I'm confused where this zeitgeist about Tylenol being bad for you is coming from. I remember working in pharmacy that taking Acetaminophen was the least reactive painkiller with the least number of long-term issues, but I'm hearing a lot more people talking about how bad it is for you.
The studies I've seen have been correlative at best, and, considering that NSAIDs and opioid painkillers are far worse over time, I don't understand the dissonance in advice that seems to be appearing.
I know we want to get really riled up and say that he's committed a war crime but presidents have been extra judicially killing drug dealers since Obama put them on the Disposition matrix (the "kill list").
Trump even goes out of his way to call them "narcoterrorists" because the way the law was written when the "war on terror" started (not that he pays that much attention to the law), anyone that has a mild supporting role in Al Qaeda and it's diaspora have open season on them without Congressional oversight in perpetuity.
I want people to understand that this is wrong but also every president has been doing this since 2010
edit: looked into this a little more and found This medium article. saying there wasn't much change in the rate of sex weekly for adults in the 90s, and not until the early 2000s when OECD countries started seeing a reduction.
Not sure what to trust but Family Studies is a conservative think-tank so I don't necessarily trust their data either.
I assume a lot of android foss app developers are going to refuse to register and the projects are going to need to be forked.
Personally I'm getting an old feature phone and an ipad mini that only has wifi. If my choice is between apple iOS and google iOS I'd rather just not use anything to do with Google.
They're also starting to charge more for the BIG ASS models.
The amount of times these things have to regenerate code to get it to work properly during the SOTA "agentic" operations, you can burn through your token allotment and get throttled super quickly.
You need to encode the metadata in a standard way, encode new data that shows up in a standard way, and various people can add more metadata to files: think like Posix ACLs or the immutable flag or whatever.
Nix actually invented a fork of tar specifically for this called "normalized archive" or "Nix Archive" or nar. Guix uses this too:
You won't find anything as robust as the database of reviews that Google maps has built up just due to their size and ubiquity, you'll have to see if you can find reviews on non-maps review sites like tripadvisor, yelp, OpenTable etc.
Worst part is everything has to use Microsoft's signing keys, so it's ironically a gigantic security hole if your threat model includes being on Microsoft's shit list.
I'm confused where this zeitgeist about Tylenol being bad for you is coming from. I remember working in pharmacy that taking Acetaminophen was the least reactive painkiller with the least number of long-term issues, but I'm hearing a lot more people talking about how bad it is for you.
The studies I've seen have been correlative at best, and, considering that NSAIDs and opioid painkillers are far worse over time, I don't understand the dissonance in advice that seems to be appearing.
Is this more "seed oil" nonsense?