I got her to switch to an SLS-free toothpaste a couple years ago, and she literally hasn't had one canker sore since then. I know this is just a sample size of one person so not exactly hard science going on here, but for her anecdotally, it helped a lot. The trouble is sometimes finding a toothpaste that has fluoride but not SLS. A lot of the crazy "healthy" toothpastes contain neither. But they're out there. I use this one from Jason.
>this will work
Developer of DeadPix here. Just coming in to say that it *might* work, but there's absolutely no guarantee that it will. However, there are various techniques that can be used such as flashing colors or static just to name a few.
Generally speaking, yes it’s BS. Extra weight puts additional strain on your heart - so that is a big risk factor by itself.
Fat people can be otherwise healthy in other categories. Just like people at a healthy weight can be unhealthy in some ways.
https://www.webmd.com/fitness-exercise/news/20170814/fat-but-fit-a-myth
This discussion thread is full of bullshit.
Trans fats (really bad) are added to some margarine.
Butter contains saturated fat (bad).
Margarine mostly contains unsaturated fat (good).
Consider Becel sticks - which they market as a direct replacement for butter. 1tbsp contains 12g of total fat, which comprises 3g of saturated fat and 0.15g of trans fat (It's there, but it's tiny). The rest is mono- or polyunsaturated fat. Butter, in comparison, also contains 12g of fat and none of it is trans fat - buuuuuut, it contains 7.3g of saturated fat! That's not good.
Now let's throw spreadable Becel margarine into the mix: 12g total fat, NO trans fats, 1.5g saturated fat, and the rest unsaturated.
Modem
MOTOROLA MB8611 DOCSIS 3.1 Cable Modem with 2.5G Ethernet, Approved for Comcast Xfinity Gigabit and More. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08DDFKXKC/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apip_qywKZAEK3cOVO
Router
ASUS AC2900 WiFi Gaming Router (RT-AC86U) - Dual Band Gigabit Wireless Internet Router, WTFast Game Accelerator, Gaming & Streaming, AiMesh Compatible https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0752FD3XJ/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apip_fJlP84vKc4HWg
Up to you but that’s what I have. I didn’t need wifi 6, the modem should be good up to 6 gbps, so future proof for awhile.
I have not participated but from reading over one of the ads, it is pretty apparent what's going on - In this specific case, $49 gets you free consultation and $1200 towards Invisalign treatment. They claim that the treatment is an $1,895 value, which is why they claim such incredible savings. You are still going to have to pay everything above and beyond that first $1200 though, and I have a hunch that in the end the total will wind up being far more than the $1,895 value claimed in the ad. I also noticed at the bottom, "Promotional value expires 120 days after purchase." So does that mean the $1,895 value is only for 120 days and that your Invisalign will really cost $6000? If that were the case then it winds up being a 20% "discount" instead of 97.5%. I put "discount" in quotes because I imagine the final price is artificially inflated in order to account for the "discount" and still make a killing. They're not doing this as charity to people with crooked teeth! Lol
Anyone who has had Invisalign or has used these Groupons, please jump in, as I am only speculating. That is why I am not saying bullshit or not, just offering said speculation.
The concept itself isn't bullshit. But their application / advertisement is.
There are legitimate companies keeping an eye out for password dumps and monitoring known marketplaces for exploits and "paydata". See https://haveibeenpwned.com/
The bullshit is twofold:
1) It gives off a false sense of security if their scan finds nothing. They can't possibly scan everything - they should really downplay their ability in that advertisement. That kind of marketing is not responsible behavior.
2) If they find valuable data of yours out there, the damage is already done, spare for passwords you can change.
Direct financial damage through credit card fraud can easily be detected and mitigated by just checking your charges and calling your card provider.
As for identity theft, I don't know enough about that topic. It's pretty rare to happen here, and the cases I know off are not the result of simple data breaches.
It’s not always the best strategy. this poor lady followed the ‘stay put’ advice and never moved for nearly a month while hiking the Appalachian trail, but ended up dying. She was one mile from the trail the whole time.
If you’re ever traveling somewhere and fear getting lost, it’d be a good idea to buy one of these GPS emergency beacon that can be located anywhere in the world.
HideMyAss was a VPN. It gained a lot of attention when people got arrested after using their service for illegal things. How? Well, it turns out that HideMyAss gave access to their logs to the police. As a result, the police were able to track them down. The incident was widely reported all over social media and on online news sites. As a result, the trust that people had for HideMyAss was crippled, and people realized that free VPNs were dangerous.
Genetic evidence shows that the strain in humans is not derived from the strain that llamas have.
Hilariously, though, Incas did have (or perceived themselves to have) a problem with llama-banging. They had a lot of rules and customs to expressly prohibit it.
https://www.academia.edu/27834852/The_origin_of_syphilis_and_the_llama_myth
Conclusion: Disturbingly plausible, but bullshit
I cannot speak for the glasses, but I can say that using a program like f.lux has greatly improved my sleep. I cannot say for certain whether it's just placebo effect, but f.lux seems to work on the same concept, just by adjusting the color temperature of your display as opposed to requiring you to wear special glasses.
We had something like this when I was a wrestler. We also had a person use calipers to get a more accurate measure.
They work. More or less, it sends electricity through you. The fatter you are, the slower the electricity. It's far from perfect though. You'll get a good estimate, but a lot of variation.
http://www.consumerreports.org/body-fat-scales/body-fat-scale-review/
I've never seen one that claims to be able to calculate muscle mass and bone mass. Maybe it just assumes a certain bone mass based on height, age, and gender, and then whatever isn't fat or bone is labeled as muscle (minus however much for average organ weight).
Yes. It's rare-ish, but Broken Heart Syndrome exists and is a qualitatively different occurance from a what we consider to be a typical heart attack. Broken Heart Syndrome can be precipitated by grief or other extreme emotions (as well as other situations). Here's more info. https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/broken-heart-syndrome/symptoms-causes/syc-20354617
Or do test it.
If you're interesting in this sort of thing, download VirtualBox (free software, by Oracle) so you can create Virtual Machines.
Then download Windows 10 by googling "download Windows 10" (should lead to https://www.microsoft.com/software-download/windows10). There, you can "download a tool" that can either help you upgrade your current PC, or (and this is what we want) get you an ISO file, so you can install/upgrade a different PC.
An ISO file is a CD/DVD image. A "blueprint" for one, if you will.
Then, go to VirtualBox software, create a new VM, and "insert the ISO" in the virtual DVD drive.
Start the virtual machine in question, you should be able to install Windows 10.
Do not enter a product key. You'll get an "Activate Windows" watermark afterwards, that's fine for our testing.
Next, do whatever the fuck you want to the System32 of this machine. See how it is possible or not. (Hint: it is possible, even if Windows makes it slightly harder for you) And see how badly Windows falls apart after.
If you're done having fun, just discard the virtual machine, or use the ISO to reinstall Windows on it.
Have fun doing other experiments with Windows inside a VM. Or, while you're having fun with virtual machines, download Ubuntu from www.ubuntu.org and install that in a virtual machine, so you can see what Linux is like without needing an actual, full computer to try it on.
This from Mayo Clinic website: Toxic shock syndrome has been associated primarily with the use of superabsorbent tampons. However, since manufacturers pulled certain types of tampons off the market, the incidence of toxic shock syndrome in menstruating women has declined.
Toxic shock syndrome can affect anyone, including men, children and postmenopausal women. Risk factors for toxic shock syndrome include skin wounds and surgery. Mayo Clinic toxic shock syndrome page
Ah, that's a good point there's a weasel word in there people are overlooking.
However:
You can overdose on dextromethorphan one of the active ingredients in Dayquil which was specifically mentioned by name by the OP.
https://www.amazon.com/Vicks-DayQuil-Multi-Symptom-Relief-LiquiCaps/dp/B005ZQP478?th=1
Take three of these packs, open them into a blender, add some nice fruit, ice and yogurt and enjoy ODing on this gross ass 50$ smoothie.
Edit: I have been informed you might need to use 6 or more packs to OD on that particular chemical and you might OD long before on some of the other ingredients so don't try and use this recreationally, it'd be bad.
In a nutshell: natural light is cool in the morning and warm in the evening. The light coming from screens is cool. This means that by staring at a screen in the evening, you're exposing yourself to a cool light, your body thinks it's still day and does't distribute chemicals to make you sleepy. It messes up with your sleep rhythm. Also, cold screen light in a darker room tires the eyes more.
Yellow-tinted glasses attempt to fix it by adding a warm color filter. So actually they might work. Still, it's not worth getting them when you can simply download f.lux. It works, I use it for a long time and there's a difference.
Virus Total Scan 5/52 detected
WoT rating rated Very Poor
Not bullshit.*
I don't know the specific website, but government departments do have to replace cars and other equipment eventually, and they do sell to the public.
*Surplus vehicles (from what I've heard), tend to be high mileage, used and abused, or damaged in some way, so take that into account when buying. Inspect it first, or get someone you trust to do it for you.
I had a quick look at the site, and it's an auction, so the price listed is only the most recent bid - not the final price. They also receive bad reviews here, so maybe try somewhere else.
It will definitely reduce the amount of data you use. Using blockers blocks the data from transferring to you in the first place.
If you’re interested, I use uBlock Origin
It has way too much star power to be a simple prank video, but too little surrounding buzz to be real. It's a viral ad campaign for a BTTF-related product by a company with a large marketing budget. Probably Nike. I don't know of any other large company coming out with any BTTF-related product anytime soon.
Edit: So it turns out it WAS a prank, rather than a viral.
http://mashable.com/2014/03/04/huvr-videos/
This surprises me. I knew Funny or Die had a healthy budget, but I didn't know it was big enough to hire a bunch of A and B list stars for a few minutes' worth of entertainment.
I don't really think this post is in the spirit of this sub.
You need to find product reviews. A basic Google shows this keyboard is badged under different brand names, none of which I've ever heard of, which to me is not a good sign.
I found it somewhat cheaper on NewEgg: https://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?item=9SIA9JN4RP6347
And a variant on Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01M7U2RPY
i've heard it's good for stopping you from using muscles that you shouldn't for whatever reason. Like when you start feeling the tape stretch, it's a sign to stop.
here's an article that concludes not enough study has been done to say for certain. Some think it's a placebo effect.
this study concludes that there's little to no effect on muscle recovery, increased range of motion, or pain relief.
Nope. It's basically just the filament extruder of a normal 3D printer stuck into a pen with batteries. By drawing slowly in the air, you can make shapes (although the ones on that site are particularly good).
EDIT: Looking at Hack a Day, they pointed out the whole "USB powered" thing might be a lie.
A good rule of thumb is to never trust the claims made by products marketed as "dietary supplements". The supplement industry has almost no FDA regulation, meaning that pretty much all of their claims are totally unproven and probably BS.
This looks to be the case with garcinia cambogia, which was first marketed as a weight loss supplement by Dr oz. It makes bold claims, but like many fad miracle foods they don't measure up in laboratory tests.
It is BS. Here is a TED talk on the subject and also a nice informative page here put up by the national science foundation debunking this common misconception.
I'm pretty sure this misinformation was spread by accidentally cutting of the end of the sentence "you typically only use 10% of your brain at a time" but don't quote me on that.
Uh, sorry, but there are documented side effects from nicotine cessation. You may be relating a personal experience, but nicotine withdrawl is no joke to most.
Source:
https://www.webmd.com/smoking-cessation/understanding-nicotine-withdrawal-symptoms
Check out the book Descartes Error. He goes into the split-brain studies, and yes, two distinct consciousnesses do seem to form.
Actually, they run around 8.5w for a 60w equivalent
SYLVANIA General Lighting 74765 A19 Efficient 8.5W Soft White 2700K 60W Equivalent A29 LED Light Bulb (24 Pack), 24 Count https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0758GXHQK/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_Hu.BFb18EZGDN
Not Bullshit. Internet privacy and free VPN are two opposing ideas. Generally anything providing a free service on the internet is selling your data. More specific to Betternet, a 2017 study on VPNs about whether injecting malware, adware, are just not providing the security that they advertised found that Betternet is the fourth worst VPN in regards to all that. It has an AV-rank of thirteen according to VirusTotal. An AV-Rank of two is considered to be a likely indication of malware presence.
I mean if I told people they should start sandblasting their eyes you shouldn't need a source to know it's a bad idea. But here, have a source saying water is fine if that's what you need to accept it.
They’re really not! I was taking heavy antibiotics for my skin, and my doctor told me to take probiotics to keep the balance in my body. I am no longer on antibiotics so I stopped taking probiotics too, and I can tell the difference in my nether parts (am woman). You don’t HAVE to take them, but they definitely help.
Edit to add evidence
I use the app F.lux which warms the colors of your screen at a curtain time of day. I can’t say if it works but I notice some eye irritation when it shift from the warm colors back to normal but after a few seconds the irritation goes away. There is some factual science to it too.
I like it as a modification to the screen whereas it puts me into a curtain mindset when the colors become warmer.
If your curious, the app is free here
Yes. The amount of caffeine in coffee fluctuates a bit, but all of them are higher than the average amount of caffeine in a similar amount of soda.
A lot of people, including me, who can relate have found relief from this book
Well, WOT doesn't like it very much. However, if you really want a free iPhone 6, Credo Mobile is giving them with new contracts.
Thanks for the reference. Actually the conclusion you describe as the one you would have reached if you only had bought the store version is the one I reached last year after replacing my faucets with new Delta units. I decided to return them and go with Grohe after seeing how cheap they were.
I'm wondering which version we get from Amazon, the cheap store version or the good one. The product numbers shown such as https://www.amazon.com/dp/B003FX7PMA/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_13h.Fb0R49C1V seems so be the good one, bit I wonder if that's really the model they are delivering.
It's ultimately a subjective conclusion, you're free to read the manuscript yourself and draw your own conclusions. I'm personally not at all convinced it's anywhere near similar enough to constitute copyright infringement. The fact that the author wasn't willing to show up in court to defend the suit suggests to me that she wasn't convinced either.
I've heard some people have had success with Minoxidil (commonly known as Rogaine) which you can now buy online even at places like Amazon.
I don't have personal experience with it, but I have a friend who swears by it and his beard is pretty full now (though I didn't know him before he used it). There are a ton of blog posts out there with people attesting to its effectiveness with before and after pictures. I couldn't tell you about how it works or the safety of using it but if you're searching down that path, I thought it might be helpful to point you in one possible direction.
Do you also get paid less whether or not I skip through the ads in the middle of videos? I've never personally heard of your channel but I have seen people like Linus Tech Tips segway into an ad like "Speaking of the Internet, YOU could use Private Internet Access!" at the end of every video and that's usually where I switch videos and I wanted to know if you see any change in money based on the video analytics of what people watched, didn't watch, skipped through, etc
It is bullshit.
Fat cells are not just blobs of butter - they are fully functional cells with a nucleus and mitochondria etc
The cells store less fat if you lose weight. They don't fill with water instead.
I think this comes from pharmaceutical standards - when they say take medicine on "an empty stomach", they ballpark that as two hours.
It doesn't mean your stomach is literally empty. It takes 6-8 hours (average, it varies depending on the individual) for food to leave the stomach and pass to the intestinal track.
https://www.mayoclinic.org/digestive-system/expert-answers/faq-20058340
Conclusion: Mostly Bullshit
The website is official according to distrowatch. The distro is just a collection of tools in a similar vein to Kali Linux except it's based on Slax.
The only tried and true emulator is Citra-Emu which is open source and available to compile for yourself, it has made incredible progress these past three months, and it can run Ocarina Of Time at about 20 fps constant, but textures are glitchy, and we don't know what's his system, it could be a 980 W/ Dual xenons or a HD4000 with an I3
Astrology is bullshit. That being said, time of the year a person was born might play a minor role in some health aspects, which might have secondary affects on personalities if it alters the way they live their lives... But I don't think you could look at time of year without considering where someone was born, as different latitudes have varying differences in light and temperature during seasonal changes.
https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2014/10/how-birth-season-affects-mood/381727/
https://weather.com/health/news/birthday-plays-role-in-allergies
If you're currently running Windows 7, 8, or 8.1, it is legitimate.
Edit: From the official Windows 10 FAQ & Tips page:
> Windows 10 is designed to run on Windows 7 and Windows 8.1 PCs. That means your device is likely compatible and will run Windows 10.
So I guess not Windows 8, but there's a free upgrade from 8 to 8.1.
It can vary between 80-120 mins, being 90 mins on average. So "you do you" also applies here. Don't take 90 minutes as a firm data point for you, but yeah something around that.
>approx 45 degrees can be fatal.
45 degrees is like, super-fatal. 46C (115F) is the highest temperature ever recorded in someone that survived, typically 40C (104 F) or higher is considered dangerous.
While the Great Pacific Garbage Patch definitely exists that is extremely unlikely to be a photo of it.
It is in the middle of the Pacific Ocean so very, very hard to reach in a small boat and a couple of oars.
My daughter is having problems with cavities in her baby teeth, she's 10.
After discussing this issue with my wife I go to wondering if those "pills" that you chew that show you where you missed brushing was still around.
What I found is GUM Red-Cote Disclosing Plaque Tablets. These resemble what I remember from school.
Heres the Amazon link.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B001BJQGES?psc=1&ref=ppx_yo2_dt_b_product_details
Delta has a partnership with Amazon, the model numbers are genuine. Notice the Ships From and Sold By on your link are both Amazon. Contrast that with this link for the Portwood faucet, where the Sold By is not Amazon. That's because the Portwood is a Home Depot exclusive. Anybody selling that on Amazon is not a supported Delta vendor.
You can always check the product on the manufacturer's website. Click the "Where to Buy" and if you don't live in a metro area, set your location to a metro area. If it's the good stuff, there will be supply stores listed and not just big box retailers.
Looks to be bullshit. Same people that brought people "RabbitTV".
One of the comments from the Amazon page sums it up pretty well: "You aren't getting pay cable or pay satellite channels. All this does is organize legal free content that you can find for yourself."
I can't find too much on it though as well. Their Youtube channel has barely any hits at all except for this video.
Based on Amazon reviews, it looks pretty much like bullshit. I mean, it works, but it doesn't really "run on water", the fuel cell needs to be replaced after enough uses, the "25-year shelf life" refers to how long the fuel cell stays good for if you haven't dipped it in water yet, and the flashlight isn't very bright.
https://www.amazon.com/Hydralight-Flashlight-Batteries-Emergency-Hurricane/dp/B076JJSJ97
I too have a Dyson vacuum, it was expensive, but works great. I have spent 2-3 hundred on three vacuums prior to spending the 400 on my Dyson. I had an Oreck in the past as well, the Dyson wins hands down on all accounts. I would have saved a lot of money if I had bought one in the first place, but I didn't realize how little bang you get for your buck spending about 200 instead of 400. Even my 300 dollar vacs were terrible in quality, not much difference than the lower price brackets. The Oreck was decent, but the Dyson kills it. It is much more quiet, the dust doesn't spew everywhere, it has good mobility and gets under my cupboards easily since the base isn't too high, would buy again. Why not check it out on consumer reports though ? See what others think too, I realize I sound like an add.
Sadly it's still a thing, maybe not by cookies themselves, but they find a way. you probably heard in a YT NordVPN sponsors spot that a VPN can help you get Hotels, car rentals or planes tickets for cheaper, and that's actually true. I tried with a VPN (Not Nord, too expensive) and found cheaper prices,especially for planes tickets and car rentals,a bit less for hotels :(
I was always told not to drink the hot water in our house (whether it's from the tap or the shower). The water that goes to our water heater first passes through a water softener which removes minerals such as calcium and magnesium and adds a small amount of sodium. This helps with laundry and showering. The taste difference is barely noticeable and the fears of increased sodium consumption are largely overblown: https://www.mayoclinic.org/healthy-lifestyle/nutrition-and-healthy-eating/expert-answers/water-softeners-sodium/faq-20058469 . As long as your water heater, pipes and shower head are clean, there should be no problem with drinking it.
It could be a thing. If they explain it in detail I guess you would understand what it is that they are doing. If they hide their service behind a couple of buzzwords, then it could easily be just snake oil. Dashlane is a well renown pass manager, so it could actually be a real thing. However, there are free services that offer this, like haveibeenpwned.
Yes, this neuroimage shows how neglect can influence the brain https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/Child-%E2%80%A9-Maltreatment-%3A-%E2%80%A9-A-%E2%80%A9-Neurodevelopmental-%E2%80%A9-%E2%80%A9-Perry-Beauchaine/c863f8115673b42ef0efcb54e04d7e1d137e7094/figure/2
I think its called "folding at home", but I dont know if it's for caronavirus yet. They have don cancer and alzheimers research though. Linus tech tips has folding month once a year and have a contest so I'm fairly sure its legit.
Here is a link https://foldingathome.org/
> So is there a better way to help my dry lips that won't have negative long term effects.
Boroline cream. It kinda smells, but it does the job. It's a medicated product from India that you can get on Amazon for a couple bucks. I highly recommend it. Unlike other products, Boroline cream promotes healing.
https://www.amazon.com/Boroline-Antiseptic-Ayurvedic-Cream-Pack/dp/B00E6NIZXQ
You must live in some big city that doesn't have deer. I assumed OP meant these
More a whistle than a horn, though. Of course, maybe it just never occurred to me because deer don't have "literal horns", they have antlers.
I enjoy Redshift much more than f.lux for a couple of reasons.
Firstly, it's open source unlike f.lux which I support wholeheartedly what with some closed source "free" programs spying on users. I can't live without closed source software but I avoid it where possible.
Secondly, it's much more powerful than f.lux. You can run it in one-time mode which doesn't care about what time it is. You can change what time is considered night time and daytime, (elevation-high and elevation-low), and you can change the system gamma.
You can use f.lux on Linux but I wouldn't recommend it. Redshift is just so much better.
Certainly it's not bullshit. The question is whether it's effective.
There is an NPR writeup and an article in Nature discussing the effectiveness:
>After Year 1, the gender gap closed by 98%, and the ethnicity gap by 38% (rising to 93% after the second year). All groups in the intervention cohort performed significantly better than control cohorts, but the effect was particularly large for males and ethnic minorities.
This is not true at all. It has been linked to length of index/length of ring finger. Also my 5'8" husband with tiny hands (Magnum XL) and my 6'4" ex husband with the biggest hands I've ever seen in real life (barely regular Trojan) would also disagree.
https://www.webmd.com/men/news/20110705/study-penis-size-linked-to-length-of-fingers
Came there say this, plus source https://socratic.org/questions/what-electromagnetic-waves-are-dangerous-for-humans. Radio waves are hundreds of times shorter (higher frequency) than wifi and still not really dangerous.
okay what. don’t wash y’all cast irons like that. “Clean your cast iron each use, wiping away leftover food morsels and reapplying the oil layer. If you maintain your pan’s seasoning through proper cleaning, it won’t rust and will have a natural nonstick finish slippery enough to fry an egg on.”cite
Almost certainly bullshit in a factual sense, but not bullshit in a malicious or bad-faith sense. It's what we call a Fermi estimate, and it's a sort of back-of-the-napkin calculation we do when we're dealing with large-scale questions where we don't have precise values or where doing a detailed calculation is prohibitive in terms of time or complexity. They're generally extremely rough estimates based on incomplete or even purely hypothetical numbers, and as a result are often off by multiple orders of magnitude; in a Fermi estimate, 1, 10, and 100 are all close enough as to be roughly equal. Additionally, when it comes to questions as vast as yours specifically, there are so many layers of estimation, each with their own margin of error, and so many other potential confounding variables that it becomes impossible to say with any degree of certainty if we're even in the ballpark with the answer we come up with. But that doesn't really matter at the end of the day, because that's not why we do them. It's better to think of them along the lines of thought experiments rather than detailed and precise calculations, and to take the conclusions you get from them with a very large grain of salt.
I've used them a few times and they are legit.
Here's their link for reviews https://www.trustpilot.com/review/techpayout.com
TrustPilot is trustworthy because every order is a real verified customer.
Looks legit
https://www.trustpilot.com/review/www.fragrancedirect.co.uk
Edit: For most businesses just type in the name followed by "reviews" and you'll usually find decent info. I thought about getting my wife something from PajamaGram for Christmas. Checked the reviews first TL/DR: Not good. At all.
Depends on the brand of carbonated water you prefer and the brand of the machine you use. For the sodastream, this $33 canister is the cheapest refill I could find. It makes up to 60 liters of carbonated water which works out to $0.55 per liter. Looking on Amazon, most carbonated water cost between $0.03 and $0.04 per Fl Oz. 1 liter is a about 34 oz so it costs between about $1.02 per liter for the lower price and you save between $0.47 which does make it cheaper but your local prices may be different. This doesn't factor in the startup cost which I can't calculate now but just a rough guess is that you're going to have to drink a couple hundred liters to get to the break even point at which point it's going to get significant enough that you'll have to factor in water usage so the answer is that it eventually will be cheaper but it might take a while. Probably a year or two if you drink a liter a day.
Need electrolytes?
Just say NO to Gatorade & Powerade, it's just High Fructose Corn Syrup.
Say YES to real electrolyte replacement.
Ingredients:
I'd say it's BS.
Worth the price? Only if that's for the lights and installation in 6 different cars. I mean here's on on Amazon and it's $25 Canadian. That like $14.50 for you American. It appears to be cheaply made, so installation will be simple. If you can use scissors, and know that red connects to red, then you can install it in less than one minute. Not with $300.
Is it safer? Not likely. On one hand, humans are great at detecting movement. Flashing lights mimic this. There's a reason why fire trucks and police cars have flashing lights, and not lights that are steady on. That being said, if someone's not paying attention to you enough that normal brake lights won't get noticed, then they're also probably not paying attention enough that the flashing lights won't get noticed as well. Plus it could confuse people. Drivers are accustomed to flashing brake lights, but they are accustomed to flashing signal lights. So they might notice it, but think you're signalling to turn, or you have your hazard lights on for some reason. Or even that there's a wiring problem.
Also, brake lights are red. The cops could say that you're trying to look like an emergency vehicle. Most cops probably wouldn't care, but if you have a cop looking for a reason to pull you over and/or ticket you, which obviously isn't a good thing.
None, it was for work. But the ones who log the least (of the ones I looked at) were Nord, PrivateVPN, Private Internet Access, Strong, and Ivacy. If I were to get one for personal use it would be Nord.
Dr. Rhonda Patrick's quote comes from her interviews with Tim Ferriss and is in the book Tools of Titans
Edit: Here is a video of hers on hyperthermic conditioning as well
It's a device that you can use to give self massages.
Yeah I got an electric one (this guy and I love it. I see neighbors walking around with their ridiculously loud, smelly backpack blowers and I take this little thing out and it does just as good of a job as any gas powered one. Now if you’re trying to blow leafs around a mile of sidewalk or at an estate or something, then yeah go gas but people with moderately sized yards and driveways, I just don’t get why you wouldn’t go electric.
Robert Sapolsky has a great lecture on the biological basis of religion: http://www.openculture.com/2014/12/robert-sapolsky-explains-the-biological-basis-of-religiosity.html
He talks a lot about schizophrenia... Saying (IIRC) that indeed such people were valued as religiously significant by ancient societies as long they had good "timing" -- don't start tripping during a hunt, etc. So it was the "moderate" schizophrenics who were religiously successful, so to speak.
The Oracle at Delphi was discovered to have been built on a fissure that released toxic gas, which the women would huff, start tripping, and tell people their visions.
https://www.livescience.com/4277-theory-oracle-delphi-high.html
This is different though, it's implanting a sleave of silicon around your penis.
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/fda-approved-penis-implant-penuma-elist_n_56aa79aae4b05e4e3703b3b6
https://www.healthline.com/health/mens-health/penis-enlargement-surgery-cost
To follow up: This doc has a bunch of info. Mayo Clinic is pretty well trusted. Basically there are specifics for each vitamin and whole foods are better for most people. Issues with vitamin deficiencies come into play when people have limited diets.
r/https://www.mayoclinic.org/documents/mc5129-0709-sp-rpt-pdf/doc-20079085
(doc is a pdf but downloaded for me without the file extension)
I'd like to share some sources for the 2 hour rule:
https://lifehacker.com/how-can-i-tell-if-food-left-at-room-temperature-is-safe-1460920090
>Secondly, you're assuming the infection you get is always from the same organism. It is not. It will be any one of thousands of possible organisms. In short, you have been extremely lucky. You could have just as easily been exposed to a norovirus whose symptoms proved life-threatening and, more importantly, highly contagious. Different TCS foods carry different susceptibilities. Fish and shellfish run the risk of parasites. Chicken and pork may contain strains of salmonella, but not beef. Beef may have clostridium. Dairy may have listeria. Grain may have bacillus. Processed foods that are canned may have botulism. Any food may contain staph strains or viruses.
Given that i don't do anything that the vast majority of the people i know don't also do, i'd say we are all extremely lucky. In fact, nowadays i'm very careful, but until my early 20's i had to go by other people's rules, since it wasn't my house, so i would regularly eat food that had been left on the counter for hours. And i didn't even know it was a bad thing to do.
My friends and family members care a lot less about it than me. I've never met anyone that suffered any sort of life threatening food poisoning. Which isn't to say that there aren't people who die because of it. But when you can have so many people that almost every single day, through decades, never or rarely follow the rules and never died because of it, how dangerous can it really be to eat something that has been at room temperature for a few hours?
I just use these foam ones. The Mack’s come in different sizes and decibel ratings, but you could also look into the reusable silicone ones. I like the foam ones because you can change them frequently and there’s no cleaning/maintenance. Depends on your preference :)
I would argue mostly bullshit. But there's some truth to it.
Your traffic won't be encrypted through the access point, which means that potentially a malicious actor on the same network can intercept the traffic between the AP and your machine, and capture that network traffic for inspection. If they do this, they will still have to contend with SSL encryption for most web traffic -- which can be bypassed by spoofing as well.
Is this likely to happen to you, personally? Eh. I wouldn't say so. It definitely does happen to people, and you definitely don't want it to happen to you. You should definitely err on the side of caution when using public access points. Make sure that you're always using SSL for anything important, and in general I wouldn't enter critical info on a public AP -- so, maybe don't log into your bank account if you can avoid it.
A VPN isn't a cure-all, but can provide some extra security when properly configured, since all of your traffic should be routed through an encrypted tunnel between your computer, and the VPN server. You need to make sure that you aren't leaking DNS queries (easy to do online. All your DNS requests should be coming from the server owned by your VPN service provider), and ideally that the service provider is logless. A lot of them claim to be, but actually aren't, and maintain either temporary logs or "minimal" logs of traffic.
I use VyprVPN, and I'm a big fan considering that it wasn't too expensive when I got it. A lot of the time their service lets me bypass region locks on various streaming services too, which is nice. Pretty sure that's actually one of their marketing points, but wasn't really a factor in why I got it to begin with (mostly just wanted the added security for public access points, because I didn't have internet at home at the time).
99% of the modern internet, including basically every site you've heard of or visited, uses https instead of http. The extra s stands for secure, which means it's encrypted. The way it works is kinda complicated but essentially there's no way for anyone other than your bank to encrypt messages the right way, and your device would know if it was wrong. Same goes for every app, they're all secured. All this is out the window for say online gaming or FTP, since those usually don't use https, but if you know what FTP is you should know this already, and why would you online game on public WiFi.
What isn't secure is seeing which site you're on. If I control the WiFi network, I can see that you loaded a page from YouTube 5 times, loaded a page from reddit 216 times over the course of 3 hours when you were supposed to be working.... Yikes... But I can't see which videos or reddit posts you looked at, or what you commented, without other stuff like access to your account or a virus on your pc.
As for a VPN, instead of seeing "they made 5 requests to YouTube and 27 to reddit", they'll just see "they made 32 requests to NordVPN". However, NordVPN still needs to route your traffic, so Nord will see which sites you went to but not what you did there.
99% of the modern internet, including basically every site you've heard of or visited, uses https instead of http. The extra s stands for secure, which means it's encrypted. The way it works is kinda complicated but essentially there's no way for anyone other than your bank to encrypt messages the right way, and your device would know if it was wrong. Same goes for every app, they're all secured. All this is out the window for say online gaming or FTP, since those usually don't use https, but if you know what FTP is you should know this already, and why would you online game on public WiFi.
What isn't secure is seeing which site you're on. If I control the WiFi network, I can see that you loaded a page from YouTube 5 times, loaded a page from reddit 216 times over the course of 3 hours when you were supposed to be working.... Yikes... But I can't see which videos or reddit posts you looked at, or what you commented, without other stuff like access to your account or a virus on your pc.
As for a VPN, instead of seeing "they made 5 requests to YouTube and 27 to reddit", they'll just see "they made 32 requests to NordVPN". However, NordVPN still needs to route your traffic, so Nord will see which sites you went to but not what you did there.