10,000 Matching Annotations
  1. Mar 2021
    1. Mangroves, seagrass beds, and coral reefs are often found together and work in concert. The trees trap sediment and pollutants that would otherwise flow out to sea. Seagrass beds provide a further barrier to silt and mud that could smother the reefs. In return, the reefs protect the seagrass beds and mangroves from strong ocean waves. Without mangroves, this incredibly productive ecosystem would collapse.

      it's always important to note that no organism exists in a vacuum, and what happens to just one species has an effect on the whole ecosystem

    1. "That's a good luck omen," the Englishman said, after the fat Arab had gone out. "If I could, I'd write ahuge encyclopedia just about the wordsluck andcoincidence. It's with those words that the universallanguage is written.'

      This could pushing a threshold because I think these omens are a way to push Santiago and the Englishman's threshold of where they are and where they want to be at the end of the journey.

    2. And he went on, fearing that the boy wouldn't understand what he was talking about, "It's in the Bible.The same book that taught me about Urim and Thummim. These stones were the only form of divinationpermitted by God. The priests carried them in a golden breastplate."

      I feel like the Englishman will be another mentor to Santiago just like the king and the crystal merchant. Surely he has such a connection to Santiago since their journeys seems so similar up to this point

    1. The irony of BLM protests in white communities is it is these same towns that repeatedly block the development of affordable housing, which we know is an efficient way to promote integration,” said Fionnuala Darby-Hudgens of the Connecticut Fair Housing Center, a nonprofit that advocates for more desegregation.

      The people in the Capitol weren't met like peaceful protesters were. People will be upset regardless if something is changing. We have the measures to restrain those extremist groups, just because we don't seem more like an inner issue I can't hold much conversation on. I digress, debating about housing is just a civilized version of how marches led by Martin Luther King Jr were met. The people trying for positive change are met with dogs and extreme blasts of water, while the people spitting and hitting those people are coddled. Nothing is different here because the physical aspect of it. Mentally this is all exhausting. These people are having BLM protests in the same towns trying to block their prosperity. It's the idea of I want them to make it, just not beside me. Again, sad.

    2. In Hartford, some neighborhoods have as much as 70% of the housing units reserved for low-income residents — which, in turn, puts a strain on the town’s ability to raise enough revenue to pay for things like schools and street repairs. “I think it’s time for Connecticut to ask itself, what will these pandemics mean for our land use regime,” said Sara Bronin, the leader of Hartford’s Planning and Zoning Commission and an expert on land use at UConn Law School. “Segregation is an urgent crisis.”

      You can read a paragraph and see all the issues in it. The solutions aren't always easy but they can be done. People live in fear of people being upset, but the Capitol was just attacked by many people that I'm sure live in regularly mortgaged houses. The people from low income housing protest peacefully and are tear gassed, pepper sprayed, and still met with extreme measures for fighting for what's right. They are fighting for a change and the people who usually don't want it will use any means to keep things the way they want it. It's sad.

    1. In sum, game harvest studies throughout thetropics have shown that most unregulated, com-mercial hunting for wild meat is unsustainable(Robinson and Bennett 2000; Nasiet al.2008),and that even subsistence hunting driven bylocal demand can severely threaten many medi-um to large-bodied vertebrate populations, withpotentially far-reaching consequences to otherspecies

      If this is true why aren't regulations much more strict and why aren't there more limits on hunting and fishing both commercially and recreationally? It seems as though we know it's having a negative impact and ding harm but just not doing anything to stop it.

    2. However, animal and plant popula-tion declines are typically pre-empted by hunt-ing and logging activity well before thecoup degrâceof deforestation is delivered.

      This is not shocking. A forest isn't destroyed in one night. I think having this knowledge is important, because many people will see a ruined, or torn down forest, and see the atrocity of it, yet they turned a blind eye to said forest just weeks ago when the animals were being hunted to endangerment, and where the ecosystem is already suffering. People won't just cut down a forest without first stealing all of it's resources.

      I think there should be transparency when it comes to the impact people are having on ecosystems like forests. Like, for instance, if it is permitted that humans harvest trees or hunt specific animals in a region, they should have to also provide metrics (perhaps monthly) of what they have take from the land, what remains, and if they have a plan for replanting trees, or protecting animals from over hunting and plants from over harvesting.

    1. "See, Ms. Norton-Meier, I'm reading the walls just like at school!" he ex- claims as he tugs me along. This is the child I viewed as struggling with literacy in the classroom. It is clear that he is totally literate in his world!

      It's crazy to see the real world setting apply to a child's knowledge. Do we assess them the ways we should? Do we know their full potential?

    1. he referred to a meme as “a unit of cultural transmission, or a unit of imitation.”

      It's just interesting to see an actual definition of something that we find comical and basic.

    1. TikTok enables, for video and audio, the type of combinatorial evolution that Brian Arthur describes as the underlying mechanism of the tech industry's innovation.

      Short-form, though! We can't underestimate how bound up TikTok's whole thing is with the fact the videos just aren't allowed to be that long. It's possible for everything to iterate at a very different pace; your audiences don't mind a bad recommendation when it takes seconds to get past it (something quite different than "you need to watch a couple of seasons of this show to get into it").

    2. Until later in life, children think you should know exactly what they're feeling, and it takes a bit of coaxing to tease out their inner emotional state.

      I don't know exactly where this is going for him, but it's interesting to me that in order to identify what was going on in my own emotional life I consumed media (books, really) by/for adults, with greater depth than I had. Is there some degradation in how we are able to find media matching our inner states provided by people just like us, without any greater understanding? Connection without insight.

    3. TikTok's needs to improve its search ranking algorithm. Trying to find popular TikTok's I remembered seeing back in the day was much harder than it should have been using TikTok's native search. A couple that I wanted to use I just couldn't locate, and even Google and YouTube didn't turn them up (a thing you realize after trying to do it more than once is how hard it is to create a comprehensible search query for certain TikTok's).

      This you can be sure it has no reason to do. Remember, it's a company store -- why would they want you to take control over your discovery?

    4. Of course, we're all just in our FYP feeds, which just scrolls up endlessly, so it isn't an actual space. But we trust the visible view counts as evidence FYP is doing its job getting many of us with the same tastes in front of the same videos, and so this evidence of common knowledge creates a liminal third place that exists [waves hands at the air in front of me] out there. I’ve tended to think of social networks as being built by people assembling a graph of people bottoms up, but perhaps I’ve been too narrow-minded. TikTok might not qualify by that definition, but it feels social, with FYP as village matchmaker.

      Terrifying, terrifying, terrifying! Why? Because the app points you to just let the algorithm make your choices -- there's no nudging-nudging-nudging to follow creators you like when it can detect you like them and serve them up to you anyway. Which then means the parasocial relationship you would have on a platform like YouTube now exists, but is entirely mediated by the discovery algorithm. If it's a village matchmaker, it's a matchmaker who has to come along on every date you ever have together. If it's a third place, it's a third place to which TikTok owns the title.

    5. Reading the comments on TikTok serves a communal function. It's like hearing the laughter of the crowd at a comedy show.

      It's interesting to me how much he emphasizes this because I hate reading the comments. Swiping through TikTok emulates the quick dopamine bursts of Twitter content without making me feel like I'm in a Comments Section as do Twitter, Facebook, etc., providing the same "just the videos, ma'am" experience as seeing a film in a theatre. When a comment is picked out for a video response that I end up seeing, four times out of five it feels like it was a staged / fake comment to begin with, so it doesn't bother me.

    6. This is why TikTok's network effects of creativity matter. To clone TikTok, you can't just copy any single feature. It's all of that, and not just the features, but how users deploy them and how the resultant videos interact with each other on the FYP feed.

      I wonder if this is true. Don't users experience the internet on a meta level with topics popping up on Tumblr screenshots on their IG feed, tweets screenshotted for Facebook groups... Is the micro-zeitgeist of a moment limited to an app's walled garden? How do group chats fit into the answer to that question?

    7. This piece is long, but if you get bored in any one section, you can just scroll on the next one; they're separated by horizontal rules for easy visual scanning. You can also read them out of order. There are lots of cross-references, though, so if you skip some of the segments, others may not make complete sense. However, it’s ultimately not a big deal.

      One interesting thing about this is that experimentation with form is limited by reader habits. If years of university made me uncomfortable skimming I'm not going to engage in the intended way. I am remembering something apocryphal about Erik Satie's furniture music, the audience attending politely and having to be encouraged to treat it as the background sound it was intended to be. Apps and interfaces are scary when they cue us with dark patterns, but it's also possible to use that power to coax your audience into new forms.

    1. I can’t stop thinking about it. These people really think this isn’t going to happen to them. And then they stop yelling at you when they get intubated. It’s like a fucking horror movie that never ends. There’s no credits that roll. You just go back and do it all over again.
    1. (don’t just click “I Agree” without actually reading the terms!

      Something I think would be incredible to put together though difficult is something I guess like the site like reqordify (http://rewordify.com/) and quillbot (https://quillbot.com/) that takes dense text and simplifies it. The resource could also explain common phrases that can to many be so confusing in a terms of service. I don't know if it's already out there, but I do know that companies are clever in making their terms of use so long and complicated because it makes nearly everyone click agree without reading.

    1. Which Sounds Are the Most Annoying to Humans?{"@type":"NewsArticle","@context":"http://schema.org","url":"https://gizmodo.com/which-sounds-are-the-most-annoying-to-humans-1846098655","author":[{"@type":"Person","name":"Daniel Kolitz"}],"headline":"Which Sounds Are the Most Annoying to Humans?","description":"Earlier this month, a kind of chirping, rainforest-y sound sprung up in my apartment. It came from my roommate’s room. At first, I took it for a video game, but then realized the sound materialized even when my roommate was asleep. For days, I wondered about this. At any point I could’ve asked him what the deal was, but I kept on forgetting—the sound was just annoying enough to be notable but not annoying enough to do something about. When I did remember to ask him, during one of the sound’s occasional disappearances, he had no idea what I was talking about. ","dateline":"01/25/2021 at 08:00","datePublished":"2021-01-25T08:00:00-05:00","dateModified":"2021-01-25T08:00:01-05:00","mainEntityOfPage":{"@type":"WebPage","url":"https://gizmodo.com/which-sounds-are-the-most-annoying-to-humans-1846098655"},"image":{"@type":"ImageObject","height":675,"width":1200,"url":"https://i.kinja-img.com/gawker-media/image/upload/c_fill,f_auto,fl_progressive,g_center,h_675,pg_1,q_80,w_1200/ysfrxb7ougwtr6l0v3ds.png","thumbnail":{"@type":"ImageObject","height":180,"width":320,"url":"https://i.kinja-img.com/gawker-media/image/upload/c_fill,f_auto,fl_progressive,g_center,h_180,pg_1,q_80,w_320/ysfrxb7ougwtr6l0v3ds.png"}},"articleBody":"Earlier this month, a kind of chirping, rainforest-y sound sprung up in my apartment. It came from my roommate’s room. At first, I took it for a video game, but then realized the sound materialized even when my roommate was asleep. For days, I wondered about this. At any point I could’ve asked him what the deal was, but I kept on forgetting—the sound was just annoying enough to be notable but not annoying enough to do something about. When I did remember to ask him, during one of the sound’s occasional disappearances, he had no idea what I was talking about. \n\nThe sound to that point had been a subconscious irritant—by the time I noticed it, I could never say how long it had been going for. But after that exchange, and the sanity-questioning it entailed, roughly half my brain was looking out for the sound’s return. When it did finally reemerge, I burst without knocking into my roommate’s room. “That,” I said. “Oh,” he replied. “The radiator?”\n\nIt was, in fact, the radiator. He hadn’t noticed it.\n\nThis is all to say that, when we are speaking about sounds, “annoying” is a subjective criteria. But there must be, one figures, some consensus on the subject. For this week’s Giz Asks we reached out to a number of sound-experts to find out what that might be.\n\nDr. Tjeerd Andringa\n\nAssociate professor Auditory Cognition, University of Groningen\n\nThe sound of vomiting: elicits a visceral response. The first steps of auditory processing are in the brainstem close to the “disgust” center that is activated when we swallow(ed) something toxic and which activates the muscles to expel it.\n\nIt’s actually pretty simple. In the evolution of vertebrates, the first vertebrate was basically a long tube with on one side the mouth and on the other side the anus. And the only thing that it really had to do was to open its mouth, accept something as food and then digest in that tube. The tube was basically a little garden with all kinds of bacteria. It should not make a real mistake because then it would poison the garden and poison itself. So it was very important for that early vertebrate to make the proper decisions — what to swallow, what not to swallow. That is the reason why all our senses are around the mouth. We taste, we smell, we hear, we see — all around the mouth — so we can make the best decisions of what to eat.\n\nAll the sensors came together at the top of the neural tube. That is our brain stem. That is the level where all the information is processed at the most basic level. That leads to a situation that if you have no time to process the signal in full or to use your higher mental faculties, then you fall back to the lowest form of processing that we have, which is that physiological, low-level form of processing. This is always active in the background, and it has to be overruled by higher levels of processing. But it is always the first response that we get because it’s the quickest. \n\nPretty much all the other sounds are sounds that are relevant to higher cognition. So the scraping of fingernails on the chalkboard probably also has a visceral component, but it’s much further away from our basic responses than vomiting. A baby crying does not make sense for all mammals; it only makes sense for mammals that have babies that actually cry. This is a higher level, more advanced type of processing. And it must be very strong, but it is not as deeply encoded in our body as the response to vomiting. \n\n“The sound of vomiting: elicits a visceral response. The first steps of auditory processing are in the brainstem close to the ‘disgust’ center that is activated when we swallow(ed) something toxic and which activates the muscles to expel it.”\n\nTrevor Cox\n\nProfessor, Acoustic Engineering, University of Salford\n\nPeople’s responses to sounds are learned; what’s most annoying to any given person can be highly individualized, and is intimately connected to circumstance. In general, though, the most annoying sounds are those that get in the way of whatever you’re trying to do. With everyone working at home right now, a neighbor’s DIY drilling might be the most annoying sound.\n\nWhat can heighten annoyance is a lack of control. When your neighbors are throwing a party, the noise is annoying not only because it prevents you from sleeping but because you have no idea when it’s going to end. If you knew in advance when the party might end, the sound would likely be less disruptive.\n\n“People’s responses to sounds are learned; what’s most annoying to any given person can be highly individualized, and is intimately connected to circumstance.”\n\nFlorian Hollerweger\n\nAssistant Professor, Audio Arts and Acoustics, Columbia College Chicago\n\nThe most annoying sound for a human, as we all know, is the sound of chalkboard scraping. It’s terrible! Precisely why that is so remains a bit of a mystery and—I kid you not—the subject of ongoing psychoacoustic research. Even thinking about it (the sound, not the research) makes me cringe. Anecdotal evidence also suggests that the Covid-19 pandemic has brought back to the forefront many traditional contenders for the title of “most annoying sound.” Depending on your living circumstances, the sounds of your otherwise respected neighbors or housemates, for example, may well be much more annoying to you now than they were nine months ago.\n\nThe “most annoying sound for a human” is a surprisingly evasive concept that depends not only on who the human in question is, but also on that person’s circumstances and emotional state. If you think about it, this is a trivial truth only in a superficial sense. Rather, I think of it as a beautiful testimony to the raw emotional power that sound commands over us—not only on the negative end of the spectrum, but also with regards to that most beautiful of sounds: music. Many of the above truisms apply just as well to music—its dependence on the listener’s personal preferences or aversions, stage in life, current emotions, etc. In other words, the same strong reliance on context explains both the “ugliest” as well as the “prettiest” sounds. In my mind this shows that these are really just two manifestations of a larger underlying natural beauty, which we humans can become a part of and nurture (through music, for example), but which ultimately exceeds the value judgements that we can’t quite seem to be able to do without.\n\nA large part of my creative practice and research unfolds in the realm of experimental music and sound art. From this experience I can assert that one human’s “most annoying sound” may well form the basis of another’s most precious music. Perhaps once a Covid-19 vaccine is widely available, you might want to attend an experimental music concert near you, to see which of these two groups you belong to... or whether there is room in between. British composer Trevor Wishart, for example, created a stunningly complex and highly recommended piece of music entitled “Imago” from a single clink of two glasses.\n\n“The ‘most annoying sound for a human’ is a surprisingly evasive concept that depends not only on who the human in question is, but also on that person’s circumstances and emotional state.”\n\nSteven J. Orfield\n\n\nFounder of Orfield Laboratories which provides multi-sensory design, research and testing in architecture, product development and forensics\n\nIn 1990, I moved my perceptual laboratory into the former Sound 80 Studios. Sound 80 was a client of mine for acoustic and lighting consulting, and in 1975, in collaboration with 3M who had just invented multi-track digital recording, they became the World’s First Digital Recording Studio, as recognized by Guinness World Records in 2006. During their time as a client of mine, I sat in that last American album recording of Cat Stevens, Izatso. \n\nI bought the studio to move my company but also to deal with a health issue.\n\nI had just gone through surgery to get an artificial valve, as I was born with a defective aortic valve. I had read the acoustic studies in the medical journals about the noise levels, but when I woke up from surgery, I found that the valve was much louder than claimed in the academic studies. So as I went back to my lab, I measured the sound with an accelerometer (vibration transducer), and with a 1” precision microphone, and I recorded each. Then I did a listening experiment to listen to my heart valve with one ear and the recordings with the other. I spent hours equalizing the sound so that the recording was a close facsimile of what I heard.\n\nThen I did a Stevens Threshold test to see how loud it was. This was done by playing a pink noise track until it was so loud that I couldn’t hear the valve, and then playing the pink noise again from loud to soft until I could hear it. Those two extremes established the threshold for my hearing of my valve.\n\nWhile it was claimed to be about 30 dBA, it was actually able to be perceived into the low 80 dBA range, about 16 times as loud as claimed, and it sounded like I had been implanted with an old mechanical clock.\n\nI went back and reviewed the journal literature again and found out that most of the measurement procedures used by the industry were incorrect, and most of the equipment used was not used correctly. It took me two years to learn to sleep after sleep hypnosis, sleep medicines and special pillows and fans. I was so frustrated that I invited all the American heart valve companies to join me in a conference at my Lab, so that I could show the levels of mistakes they all made, and so that they could start to work on the terribly annoying sound. In 1993, for the first and only time they ever met together the entire industry came to my lab and listened to what heart valve noise really sounded like. They were all shocked and concerned, and many were in violation of FDA requirements because they had been claiming quiet valves.\n\nThis meeting caused new research on porcine (pig) valved to extend the valve life from 5 years to 20 years, and now most implants get a bio-prosthetic valve, that can be implanted through an artery and can be repaired in the same way. I hope that my work with them was helpful in causing a reconsideration of heart valves across the entire industry. It also lead to a Medical article in the Wall Street Journal, where their editor explained to me that many ‘facts’ that he was told in interviews with doctors were false, as they were very defensive about discussing medical problems.\n\nDo you have a burning question for Giz Asks? Email us at tipbox@gizmodo.com. \n\nAdditional reporting by Marina Galperina.\n\n","articleSection":"Giz Asks","keywords":[],"publisher":{"@type":"Organization","@context":"http://schema.org","name":"Gizmodo","url":"https://gizmodo.com","logo":{"@type":"ImageObject","url":"https://x.kinja-static.com/assets/images/logos/amp/logo-gizmodo-amp.png"},"sameAs":["https://www.facebook.com/gizmodo","https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCxFmw3IUMDUC1Hh7qDjtjZQ","https://twitter.com/gizmodo","https://instagram.com/gizmodo"]},"video":[]}

      人类最受不了哪些声音?

    1. Why is @BBCr4today playing vox pops with random members of the public speculating that the Covid vaccine might be unsafe? It's a *news* programme, not a phone-in. If there's informed, scientific disagreement, then air it. But this is just irresponsible.
    1. “People are surprised that suicides outnumber homicides, and drownings outnumber deaths by fire. People always think crime is increasing” even if it’s not.

      This is a great example of what the average person might think, but it is completely wrong. What else might be like this that most of us don't know? There are a lot of mysteries to this world, but most of them hide in plain sight and we're just used to it.

    1. Conservation – reservoir and return. It’s not an exaggeration to say that colossal numbers of species are going extinct across the world, and many more are increasingly threatened and risk extinction. Moreover, some of these collapses have been sudden, dramatic and unexpected or were simply discovered very late in the day. Zoos protect against a species going extinct. A species protected in captivity provides a reservoir population against a population crash or extinction in the wild. Here they are relatively safe and can be bred up to provide foundation populations. A good number of species only exist in captivity and still more only exist in the wild because they have been reintroduced from zoos, or the wild populations have been boosted by captive bred animals. Quite simply without these efforts there would be fewer species alive today and ecosystems and the world as a whole would be poorer for it. Although reintroduction successes are few and far between, the numbers are increasing and the very fact that species have been saved or reintroduced as a result of captive breeding shows their value. Even apparently non-threatened species and entire groups can be threatened suddenly (as seen with white nose syndrome in bats and the Chytridiomycosis fungus in amphibians) it’s not just pandas and rhinos that are under threat.

      Zoo is a place that they breeding nearly extinct animal and they protect and take acre of the animals. Zoo also have the project that protect the nearly extinct animals in the wild too. It don’t have to be only in the zoo. I think it is a very example of what zoo do in there campaign.

      What is consider a animal that zoo will protect?

  2. Feb 2021
    1. Parents and tutors are always telling their sons and their wards that they are to be just; but why? not for the sake of justice, but for the sake of character and reputation; in the hope of obtaining for him who is reputed just some of those offices, marriages, and the like which Glaucon has enumerated among the advantages accruing to the unjust from the reputation of justice. More, however, is made of appearances by this class of persons than by the others; for they throw in the good opinion of the gods, and will tell you of a shower of benefits which the heavens, as they say, rain upon the pious

      The emphasis on character and reputation plays a big part in their lives. It goes to show people aren't being just because they feel it's the right thing to do but rather to put on a front and make themselves seem more of a bigger person. Through this they believe they will receive benefits from heaven for doing so.

    1. to the impossibility of effecting any changes to System 1—the quick-thinking part of our brain and the one that makes mistaken judgments

      People use this part of the brain all the time. And like said in the context, it's impossible to effect any changes because it's all about quick thinking. Everyone has their own way of quick thinking, but it is all about second nature thinking. Meaning when something happens fast, we have to think fast to where we almost don't think at all, we just do it.

    2. Present bias shows up not just in experiments, of course, but in the real world. Especially in the United States, people egregiously undersave for retirement—even when they make enough money to not spend their whole paycheck on expenses, and even when they work for a company that will kick in additional funds to retirement plans when they contribute.

      This is shocking to me! I always assumed as a kid that people were good at saving from retirement, but from what I've learned from how humans work, it's very hard to work hard NOW and only see the benefits LATER.

    1. Fiction Bonus! Six of Crows by Leigh Bardugo: I’m unabashedly a part of a young adult fiction book club, so if there’s a fantasy, sci-fi, dystopian, or historical novel that features teen protagonists called to save the world under extraordinary circumstances, I’m there. This is my favorite series in recent memory. It’s two books long and features the most lovable band of crooked thieves you will ever meet attempting a heist that is equal parts madness, redemption and glory. Just pure, wonderful storytelling and a rollicking good time.

      毫不掩饰,我是成年人小说书友会中年轻的一员,所以如果有一本关于幻想,科幻,反乌托邦,或者有十几岁的主角在特殊情况下被召唤拯救世界的历史小说(怎么感觉像穿越网文?),我肯定会读。 在最近的记忆里这是我最爱的系列。它有两本书长,有最可爱的犯罪团伙,还会遇到疯狂的救赎与荣耀。它只是纯粹的美妙故事和一段欢闹的好时光。

    1. men need 'a strongeducational component focused on clarifying different behaviors that all constitutesexual assault, but do not follow the stereotypically imagined scenarios related to rape.'

      I think it's really valuable to point out that rape can look like many different things. People may think coercion isn't rape, but it's still important to teach kids that talking someone into having sex with them isn't okay. While reading many survivor stories, many people (all college students) recounted that they were just too drunk, something happened between them and their friend, and it's something they regretted later on. Rape isn't just a random guy finding a girl walking alone at night, it's often people you know and that's why this bill should have passed, and why we should be teaching kids these things.

    Annotators

    1. 28/n However you slice it, it's inappropriate to just bung these two estimates together into a model and treat them as separate. I would argue that the Mazumder paper is probably a better estimate, but either way what they've done here is wrong
    1. Apologies: it's hyperbole. The parent site has a bunch of "spend x to get one of y Steam games" deals, which is what I was referring to. it was not meant literally. Just an attempt to build common ground with the poster who was talking about gambling and fomo.I thought they were referencing the larger site, so I wanted to acknowledge that so I didn't come off as dismissive of their concerns.Which turned out to be entirely separate concerns! Obviating the reason for the comment in the first place.Anyway, sorry for the short novel. But that's the danger of pithy one-liners: assumed context for the poster can be entirely lost in translation.Thanks for coming to my public apology press release?
    1. Kaczynski’s second key insight is that—despite industrial society making everyone sick and unhappy—there is no effective feedback to prevent this from happening in the future. That’s because industrial society can overcome the harm it causes people by inventing feel-happy drugs for them to take.

      This is actually just a specific example of K.'s larger insight about this sort of feedback loop, but it's a very important one.

    1. Research and creative thinking can change the world. This means that academics have enormous power. But, as academics Asit Biswas and Julian Kirchherr have warned, the overwhelming majority are not shaping today’s public debates.

      I have a real concern that my "value" to my institution lies in how many other academics cite my work. It's like we all live in a bubble where we're just talking to each other.

      Surely it matters more if my work is useful to the much larger public?

    1. Sohn, Meinrath and others have testified that the digital divide was exacerbating disparities in the US, but it’s the coronavirus outbreak which has brought these concerns to the forefront.

      Having Sohn and Meinrath speak on the internet access issue opens the eyes of the government and the people to make them realize just how important this issue is and to figure out a plan for the future.

    1. For branching out a separate path in an activity, use the Path() macro. It’s a convenient, simple way to declare alternative routes

      Seems like this would be a very common need: once you switch to a custom failure track, you want it to stay on that track until the end!!!

      The problem is that in a Railway, everything automatically has 2 outputs. But we really only need one (which is exactly what Path gives us). And you end up fighting the defaults when there are the automatic 2 outputs, because you have to remember to explicitly/verbosely redirect all of those outputs or they may end up going somewhere you don't want them to go.

      The default behavior of everything going to the next defined step is not helpful for doing that, and in fact is quite frustrating because you don't want unrelated steps to accidentally end up on one of the tasks in your custom failure track.

      And you can't use fail for custom-track steps becase that breaks magnetic_to for some reason.

      I was finding myself very in need of something like this, and was about to write my own DSL, but then I discovered this. I still think it needs a better DSL than this, but at least they provided a way to do this. Much needed.

      For this example, I might write something like this:

      step :decide_type, Output(Activity::Left, :credit_card) => Track(:with_credit_card)
      
      # Create the track, which would automatically create an implicit End with the same id.
      Track(:with_credit_card) do
          step :authorize
          step :charge
      end
      

      I guess that's not much different than theirs. Main improvement is it avoids ugly need to specify end_id/end_task.

      But that wouldn't actually be enough either in this example, because you would actually want to have a failure track there and a path doesn't have one ... so it sounds like Subprocess and a new self-contained ProcessCreditCard Railway would be the best solution for this particular example... Subprocess is the ultimate in flexibility and gives us all the flexibility we need)


      But what if you had a path that you needed to direct to from 2 different tasks' outputs?

      Example: I came up with this, but it takes a lot of effort to keep my custom path/track hidden/"isolated" and prevent other tasks from automatically/implicitly going into those steps:

      class Example::ValidationErrorTrack < Trailblazer::Activity::Railway
        step :validate_model, Output(:failure) => Track(:validation_error)
        step :save,           Output(:failure) => Track(:validation_error)
      
        # Can't use fail here or the magnetic_to won't work and  Track(:validation_error) won't work
        step :log_validation_error, magnetic_to: :validation_error,
          Output(:success) => End(:validation_error), 
          Output(:failure) => End(:validation_error) 
      end
      
      puts Trailblazer::Developer.render o
      Reloading...
      
      #<Start/:default>
       {Trailblazer::Activity::Right} => #<Trailblazer::Activity::TaskBuilder::Task user_proc=validate_model>
      #<Trailblazer::Activity::TaskBuilder::Task user_proc=validate_model>
       {Trailblazer::Activity::Left} => #<Trailblazer::Activity::TaskBuilder::Task user_proc=log_validation_error>
       {Trailblazer::Activity::Right} => #<Trailblazer::Activity::TaskBuilder::Task user_proc=save>
      #<Trailblazer::Activity::TaskBuilder::Task user_proc=save>
       {Trailblazer::Activity::Left} => #<Trailblazer::Activity::TaskBuilder::Task user_proc=log_validation_error>
       {Trailblazer::Activity::Right} => #<End/:success>
      #<Trailblazer::Activity::TaskBuilder::Task user_proc=log_validation_error>
       {Trailblazer::Activity::Left} => #<End/:validation_error>
       {Trailblazer::Activity::Right} => #<End/:validation_error>
      #<End/:success>
      
      #<End/:validation_error>
      
      #<End/:failure>
      

      Now attempt to do it with Path... Does the Path() have an ID we can reference? Or maybe we just keep a reference to the object and use it directly in 2 different places?

      class Example::ValidationErrorTrack::VPathHelper1 < Trailblazer::Activity::Railway
         validation_error_path = Path(end_id: "End.validation_error", end_task: End(:validation_error)) do
          step :log_validation_error
        end
        step :validate_model, Output(:failure) => validation_error_path
        step :save,           Output(:failure) => validation_error_path
      end
      
      o=Example::ValidationErrorTrack::VPathHelper1; puts Trailblazer::Developer.render o
      Reloading...
      
      #<Start/:default>
       {Trailblazer::Activity::Right} => #<Trailblazer::Activity::TaskBuilder::Task user_proc=validate_model>
      #<Trailblazer::Activity::TaskBuilder::Task user_proc=validate_model>
       {Trailblazer::Activity::Left} => #<Trailblazer::Activity::TaskBuilder::Task user_proc=log_validation_error>
       {Trailblazer::Activity::Right} => #<Trailblazer::Activity::TaskBuilder::Task user_proc=save>
      #<Trailblazer::Activity::TaskBuilder::Task user_proc=log_validation_error>
       {Trailblazer::Activity::Right} => #<End/:validation_error>
      #<Trailblazer::Activity::TaskBuilder::Task user_proc=save>
       {Trailblazer::Activity::Left} => #<Trailblazer::Activity::TaskBuilder::Task user_proc=log_validation_error>
       {Trailblazer::Activity::Right} => #<End/:success>
      #<End/:success>
      
      #<End/:validation_error>
      
      #<End/:failure>
      

      It's just too bad that:

      • there's not a Railway helper in case you want multiple outputs, though we could probably create one pretty easily using Path as our template
      • we can't "inline" a separate Railway acitivity (Subprocess "nests" it rather than "inlines")
    2. Defaults names are given to steps without the :id options, but these might be awkward sometimes.

      Why would those default names ever be awkward?

      If you the default name is whatever comes after step:

      step :default_name
      

      then why can't you just change that name to whatever you want?

      To answer my own question: I think you can do that, as long as the name is the 1st argument to step. But below I noticed an example where a Subprocess was the 1st argument instead, and so it needs a name in this case:

      step Subprocess(DeleteAssets), id: :delete_assets
      

      Why are they inconsistent about calling it name or id? Which one is it? I guess it's an id since that's what the key is called, and since there's an Id() helper to reference a task by its id.

    1. Children are more likely to get the virus outside of school settings.

      I feel like just the sheer amount of fear spreading through schools is reason enough to wait longer. Not only that, but the virus seems to be mutating. I think it's better to keep kids at home a little longer, than risk them getting sick.

    1. Writing isn’t just for capturing and sharing thoughts that have already happened. It’s also a great tool for thinking new thoughts you wouldn’t have had otherwise. Externalizing cognition and all that. So the easier the better.

      writing<br> new thoughts externalizing cognition

    1. if you get caught panhandling in the road ways, it's a misdemeanour charge that can cost up to $100 or more depending on how many times you get caught. This is because it's a safety issue and people are often hit at traffic lights when they turn green

      I think that this is extremely interesting. There has to have been countless incidents of this occurring for panhandling in the street to be a misdemeanor charge. This shows that panhandling is a huge issue in regards of frequency. The fact that people are 'often' hit just amazes me.

    1. This is about more than just a distinction between the stylistic pastoral and epic, though, where description recounts in minute detail because it has the bourgeois leisure of a shepherd, and narration practically presents the facts, with military precision. Description is not essentially static, even though it often is. The proof is simply that action can be, and is, imagined in the same way as a still-life. Furthermore, description’s linearity makes it a priori dynamic.

      All this needs far greater elaboration and patience. You've moving very quickly, often through mere assertion, through a huge mass of argument. Why the reference to pastoral and epic? Why is the static/dynamic distinction important? Why does our ability to imagine action in freeze-frame say anything about the actual relation between narration and action? In your pursuit of a breezy and direct style, it's possible to make an argument more, rather than less, obscure.

    1. Online marketers understand the benefits and importance of “sociability” to the successof their businesses; marketers try to increase the participation and exchange on their socialmedia platforms by inviting users to take part in online challenges and competitions; to uploadtheir posts, photos, and videos; and to encourage users to “like” their products and services.Marketers understand that although they have new social media platforms, what counts isthe number of users (“friends” and “likes”), interactions,and exchanges on their platforms.According to two online marketing gurus: “Technology is just that: technology.Social Mediais about people and how we can approach them as informed and helpful peers” (Solis &Breakenridge, 2009, p. 154)

      This really stuck with me as I am a Business and Marketing Major. When a certain website has a high number of traffic on the site, it's more likely that certain business is having success. Having a social website allows for brands to interact with their target audience and allows to be able to build longer lasting relationships. When a brand has a website with low level of sociability, the interaction on the site is low and your business more than likely won't get as much exposure.

    1. “And yet when Thomas Jefferson’s contemporaries talk in public about why the colonists need to be free from England, they refer to themselves as slaves. As slaves to the King of England."

      That’s hypocritical. And he knew it. At first, I thought that, in slave times, people just weren’t educated enough to think that black people were animals and property. Maybe they didn’t know that all people are homosapiens and technically animals too. Because of technology, there are a lot of things we know that they didn’t. But the fact that they knew and blamed it on the king. It’s vile.

    1. In academia it’s critical to have a system that allows us to read and mine important ideas from papers into your vault as efficiently as possible. My method has continued to evolve and I’m finding it more efficient now. In a nutshell, I’m now adding the one-sentence summaries to highlights as I’m reading (and the tags where possible). This means I don’t need to read the source more than once; instead I’m processing them as I’m reading because that’s when I discover them as important points in the first place. I then bring them into Obsidian in a single note per paper/source. I title each note Surname, date (e.g., Smith, 2018). It’ll make sense why in a moment. Each idea within the note is structured like this: One-sentence summary of idea | Original idea in the author’s words (Reference, date, page number). T: #tags #go #here C: Any connections to other notes or ideas - not necessary to include for every idea but it’s useful to think of connections where possible If you structure all the notes this way, it means you can then add the ideas straight into your index with transclusion without needing to create any additional notes (in the past I created a new evergreen note for each idea). An example of a transcluded idea to pop into your index would be like this: ![[Smith, 2018#One-sentence summary of idea]] This allows you to see the source and the summary of the note in edit mode and just that idea transcluded from your note page in the preview mode. I have another approach for actually turning those ideas into publications, but this is the main approach for processing notes into my index. There may be even more efficient ways to do this. The key I think is being able to process ideas into your vault as quickly as possible while still tagging and making connections to help with later retrieval of ideas. Since changing to this approach I’ve written a couple of book chapters with very little cognitive strain and I’m reading more than in the past (it’s addictive because every paper has the potential to be used to level up your knowledge base). Hope this is somewhat helpful to others. The evolution will undoubtedly continue. I know there are awesome examples of how to do all kinds of things in Obsidian but all I’m really aiming for is being more productive in my academic role. The rest is all interesting but additional to my main purpose for this wonderful app.

      Another great synopsis of useful tips in using Obsidian for research.

      The idea of using the general form ![[Smith, 2018#One-sentence summary of idea]] can be particularly powerful for aggregating smaller ideas up into a longer work.

    1. ·Fluctuations in the environment, such as varia-tion in rainfall and food sources, which affect birthand death rates in populations

      I feel as though this happens much more than we think. Natural disasters kill off human life, species of vegetation, animal life and much more. It is extremely hard for animals to find proper food sources in events such as floods, and other natural disasters due to the fact that most of the food sources are swept away.

      This is a piece of life and the environment controls what happens not us, we can't possibly control or tell when i natural disaster is going to happen so I say it's just gods way of natural selection.

    1. Personally, I'm starting to think that the feature where it automatically adds xray.js to the document is more trouble than it's worth. I propose that we remove that automatic feature and just make it part of the install instructions that you need to add this line to your template/layout: <%= javascript_include_tag 'xray', nonce: true if Rails.env.development? %>
    1. Gladwellproposes,“Thereisasimplewaytopackageinformationthat,undertherightcircumstances,canmakeJitirresistible.Allyouhavetodoisfindit”(2000,132)

      I think that this is a very interesting quote. It's basically just saying that all they have to do is put something that their consumers are interested in infront of them and all of a sudden they are infatuated.

    1. Have you ever felt like a framework was getting in the way instead of helping you go faster? Maybe you’re stuck on some simple task that would be easy to do manually, but your framework is making you jump through configuration hoops. I end up getting lost in a sea of documentation (or no documentation), and the search for that one magical config key takes just a tad bit too long. It’s a productivity sink, and worse than the time delay it adds to my frustration throughout the day.
  3. onedrive.live.com onedrive.live.com
    1. It's me. Me.

      p 114 I find it interesting that the author repeats that word twice, "me". He mentions above that he is a killer just not of mammals, which is in itself intriguing (he finds himself unsure and scared when he has to kill a mammal but not when he kills insects or reptiles(the snake). One would think that it is because the goat in its size and amount of blood and organs and organism as a whole is way closer to a human than mosquitoes for example but then the narrator also mentions fights between people where death is highly likely and the ones beating up others are ready to kill. They become murderers the moment they attacked with no regard of how much they hurt the other person. As we know, the narrator has been in fights before (if he is the same narrator as in "House of Hunger" where he fought Harry, for example). Therefore, just as he claims that life is meaningless, so is his reluctance and his claims that he is not a killer, not a "man" in the sense that he is capable of taking a life.) Here, he emphasizes the difference between himself and soldiers and querrillas. He lists them just before these two sentences and then makes the claim that he is not them, he is not a part of war, he is no way obliged to, nor inclined to murder in the name of any cause. The simple sentence "It's me." he wants his sister to think about it from his perspective, summon all her memories and knowledge and find him indeed incapable of murder. The repetition is what turns his argument into a plea. he is begging her to please understand him. He is sincerely scared even if he points out himself that his reservations are illogical. This repetition in the midst of all his thoughts is what brings the readers back to the scene of his sister and him conversing. That is where his feelings come through even if what we read are his thoughts and words.

    2. Neanderthal to the man of today who is supposed 114 to see things like a camera lens looks at you just before the shutter falls. I refuse to see things that way! They look at you like you want me to look at that goat

      (114-5) I believe that Marechera's character is having some sort of mental breakdown. The whole story seems to be his attempts to justify his unwillingness to kill a goat for Christmas. However, he goes on and on about the toxicity of the environment and its expectations on men, the double standards between men and women, gas chambers, the hierarchy about eating and the objectification of women. The narrator is losing it. I presume it's because of loneliness, mental instability, or even a fear about how people might perceive him. At the end of the short story he even suggests giving the goat to the Makonis, which would be an act of kindness if he actually wanted to help them, rather than them being his escape from the responsibility of killing it. This whole story sounds very similar to Marechera's own erratic way of speaking. At the end the narrator also claims that he has already reserved a spot at a restaurant for Christmas. Did he plan this whole rant sequence, or was it all random? If he already had a reservation, why would he rant about all the injustices in the world?

    3. Cocktail Party. T S Eliot.'

      Here, Harry is making a poor alliteration to T S Eliot's "The Cocktail Party". It's a poor alliteration, because Harry is just trying to sound smart, but doesn't really know what he is talking about. "The Cocktail Party" tells the story of a married couple that is separated, but holds cocktail parties. The play deals with theme of pressure of the social appearances, and social norms. The fact that Harry uses this, supposedly, without knowing what the play is about, but just using the title of a famous play to sound smart, creates situational irony. He is bad-mouthing his own race, in order to get into the higher society of his colonisers, by trying to keep up with the social norms that T S Elliot's play is making fun of.

    4. It was my cat. It was dead. The fur was not only spattered with blood but also half-burnt, as though our neighbour's children had even tried to burn it before flinging it through the window.

      From that we can make a conclusion of the environment the narrator is living in. It is a chaotic place with no real rules or limits. From the absence of a reaction that a person like me or you would have, we can conclude that things have been like that for a very long time. It's just one broken community that it is not functioning at all.

    5. It was in a way a necessary baptism.

      (74) I reaaaaaaaaaally like this paragraph here. It's pretty awesome. This statement just sums up the whole absurdism he possesses. Baptism or christening is this really important ritual in every Christian's life and he compares it to falling into a cesspit. This leads me to think that he has this very negative view of Christianity which I completely understand because of the scene with the priest. This may be so because Christianity is very much related to colonialism. Thinking of the Crusades, they were times of strict consumption of the lands where the divine soldiers passed just like Colonialism. I think he also presents his writing journey:"when I was writing an article about shantytown and while inspecting the pit-latrines there I fell into the filthy hole." He has a difficulty with the languages and his traumatic experiences, so when he tries to observe and write about them, he falls into this never ending void of pain, violence and despair.

    6. Leda

      (81) Leda is the supposed mother of Helen of Troy. There is a Greek myth that Leda was so beautiful, Zeus tried to seduce her. She had just married her husband when Zeus took the disguise of a swan and had sex with her. The product of that encounter was Helen of Troy. There is also a poem by Yeats which is about the myth. Yeats is considered to be both colonialist and anti-colonialist but the poem 'Second Coming' was written by him and we encountered it earlier on. This story is very violent so it's interesting to see how easily the narrator switches from serenity to violence. Also, the Leda myth is rebirthed through the Renaissance, so I think we can easily link this to the way African people are trying to revive the connection to their past even today.

    7. 'How come,' he asked, 'how come you bring your son up wrong?' Her smile widened until it swallowed the room. 'It's none of your business, is it?' she said.

      Nestar's reaction here is surprising because one would expect from her to have sympathy for Anne due to the similar struggles she has been through herself. However, her reaction here is really surprising because she does not seem disturbed or bothered by what she has heard about her son and just smiles at Philip, knowing what his sister has experienced. Her behavior is even more bizarre when it is taken into account that she does not agree with her son's actions and supports the narrator's position on this issue: "I knew she had instantly come over to my side. But she obviously did not like doing so" (69). It appears she doesn't want to openly show her shame and disappointment of her son so she does not look emotional and weak, she prefers to keep her "poker face" in the situation. (70)

    8. The old man died beneath the wheels of the twentieth century. There was nothing left but stains, bloodstains and fragments of flesh, when the whole length of it was through with eating him. And the same thing is happening to my generation. No, I don't hate being black. I'm just tired of saying it's beautiful. No, I don't hate mysel£ I'm just tired of people bruising their knuckles on my jaw. I'm tired of racking my brains in the doorway. I don't know. Nothing turns out as exactly intended. A cruel sarcasm rules our lives. Sometimes freedom's opportunity is a wide waistline. The bulldozers have been and gone and where once our heroes danced there is nothing but a hideous stain. They stretched the wings of our race, stretched them out against the candle-flame. There was nothing left but the genitals of senile gods. My life -my life is a spider's web; it is studded with minute skeletons of genius -My life -

      (pg 60) I think that this passage holds a lot of ideas, so I’ll try covering some. First of all, the old man he is talking about is, I think, the African person, proud of their origin and willing to fight. That’s because from the 19th century onward, civilization has experienced a massive industrialization, increasing the power of rich countries which were usually white. The wheels of the 20th century refers to the fast-paced, demoralized industrialization and the whites that come with technological advancements. The next sentence refers to ‘it’ which is a monster that ate the old man and it seems as this long and never ending snake that leaves just a stain of the African. This ‘it’ should be the rulers who changed decade after decade but never thought of the wellbeing of the black people. They managed to consume the morale and pride of the indigenous person. Apparently, indifference to one’s origin is also consuming Marechera’s peers and he tries to explain that in the following sentences. He seems to be tired with the violence and the lack of perspectives in the House of Hunger, but at the same time feels the need to disprove the people who accuse or think that he is ashamed to be black. I feel as a reader this sort of indifference that rots in the soul of not being able to feel a particular sense of belonging or hate (or love). In the next part, Marechera says: “The bulldozers have been and gone and where once our heroes danced there is nothing but a hideous stain. They stretched the wings of our race, stretched them out against the candle-flame.” which sounds like this nostalgic description of the greatness of African kin. There is no hatred, no anger right here, a splash of sad reminiscence. Marechera goes on to talk about the spiderwebs, thus confirming he’s a small man.

    9. Our kicks were mere coquetry.

      (pg 47) I think that Merechera is quite the showman or at least sees and tells stories of aggression through a lens of simplifying. For the second time, we see him experiencing something quite violent as a performance or a game even. The first time that happens is when Immaculate is being beaten and he says:"At that moment I could have sworn that she was putting on a show for me. I laughed". This seems to me as a way to minimize the trauma that violence has or it's just that he doesn't acknowledge it because of its frequency. I think that it's both because they are connected. In the fight with Harry, he represents their possible tiredness as this insincere flirt. They don't want to fight each other - they do it for the sake of fighting.They don't put their hearts into this fight meaning that they are not especially angry. Most of the violence we see in the book is not because of the anger itself, I think (except Peter's). Its just the way to be - when Philip and the protagonist beat Nestar's son, when the father beats the protagonist for speaking English. These are all forms of discipline as I understand. But really Harry and the narrator fight not for discipline but for proving a point and in the end it feels like a game.

    10. It's the ape in you, young man, the heart of darkness.'

      Pretty bold statement coming from another black person. But this just shows how basically brainwashed they are to believe that they are "apes" and to associate darkness with impurity and maliciousness. Saying "the ape in you" for me implies that there's an ape in every single one of them, which must make them inferior and primitive, which is something they have to control and work on. (48)

    1. it’s no longer about poor countries and just poverty. It’s about every country.

      This is a very good point to make, since as seen, Norway had the highest score even when no where near close to having the same GDP as the US or China. Poverty is just one issue on a very long list, the SDG's highlight a bunch of goals, that cover every aspect of what would be a peaceful, perfect world, which no country has achieved. They give every country a laundry list of things to improve that help overall quality of life, not just quality of life for the extremes.

    2. Costa Rica has prioritized education, health and environmental sustainability, and as a result, it’s achieving a very high level of social progress, despite only having a rather modest GDP. And Costa Rica’s not alone. From poor countries like Rwanda to richer countries like New Zealand, we see that it’s possible to get lots of social progress, even if your GDP is not so great.

      I think this is a great point to make considering most people and countries are more concerned about GDP than they are social progress. Everybody wants to be rich, be a CEO, have a lot of money, but by only being concerned with the economy we slack on education, the environment, and over all quality of life. A phrase that comes to mind would be, "Money can't buy you happiness." Growing up in an extremely competitive environment in my family and in school has shown me that even in success you can be in a really bad place. So I find it really important to highlight how improving quality of life is just as important, if not more so, than improving GDP.

    3. Do you think the world is going to be a better place next year? In the next decade? Can we end hunger, achieve gender equality, halt climate change, all in the next 15 years?

      I feel like we are not capable of fixing all the problems that the world has because of the fact that there will always be something that we do wrong. There is not a lot we can do at this point because the world has become such a modern place that it's honestly just filled with problems. There will always be racism, hunger, pollution, discrimination and other problems in the world. They might not be as obvious as they were in the beginning but they will always be there. I feel like we have a limit on how far and how much we can try to help to make the world a better place but there will always be problems that we cannot solve.

    4. Now, the idea that the world is going to get a better place may seem a little fanciful. Watch the news every day and the world seems to be going backwards, not forwards. And let’s be frank: it’s pretty easy to be skeptical about grand announcements coming out of the UN.

      With all that has happened in the last 4-5 years, from the elections to the trainwreck of 2020 in its entirety, I more than agree with how it feels like we're regressing rather than progressing.

      I remember hearing about my (at that time) 10 year old brother crying in my mother's lap when Donald Trump won the 2016 presidential election. I remember feeling sick to my stomach when we watched the inauguration in history class, I actually got a pass to the bathroom because of how nauseous I was.

      I remember losing my grandfather the summer of 2018. Learning of his hospitalization out on a trip with my family, how my parents were desperately searching for cheap plane tickets to send her as soon as possible from Maryland to Iowa to see him. I remember hearing the anguish in her voice as she told us that she missed his passing by 30 minutes. She was alone in a rental car in the back roads when her sister called to tell her the news.

      I remember the death of one of my guinea pigs on the first day of 2019.

      I remember how 2020 went from bad to worse, losing out on school, losing our graduation, losing contact with people outside of blood-related family.

      I remember the death of George Floyd and violence used by police during peaceful protests.

      I remember the riot in the capital, and the recent evidence during the second impeachment trial that shows just how awful things had gotten.

      I remember how this year I realized that even though I had most of my senior year, my underclassmen weren't getting any of it. No sports meets, no marching band, no state championships, no homecoming week or dance. And even for what they are getting, they can't high five, they can't hug, they can't even have spectators to cheer them on. My class will be remembered for our interrupted year and the start of the pandemic. But it's unlikely they'll even have a footnote to remember their struggles.

      It feels like no matter how we try to bring ourselves up, insult upon insult gets added to our injuries, and we're not getting the chance to breathe despite having all the time in the world.

      It's been really tough to stay positive and believe the world is getting better.

    5. Economic growth seems to have really helped in the fight against poverty, but it doesn’t seem to be having much impact on trying to get to the Global Goals. So what’s going on?

      I think the problem is people assume that the only way to lend someone in need a hand is by giving them money. Like I said before money is just temporary aid and when it’s all gone the door opens up again for poverty that’s why we never advance as a whole. Were stuck in the same position each time and our minds easily get use to temporary changes not giving room for long-term changes.

    6. That’s where we are today: 61 out of 100

      I wonder what the score would be now in 2021 and how Covid-19 has affected it. My guess is that it would be lower as it seems many countries including the U.S suffered as result of lack of sufficient support from their governments. Many people lost their livelihoods as new social safety nets weren’t implemented and current ones lacked the infrastructure to support people living in a failing economy. That certainly would’ve affected the Global Goals. It’s interesting to learn about what went into structuring these goals, and how in 2015 they didn’t even fathom to think about accounting for a pandemic just 5 years later.

    7. But the pessimists and doomsayers who say that the world can’t get better are simply wrong.

      I gotta say, sometimes I am one of those "pessimists and doomsayers". Can the world get better? Sure. But it's hard to have a positive outlook when everything I see and hear about the world and economy is negative. It's a lot easier to just call it quits and accept the world as it is. However, I am holding onto a little bit of faith that the changes I make in my daily life are steps towards a greater goal. Hopefully a revolution will begin to completely turn around the morals and priorities of our society to really get things moving but hey, that's just me being optimistic.

    8. Michael Green: This is a really important point; it’s a big shift in priorities — it’s no longer about poor countries and just poverty. It’s about every country. And every country is going to have challenges in getting to the Global Goals. Even, I’m sorry to say, Bruno, Switzerland has got to work to do.

      In any scenario of growth or change, it is inevitable to compare. While it is easy to view one country as “better” based on quantitative data, it is true that no country is perfect. I actually found the statement “ Switzerland has got to work to do.” funny. It is commonly known that Scandinavian countries rank at the top for many categories such as happiness, education, healthcare, etc. While it may be true that they are statistically the best, there is room for improvement amongst the entire world.

    9. Do you think the world is going to be a better place next year? In the next decade? Can we end hunger, achieve gender equality, halt climate change, all in the next 15 years?

      There is no way realistically that the world will be a better place in the next few years not even in the next 10 or even 15. The reason why I think that is because there are people that are going to ruin those goals because they either don't agree with the goals we're trying achieve like gender equality and climate change. Also it's just not realistic and it can take a very long time especially if people don't want to help or disagree.

    10. We have countries that are underperforming on social progress, relative to their wealth. Russia has lots of natural resource wealth, but lots of social problems. China has boomed economically, but hasn’t made much headway on human rights or environmental issues. India has a space program and millions of people without toilets. Now, on the other hand, we have countries that are over-performing on social progress relative to their GDP. Costa Rica has prioritized education, health and environmental sustainability, and as a result, it’s achieving a very high level of social progress, despite only having a rather modest GDP. And Costa Rica’s not alone. From poor countries like Rwanda to richer countries like New Zealand, we see that it’s possible to get lots of social progress, even if your GDP is not so great.

      It's pretty interesting to see what different cultures find important. I'm sure it's incredibly difficult to prioritize what will get the most attention. There's just not enough money to go around! They need to choose what will positively affect the most people, but sometimes they feel like the money is spent better on other advancements, especially technology and the military. But those things won't really help people have better lives if they can't even afford food or if they have no education opportunies. I can imagine it's very stressful to have to make all those decisions and wonder if they're the right ones, even though they usually decide as a group.

    11. What do we have to get to achieve the Global Goals?

      We need to start looking at it as "us" not "you" or "them" we are all in this together. Some people may think just a simple bottle being thrown out the window may do no harm. What is the problem? It's little. Okay well, there are so many people around the world thinking the exact same thing. One simple bottle turns into millions of bottles that are slowly destroying the earth. If one person doesn't like where they live don't take everyone down with you.

    12. Some of the biggest reductions in poverty were in countries such as China and India, which have seen rapid economic growth in recent years.

      It's interesting and it makes sense to hear that these massive reductions in poverty came from these countries that grew so quickly. If countries with mass poverty have good economic growth, they will be able to pull large amounts of people out of poverty. As shown later in the speech though, providing a good lifestyle outside of just basic needs requires a lot more. This is basically the law of diminishing returns. The country needs to provide more and more to provide even better living conditions for its citizens.

    13. I invite you to suspend your disbelief for just a moment

      This is something that is very important and should be heard/seen by many people. We often get so caught up in our own thoughts that we out up blinders and don't accept anything else but our judgment. I see this a lot with debates. People do research on their claim and evidence that they forget there may be a possible "x" factor. Once that "x" factor is brought out by the opposing party it's like a lightning storm unleashing on the table. I’m not sure about the rest of the world but a lightning storm is a big “no” in my book Listening before speaking is an important lesson to learn and to keep with you at all times because unlike many things this one fact won't cause you any harm.

    14. it’s no longer about poor countries and just poverty. It’s about every country.

      Yes, every country needs to do their part but global stratification is apart of the issue as well. Some of the global inequalities are caused by core nations exploiting semi peripheral and peripheral nations. Core nations exploit semi and peripheral nations by using their resources and labor. If peripheral nations depend on core nations for aid, they cannot achieve stability for themselves. The core nations that help these countries can feel as if they have power over them and try to control them.

    15. Our world today is scoring a C-. The Global Goals are all about getting to an A, and that’s why we’re going to be updating the People’s Report Card annually, for the world and for all the countries of the world, so we can hold our leaders to account to achieve this target and fulfill this promise.

      Global Goals are never about getting an A because our society is never going to be 100 percent perfect. There will always be tradeoffs to everything, let alone achieving an A score for Global Goals. We might achieve one thing but something else could pop up so I think there will never really be a perfect globe. Look around us, there are always rich and poor people; it’s been like that for quite a long time. It is just how the world balances out things.

    1. Ultimately, it is now clearthat marine resources are not inexhaustibleand that precautionary, multi‐sector planningof their use is needed to ensure long‐termsustainability of marine ecosystems and thecrucial services they provide.

      It's sad that this isn't just common sense to the public! Almost nothing is inexhaustible when it comes to environmental resources.

    2. around 2.7 to 15 million km2

      Don't have any elaboration, but that is an INSANE increase!! Over five times higher in just three centuries?? It's mind boggling how we could stand by and let this happen.

    3. promoted large influxes of colonistsinto frontier areas and often causeddramatic forest loss.

      It's sad how in todays society, everything comes down to money. I was just talking to a friend yesterday that it is insane how we live, die, compete and kill for money that is only given worth because we decided it is worth something. At this point, it is apparently more important than quality of life, sustainability, and conservation of our environment. That simply is not how life is supposed to be.

    4. number of cattle more thantripling

      I feel like we throw a lot of attention at cattle farmers and other meat producing industries as being "the bad guys". Maybe this is just because my parents are dairy farmers and I've had to defend them my whole life but in the US dairy/meat does a lot of good. For example the corn that is deemed unsuitable for human consumption that is cheap and nutritious for our cows contribute to removing 8 tons of carbon per acre of corn. A lot of the land that is used currently in the US was already destroyed (dust bowl). I don't disagree that there needs to be more regulation and protection of habitat. I just think that dairy and meat aren't the group to always be attacking. Especially considering the impact that high demand plant crops have. For example avocado farming is destroying a significant chunk of rainforest and are relatively difficult to produce so the amount of people being fed by avocados doesn't begin to offset the damage being done. Also palm tree farming for palm oil. It's cheap so it's in everything and is replacing fats like butter to make baked goods vegan.

      https://blog.agrivi.com/post/why-grow-corn#:~:text=According%20to%20the%20USDA%2C%20one,on%2020%20percent%20less%20land. https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2020/02/avocado-environment-cost-food-mexico/#:~:text=Intensive%20avocado%20production%20has%20caused,entirely%20human%2Dmade%20environmental%20disaster. https://www.arcusfoundation.org/publications/research-explores-environmental-impacts-palm-oil-industry/?utm_term=environmental%20impact%20of%20palm%20oil&utm_campaign=Arcus+%7C+Publications+9&utm_source=adwords&utm_medium=ppc&hsa_acc=2137832502&hsa_cam=1978407509&hsa_grp=73204261858&hsa_ad=354949461262&hsa_src=g&hsa_tgt=kwd-297170740305&hsa_kw=environmental%20impact%20of%20palm%20oil&hsa_mt=b&hsa_net=adwords&hsa_ver=3&gclid=CjwKCAiAg8OBBhA8EiwAlKw3kkadqyvN2h4qwVq0NjsBo7ynLoGoFHW9qZ8qfOMcEhKwEvhbYmJa_BoCr30QAvD_BwE

    5. Globally, agriculture is the biggest cause of hab-itat destruction (Figure 4.2). Other human activ-ities, such as mining, clear-cut logging, trawling,and urban sprawl, also destroy or severely degradehabitats. In developing nations, where most habi-tat loss is now occurring, the drivers of environ-mental change have shifted fundamentally inrecent decades. Instead of being caused mostly bysmall-scale farmers and rural residents, habitatloss, especially in the tropics, is now substantiallydriven by globalization promoting intensive agri-culture and other industrial activities (

      This makes me so sad. Instead of trying to help developing nations maybe harvest resources in a responsible way, having learned a lot from our mistakes, globalization is really just continuing to push the same destructive pattern. I'm no expert, but it would seem that developed nations just want cheap product. It's extremely depressing to think that things as trivial as cheap hamburgers are causing the destruction some of the most biologically diverse habitats on this planet, not to mention the human impacts.

    1. Next, imagine you have more models to deploy. You have three optionsLoad the models into the existing cluster — having one cluster serve all models.Spin up a new cluster to serve each model — having multiple clusters, one cluster serves one model.Combination of 1 and 2 — having multiple clusters, one cluster serves a few models.The first option would not scale, because it’s just not possible to load all models into one cluster as the cluster has limited resources.The second option will definitely work but it doesn’t sound like an effective process, as you need to create a set of resources every time you have a new model to deploy. Additionally, how do you optimize the usage of resources, e.g., there might be unutilized resources in your clusters that could potentially be shared by the rest.The third option looks promising, you can manually choose the cluster to deploy each of your new models into so that all the clusters’ resource utilization is optimal. The problem is you have to manuallymanage it. Managing 100 models using 25 clusters can be a challenging task. Furthermore, running multiple models in a cluster can also cause a problem as different models usually have different resource utilization patterns and can interfere with each other. For example, one model might use up all the CPU and the other model won’t be able to serve anymore.Wouldn’t it be better if we had a system that automatically orchestrates model deployments based on resource utilization patterns and prevents them from interfering with each other? Fortunately, that is exactly what Kubernetes is meant to do!

      Solution for deploying lots of ML models

    1. I’ll send her to you presently;And I’ll devise a mean to draw the MoorOut of the way, that your converse and business1590May be more free.

      Iago is most likely happy that his plan is working. It's interesting to see how everyone trusts him but he's just chaotic

    1. Make the whole stock exchange your own!

      It seems that this sentence should be read as if it’s society speaking. The exclamation mark and the demanding language and call to action indicates a bully-type mentality making me think of a crowd of people. This sentence along with the last line, “Provide, Provide!” Is not coming from the narrator himself, but rather what he is hearing and thus, feeling - this stressful and frantic need to survive. It seems callous, unfeeling and just very ruthless in tone and feeling. I get a sense of a person feeling these demands and struggling to “make it” in their world.

    2. He only says, “Good fences make good neighbors.”

      There's this contradiction between the two characters as they're building a wall that divides their properties. The narrator disagrees with the wall because it excludes people from human interaction, and being that they reside in the same neighborhood, it's important for everyone to live harmoniously so that it's a comfortable environment for everyone. As a kid, one of the town houses I lived in didn't even have fences, so whenever we'd barbecue, the entire neighborhood was invited vice versa. Human interaction is something everyone needs just a little bit of because it's lonely living in one's mind.

    1. Corporate gifting, supercharged !!

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      GIFTA makes gift cards personal. Our gift cards are warmly received, arriving with a custom message to let them know just how appreciative you are of their commitment to the team. Our employee gift cards are also completely customisable to ensure your organisation’s branding is clear and appropriately represented. Digital gift cards are also superb for connecting with remote teams. Sent straight to recipients by SMS and email, the gift card can make the distance without the common hassle that comes with sending mail in the post; delivery delays, lost mail or damaged goods upon arrival! We all know our remote teams are working hard to reach desired outcomes, however without daily face-to-face interactions, you don’t want their hard work to go unnoticed. That’s why surprising them with employee gift cards is the perfect way to remain connected to your team.

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      So, in what instance are corporate gifts appropriate? Incentivising staff based on performance, paying commission or just to say thank you! And, your staff aren’t the only ones that are deserving of gifts. Your clients and customers shouldn’t be forgotten! They’re essential to your operations, and it’s crucial to show them you appreciate their support and business.

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    1. It’s a theory about processes, about the sequences and causal relations among things that happen, not the inherent properties of things that are. The fundamental ingredient is what we call an “event.” Events are things that happen at a single place and time; at each event there’s some momentum, energy, charge or other various physical quantity that’s measurable. The event has relations with the rest of the universe, and that set of relations constitutes its “view” of the universe. Rather than describing an isolated system in terms of things that are measured from the outside, we’re taking the universe as constituted of relations among events. The idea is to try to reformulate physics in terms of these views from the inside, what it looks like from inside the universe.

      “the history of the universe is constituted of different views of itself.”

      This just makes too much sense. You can't define something based on its technical composition, because there's so much more than meets the eye. Instead, you have to take into account how all of something's many moving parts live in relation to the events of their life. One thing's experience of life is completely different from another's, even when two things you're comparing seem exactly the same, because at the very least they were created at different times, within a unique environment, and by the hands or creative forces of someone or something that is also wholly unique.

    1. In the first place, all the writers dealt exclusively with what we today would call the western high-classical tradition and accepted without question the assumptions of that tradition without seerning, for the most part, to show any awareness that they were just assumptions, or that out there might be other equally valid sets of assumptions. Never, not once in the whole five hundred pages of the book, was there a single glance outward to the experience of other cultures, not even as far as western popular traditions. And in the second place, the theories they developed were all terribly abstract and complicated, reminding me in their often quite elegant intricacy of those cycles and epicycles that astronomers used to use m order to explain planetary movement before Copernicus simplified things by placing the sun at the center of the system. I just could not make myself believe that so universal, and so concrete a hurnan practice as music should need such complicated and abstract explanations.

      I think this is an incredibly important part of the reading. Many people use a western or Eurocentric lens to analyze aspects of other cultures or even other cultures as a whole. This often often applies to music because music from other cultures is held to the standards of critics and scholars that feel that "Western" music is what all music should be. It's one thing to have a certain way of thinking but Small mentions that there was no attempt to take in mind the experiences of other cultures. I feel that this section was important to include because I think this has been a serious flaw of many scholars throughout time, taking something universal to all people like music and trying to turn it into something so complicated that can only be appreciated if it meets the standards of someone with a preference for western music. I think it's very ambitious and honorable of Small to challenge this "traditional" and outdated way of thinking.

    2. In that real world where people make and listen to music, in concert halls and suburban drawing rooms, in slum bedrooms and political rallies, in supermarkets and churches, in record stores and temples, fields and nightclubs, discos and palaces, stadiums and hotel elevators, it is performance that is central to the experience of music. There can be no music apart from performance, whether it’s live or on record.

      Performance means everything to the song, people go through experiences in their own lives and make music meaningful to them. Music is simply sounds, but sounds are boring to people and can easily be ignored, so there is a lot more that is being said when music is being communicated.

      A personal example, I am so heartbroken over the death of my grandfather that just happened last week. Music means everything to me, the lyrics of certain songs really resonate with me. I was here by Beyonce is a song with very powerful lyrics and those lyrics represent my Grandfather well. An example of lyrics in that song are "I just want them to know That I gave my all, did my best Brought someone some happiness Left this world a little better just because I was here" That represents him because he was a star football player at Holy Cross, served in National Guard, then did a great job raising 4 kids and brought happiness into many people's life.

    1. Hate crimes against Asian Americans increased soon after the disease reached America’s shores. While riding the N Train in New York City, a man sprayed an air freshener directly at an Asian straphanger in early March. On March 7th, Li Qianyang was stabbed more than a dozen times in Brooklyn. In April, the New York City Commission on Human Rights reported that they had recorded more than 248 reports of harassment and discrimination related to COVID-19 since February, more than 40% of which were identified as anti-Asian incidents. On July 14th, two men assaulted an 89 year-old woman in Queens and lit her on fire. And that’s just New York. According to the self-reporting mechanism “Stop AAPI Hate," from April to August nationwide, Asian Americans have reported more than 2,100 incidents of hate from March to June. I never reported what happened to me to the police or through other channels, so I can only imagine that number would be even higher by now.

      It's crazy to think that there are people in the world who think that this is okay.

    1. Before the pandemic, I normally called chefs after I’d written a review of their restaurant but before it was published, to check facts. The chefs usually sounded as if I were calling with the results of a lab test. One chef called me back from a hospital and told me his wife was in the next room giving birth to their first child, but — oh no, don’t worry, it’s fine, he said; in fact, I’d picked a perfect time to call! These were, in other words, awkward conversations.The ones I had last spring were different. It was as if the fear and distrust all chefs feel toward all critics were gone. They talked about going bankrupt, they talked about crying and not wanting to get out of bed. What did they have left to lose by talking to me?

      Pete highlights a key change that came with COVID, except he emphasizes the good that came from it. This compare and contrast allows the reader to see how the personalities have developed along with the times. There was a silver lining amidst the "crying and not wanting to get out of bed". The drastic comparison of his importance before and after the pandemic with a chef giving equal importance to Pete and his first child underlines just how wrong priorities were previously. His diction, utilizing awkward perfectly to encapsulate the environment surrounding his job before COVID, pushing forth the idea that good can result from change.

    1. So it’s OK for Biden to talk with Republicans and hear them out. But should he make any substantive concessions in an attempt to win them over? Should he let negotiations with Republicans delay the passage of his rescue plan? Absolutely not. Just get it done.

      Krugman reiterates his point here in saying that Biden talking to Republicans is not wrong in it of itself, but to compromise with them is not something he should do as it will only hurt the American people and thus, Democrat's electoral chances in 2022 and 2024.

    1. rails. But he had to get off the train. And ended up in Money,

      Money is emphasized by being the last word and mentioned without even the state. He didn't end up just anywhere, he ended up in Money, a city of white people. You don't even need to be told it's white, don't even need to know it's where Emmett Till was killed or even that he was killed. "Money" is so heavily associated with "White" that "Money" tells the story on its own.

    1. raw denial of reality, not just to escape accountability, but to demonize one’s opponents. And it’s another indicator of the moral and intellectual collapse of American conservatism.

      The author goes deeper to show how sickening this crime is and states that they not only denied their involvement but are doing this to weaken their opponents. The use of "demonize" adds a heavier affect to how cruel this process would make a party. It reminds them of the past where there was internal conflict in America.

    2. It’s the energy-policy equivalent of claiming that the Jan. 6 insurrection was a false-flag Antifa operation — raw denial of reality, not just to escape accountability, but to demonize one’s opponents.

      Krugman makes an apt comparison to advance his point, as he references a well known incident to highlight the level of malfeasance that is committed by the current Texas politicians. These events have repeated themselves, and bring the deja vu of politicians turning even tragedy and disaster into an outlet to attack their fellow American "enemies"

    1. Couldn't find on Steam. https://steamdb.info/app/793300/ claims that it is there, but https://store.steampowered.com/app/793300/?curator_clanid=4777282&utm_source=SteamDB just redirects to home page.

      Don't redirect to a different URL, esp. without a message explaining why it did so instead of keeping me on the page that I request. That's just incorrect behavior, and a poor UX. Respond with a 404 if the page doesn't exist.!

      That way (among other things), I could use Wayback Machine extension to see if I can find a cached version there.

      But even that (http://web.archive.org/web/*/https://store.steampowered.com/app/793300) is saying "huh?" so I'm confused.

      Where did it go and why?

      I guess it's no longer available, because this page says:

      section_type    ownersonly
      ReleaseState    unavailable
      

      ... but why?

    1. This reminds me of a viral video that is going around right now. It's a college professor yelling at one of his students for not paying attention when she's actually hard o fhearing and delayed in the class because she has to wait for everything the professor is saying to be interpreted. It is actually really sad to watch, he shows no remorse for the student even after other students back them up. He goes on to say that they are not paying attention, when that is not the case at all. This just goes to show that although some sites and resources may seem accessible for all students, sometimes there are other factors you may not be considering.

    2. We have all been there—wrapping up a class feeling frustrated, just like the students, because the technology did not work out as planned. In this case, the problem was the tool did not provide students with a good user experience.

      It's definitely something to think about the fact that technology doesn't always work the way that we plan for it to. Sometimes there are technical difficulties that we are not able to see, and it makes it frustrating when you might be trying to teach students. It helps to have more experience working with tools online, and there might be more things that a teacher could do on the spot if needed because of technology not working properly.

    1. It’s been less than a year since Roam started to gain traction, Notion just added Roam’s signature bi-directional link functionality, and there are already open-source “Roam compatible” apps on the horizon, like Athens.

      This is the first reference I've heard about [[Athens]], but there are many others that aren't mentioned here including Obsidian, Foam, TiddlyWiki, etc. which have been adding the backlinking capabilities.

    1. It's boom and gloom, a housing market that reflects America's increasing inequality. Ugh, that's a super-depressing way to end this. On the bright side, 2020 has fewer than four months to go?

      Fuck no. 2021 is shaping up to be just as wacky.

    1. With 3D food printing, once you start talking years out, it's not just about the pretty designs and the automation aspect -- it's about the customisation and nutrition aspect. So for example, you and I can go out to lunch today and order the same thing from a restaurant and we would get the same exact dish, the same potion sizes. But in the future they're looking at customising that, so maybe I get a little bit less and you get a little bit more, or maybe I want a breakfast bar this morning. [The 3D printer] knows from my wearable I went on a 5km run and I'm low on vitamin D and iron, and can pump up the nutrients in my breakfast bar.

      Does it sound like your personal assistant (a wearable) will be able to tell you what you need to eat?

    2. The current version of Foodini that's out on the market can heat the individual food capsule, so that's good for keeping chocolate at a good melting point, or printing warm mashed potatoes," Kucsma said. "But if you were printing raw fish or raw meat, you would have to take that out and cook it some other manner right now. So the next generation device -- which is real, it's not just an idea on paper, we have prototypes in our office -- when that generation device comes out, that's when we really know we can target home kitchen users as well."

      What will the next generation device be able to do?

    1. Grouped inputs It can be convenient to apply the same options to a bunch of inputs. One common use case is making many inputs optional. Instead of setting default: nil on each one of them, you can use with_options to reduce duplication.

      This is just a general Ruby/Rails tip, nothing specific to active_interaction (except that it demonstrates that it may be useful sometimes, and gives a specific example of when you might use it).

      Still, in my opinion, this doesn't belong in the docs. Partly because I think repeating the default: nil for every item is an acceptable type of duplication, which would be better, clearer (because it's more explicit), simpler, keeps those details closer to the place where they are relevant (imagine if there were 50 fields within a with_options block).

      I also think think that it creates a very arbitrary logical "grouping" within your code, which may cause you to unintentionally override/trump / miss the chance to use a different, more logical/natural/important/useful logical grouping instead. For example, it might be more natural/important/useful to group the fields by the section/fieldset/model that they belong with, even if your only grouping is a comment:

      # User fields
      string :name
      integer :age
      date :birthday, default: nil
      
      # Food preferences
      array :pizza_toppings
      boolean :wants_cake, default: nil
      

      may be a more useful grouping/organization than:

      # Fields that are required
      string :name
      integer :age
      array :pizza_toppings
      
      # Fields that are optional
      with_options default: nil do
        date :birthday
        boolean :wants_cake
      end
      

      Or it might be better to list them strictly in the same order as they appear in your model that you are trying to match. Why? Because then you (or your code reviewer) can more easily compare the lists between the two places to make sure you haven't missed any fields from the model, and quickly be able to identify which ones are missing (hopefully intentionally missing).

      In other words, their "optionalness" seems to me like a pretty incidental property, not a key property worthy of allowing to dictate the organization/order/grouping of your code.

    1. On Maui, carvers pass on stories about the tikis to the next generation. Some of these stories play a central role in reestablishing connections between Tonga and Hawai‘i. For example, Tēvita Māhina (see figures 17 and 20) pointed out that the Hawaiian god Kanaloa is the same as the Tongan god Tangaloa.

      Tiki traditions was extremely important to many countries in Oceania. So I find it pretty cool that this is just another significant similarity but of course it may have it's own differences as well.

    2. genealogy plays a central role in many cultural encounters

      I think it's important to keep in mind that wherever you travel (for research, vacation, etc) you should do research and educate yourself about the cultural rules/norms of a place. It's important to be respectful, and you have to realize that just because something is considered acceptable in your culture doesn't mean it's acceptable in another culture.

    1. motivation in an ODL course is not onlyresided in an individual as cognitive attributesbut also present during social interaction andduring our engagement with learning materialsand technological tools.

      I feel ilke this sentence resumes well what motivation represents in a distance education environment. I agree that it's not just individual and how it's a limitation for research.

    1. It’s still a broad term – and your CTR might not be great. But let’s also say you get a lot of leads from that keyword, at a good cost.

      Would you want to do a separate campaign to test out exact and negative keywords as well in this particular case since this keyword is ambiguous? I'm thinking I would research that keyword more first and test out various filters ie keywords like broad and phrase match. I'm just wanting to know if I've on the right track.

    1. One theory is that contra-freeloading occurs because it helps organisms gain information about the environment that might be useful later. If you know that pressing a lever gets you food, this might come in handy if other sources of food disappear. This does not seem like a very compelling explanation, however, because (under some conditions) animals will respond at a very high rate to get food in the presence of free food. It’s not like they’re just checking to see if the lever still works from time to time. (See also this elegant study showing that monkeys will work to get information about the size of the next reinforcer, even though this has no impact on whether they will get the reinforcer and gives them no long-term information.)

      Criticism of [[@Inglis.etal1997FreeFoodEarnedFoodReview]]'s explanation: it's not about [[exploration]] because animals don't seem to be explicitly engaging in learning new things about the environment.

    1. It's a Dorian Grayish fable, transposed to the twenty-first century: Steve Jobs has become Steve Jobs by doing what nobody else has done before -- by treating computers not just as tools but as mirrors, by making technology not just the engine but the emblem of transcendence. One day, however, he will have to do what everybody else has done before, and will wind up demonstrating what it's like to be mortal, even in the age of the beautiful machine. And now that he has drawn undeniably closer to the day that has given all his other days their urgency -- now that the face staring back in the mirror has lost its shiny-haired California glamour and has taken on the frank rapacity of an old Arab trader -- it's worth asking what the pressure of continual existential awareness has done to him.

      这是一个道林·格雷的寓言在21世纪的翻版:乔布斯通过尝试前人从未做的事而成为了乔布斯——将电脑不仅视为工具,而且视作镜子,将科技不仅制造成动力,而且变成了卓越的象征。但总有一天,他一定去做所有人都曾干过的事,并将最终展示什么才是凡夫俗子的人生,即便是在一个完美精致的机器时代。现在不可否认,他已快要接近那一天了,这让他日益增加了对余下日子的紧迫感——在镜子前回眸一望,那张脸已经失去了一头极具加州魅力的光亮的秀发,变成了一张衰老的阿拉伯商人的贪婪之脸——值得去问一问,那种永无休止的存在意识究竟对他造成了什么样的压力。

    1. As a result, helping poor children doesn’t just improve their lives in the short run, it helps them escape poverty.

      Another central idea present in the article is improving the lives of children in the current generation. The author most likely understands that children are the future of tomorrow and in order to escape the harsh situations they are facing through poverty, permanent change needs to occur immediately before it's too late. The government is not just handing out money for money, they need to understand that for certain people, each and every cent of their financial aid is used to satisfy the basic needs of a human being. This paragraph in its entirety urges the importance of governmental change and reconsideration of the conservatism's perspective regarding this issue.

    2. Medicaid is available only to families with low enough income, so taking a job that pushes one’s income above that threshold leads to a loss of health benefits.

      This makes a good point. It’s hard for some people that are just on the cusp of these kinds of things.

    1. Instead we should value the failures, the experiments, the amateur, the local and the handmade, the broken and the repaired, the decorated and the emotional,

      Sometimes it's better to focus on the imperfections of an object because it can tell you a lot more than just an object that is perfect but tells you nothing.

    1. “One of the bigger symbolic purposes of the child allowance is to say the work a parent does is valid — it’s valid as work,”

      overarching theme of the article - acknowledging that what parents do requires just as much effort as everyday jobs do. this adds to his article because it is a quotation from someone else which builds on his point

    1. that can mean so many things it runs the risk of meaning nothing at all.

      I was just having a conversation about this earlier today. There are so many different 'definitions' one can create for this word and it will always mean completely different things to everyone. If it is used too often and without a true personal, individualized definition then it truly will mean nothing special at all. Creativity is such a beautiful things and I think it's important for everyone to have the chance to explore their own meaning behind the word.

    1. When a fi lm print becomes worn, for instance, or has been poorly printed to begin with, characters’ speech may slip out of synch. Film dialogue that has been dubbed into another language is also nonsynchronous—characters’ lips move to form words that are obviously diff erent than those heard on the soundtrack.

      It’s amazing how sometimes actors will go off script and still make it work. They don’t hesitate by what they can’t read they just replace it and keep going which sometimes works out better then the director thought.

    1. online curation is:

      The most prominent example of this type of online curation, in my personal experience as a teacher, is curating reading lists for my university courses.

      In some cases (more "traditional"), this list is part of the syllabus and coursepack that I distribute ahead of the semester so it's something that I would do in the Summer or during a Winter break. Having taught several courses on a short notice (getting the contract a couple of weeks before the semester starts), I've fine-tuned my technique to be as efficient as possible. Some of my reading lists were better than others and a few were really solid. Teaching with such a reading list is quite a joy. Much more so than teaching from a textbook. At one point, I stopped having printed coursepacks. I simply give links to the fulltext articles available through #OpenAccess or through the databases to which the university's library is subscribed. A few students complained early on but it does mean that they don't have to purchase text material for the course. The reason it's important to me does have to do with the cost of higher education. It's also about shifting the role of text resources. We use these texts to do some work together. It's not like these texts are "transmitting the knowledge" to learners' brains.

      So, that's my more traditional pattern: a syllabus with a list of links to articles (typically PDFs) that I distributed before the semester starts.

      In other cases (my "enhanced" practice), it's something I do every week, based on what has happened in the course. And I do mean a full reading list each week. Class members choose the text on which they want to focus. Though several of them expect me to be "the sage on the stage" who will lead them to that one nugget of wisdom they will have to "retain", a shift happens once they take ownership of those reading choices. That practice is quite timeconsuming and it doesn't necessarily improves my teaching in obvious ways. It's rewarding in other ways. (I sometimes ask learners to find resources on their own, which really deepens the learning process. It requires a significant level of autonomy that they might not reveal during a given semester, even if they have significant experience as university students).

      My routine of building weekly reading lists also means that I got quite a bit of practice at this.

      Typically, I start the collecting with a "forward citation search" in Web of Knowledge, Scopus, or Google Scholar. I often know this one key article which is likely to have been cited by a number of authors more recently. I collect as many of those as possible and some patterns emerge. Quite frequently, there would be subtopics that I rearrange. It might send me in a "rabbithole". Which is ok. I'm in a discovery mode. And some of the texts which fall under my radar at that point become relevant at a further point.

      In other words, I often cast a wide net during the collection phase.

      The selection process is mostly a matter or rearranging the reading list so that the first few items cover enough of the range of subtopics. Sometimes, my lists remain quite long, which means that learners have more choice (which is uncomfortable enough to help them learn). It also involves an organization phase.

      Summarizing the significance of the collection is the basis for my presentation of the list to the class. My description of the collection is the moment in a class meeting during which I switch to lecture mode. If I do it at the end of the class meeting (or just before the break), students are likely to pay less attention, even though it's typically short. If I do If I do it before discussing the items for the current week, it gets a bit confusing. So it often works best if I present this list after we've worked through the previous ones but before some kind of activity which links the two topics.

      As for sharing in the cloud, I typically do this through the LMS I'm using in that institutions. I've tried more public methods but they weren't that effective.

      All this to say... I could probably optimize my method.

    1. think of the others in the Deaf community and the viral videos that won't be made about them.

      It's important to reflect and not just be happy for the person in the video, but to remember the deaf community and what they go through.

    2. so that they can get used to all kinds of new, but common noises, like water coming out of the faucet or wind hitting a window.

      It is not just an instant fix when someone get's the implant. Sense they haven't heard before, it takes time to adjust to the changes, learn how to hear, how to speak, and how to interact in the world. There is oftentimes therapy to help with the new changes in their life. Relationships and interacting with people is also different. This is another thing they have to adjust to. It's not a quick fast fix to all their problems. It oftentimes takes time.

    3.  but few looked past the highly emotional moment to explore the scientific explanation behind it, or to explore the question what it's truly like to be deaf.

      I think this is a very important statement where we begin to understand what this article is truly about. I think a lot of people can get caught up in emotional videos and shed a tear themselves. It is very important to think about deeper things rather to just see what's on the surface. It is important to develop moving ideas and thoughts from watching such as how the woman was able to hear again. What led to this outcome? Also we need to explore deeper and dive into the world of thinking about what it's like to be deaf, and how that person has, had to experience the world as well as how they adapt to the new change. These thoughts are important in understanding the situation and trying to understand the individuals journey.

    4. So the next time you see one, don't just cheer for the newly hearing person, but take a moment to think of the others in the Deaf community and the viral videos that won't be made about them.

      This is such a great closing sentence and really makes the reader think about the other people in the community. It's so sad that some people are eligible to get an implant because their medical insurance cant cover it. Before reading this article I would never have thought of all the others who can't get implants but now I'm looking at these videos with a new air of eyes. I'm also going into this type of field and hopefully going to be an audiologist so this was a very interesting article that I enjoyed reading:)

    1. Why process, not save? This is entirely up to you. However, it's good to stay consistent across your team so there's no confusion. I began using save but found there are some cases for forms where you aren't saving anything, such as when you are just triggering a job or push-notification. I found using process fits more cases so that's what I use. This is also typically the only method that is public on my forms.

      process is a good name, but I think this is evidence that this object is not the form object itself, but a form processor (as I like to call it) or a "workflow" object (like https://github.com/gogogarrett/reform_example/blob/master/app/forms/workflows/user_workflow.rb), which wraps a form object.

    1. When hiring managers believed a woman had children because “Parent-Teacher Association coordinator appeared on her resume, she was 79% less likely to be hired. If she was hired, she would be offered an average of $11,000 less in salary.

      I recall when learning how to do interviews once, the person who was helping me made a comment along the lines of -

      one of the things I look for is an engagement ring, as it's a sign that they are getting married soon - and want the job just to get mat leave

      I remember being rather shocked by that statement, and I didn't speak up about it at that time directly - although did push back against it a bit, but it's one of those memories that really stood out as 'wow, that is kind of messed up'

    1. They tolerate my mistakes. They correct me, they encourage me, they provide the words I lack. They speak clearly, patiently. Just like parents with their children. The way one learns one’s native language. I realize that I didn’t learn English in this fashion.

      they're right, it's the best way someone can help you improve your skills in a new language. it's the same for me at home

    1. Recent market-based approaches such as pay-ments for Costa Rican ecosystem services, wet-land mitigation banks, and the Chicago ClimateExchange have proven useful in the valuation ofecosystem services

      YESSSSS! OMG YESS!! MARKETS! LETS THROW MORE MARKETS AT THE PROBLEM!!

      In all seriousness, while this is better than nothing I feel as though creating a market to solve market externalities is kind of absurd. Also, who's paying Costa Rica? There's a market here so long as post-industrial nations want to allocate funds to these countries, though I do love that we're outsourcing environmentalism AND our pollution. That is a truly profound representation of the duality on man. It's also hilarious that emissions-trading is a thing, and it's even funnier the center of it on the US is Chicago. This is a really interesting way of doing environmental regulations, but... this seems silly. This is a knee-jerk reaction and I could be totally off base here, but wouldn't it be better to just set a strict cap, fine these corporations exorbitant amounts of money, tax them for their emissions as a baseline, and then use the money generated to fund ecological restoration, and maybe offer additional farm subsidies for "green" farms/small-scale local farmers? If I'm being a silly goose let me know, but this seems unhinged.

    2. Organisms decompose and detoxifydetritus, preventing our civilization from beingburied under its own waste.

      This is something I've known for ever, but I have never, ever thought of. It's very cool to me how intricate and intertwined the Earth is, to the point where if decomposition did not happen, we would be littered with dead bodies and garbage. When decomposition was first introduced to me as a child, I never fully understood that bodies didn't just decompose because they were dead, but because of small organisms that do the job for us, so we can have a healthy planet. Things like that, that function to keep the earth clean and free of bacteria from dead bodies littering the streets is amazing to me.

    1. Art shares a lot of similarities with undervalued stocks.17 At first, when people hear of a novel idea, a lot of them will laugh it off as ridiculous, outlandish, unnecessary, or just plain dumb. It’s here that the artist “buys” the idea at its low value, then finds a way to refurbish and “flip it” into something of higher value that the world understands and appreciates.

      Look for ideas that are under-valued, invest resources (time, money, energy) into them, so that when their true value is appreciated, you're in a good position to get a return on the investment.

    1. since packages aren’t overwritten, the old versions are still there after an upgrade. This means that you can roll back to the old version:

      Wouldn't hurt to tell folks that this is a convenience layer, and one could also just use the old package from the /nix/store, even though that path would be long and obscure; one could use symlinks of course.

      Or, onc could just use nix-shell -p that specifies a specific version (that's already in the store), but, of course, it's not that simple...

      https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/9682

    1. It's been five years since Hurricane Katrina destroyed New Orleans. In all that time -- nearly two-thousand dead, half the population gone, the city still a festering skeleton of itself -- only two people were blamed for anything: Sal and Mabel Mangano.

      I'm just highlighting all of this, so you can see how it works better.

    1. Bless me, Father, for I have sinned, it's a minute since my last confession. A minute! Are you the boy that was just here? I am, Father. What is it now? My grandma says, Holy water or ordinary water? Ordinary water, and tell your grandmother not to be bothering me again. I told her, Ordinary water, Grandma, and he said don't be bothering him again

      A scene of humor it seems like with the over-zealous grandmother. Breaks the tension but shows character.

    1. The ideal of humanity existing apart from nature simply does not reflect reality.

      This passage summarizes Smith's central argument. Smith wants the audience to realize that people and nature can coexist and that it's not unheard of or particularly rare because that used to be the norm. Just with the changes that have been made and modern technology has made it so we cannot see how this is possible.

    1. College... or University in my case is a big question mark. There's so much you can't say about it that you feel like you should. The sleepless nights that keep you awake with stressful thoughts that fill you with more frustration than kind of annoyance. The friends that move in and out of your life like ghosts wandering through a long abandoned house that you exchange glances and a half-hearted wave with but never choose to acknowledge further. The parties where you sit in a corner sipping on a cup of water because you don't want to want to feel even more out of place until you feel you've spent an adequate amount of time there and leave. Studying alone because it "helps you focus more". Sitting one seat removed from the closest person because you don't want to seem eager or weird. Wondering how the people around you already seem to have everything figured out while you're left just trying to keep your head above water and your grades respectable enough for grad school. The feeling that this is your life, this is the most important thing up to this point in it and you desperately don't want to mess it up. The fact that film is around to at least try to give the seemingly inarticulate something of a recognizable voice is why I never get tired and never stop trying. Bring it on world! Do your worst!

      Review style 4/4.

      This kind of review is interesting as it can be argued that it isn't really a review in a familiar form. Instead of a user writing out all their feelings and thoughts concerning the film, they use the film and often its themes as well to dive deep into specific ideas that, while related to the film, aren't really about it. It's almost as though the film filled the user with a spark and now they have something they have to say because of the film. This style seems to be popular because of the nature of human conscious and how what we are exposed to will influence us. Mental and actual conversations occur because ideas spring up both consciously and unconsciously all the time.

      Examples:

    1. {"@type":"NewsArticle","@context":"http://schema.org","url":"https://kotaku.com/destiny-2s-season-of-the-chosen-is-good-so-far-1846234532","author":[{"@type":"Person","name":"Ethan Gach"}],"headline":"Destiny 2's Season Of The Chosen Is Good So Far","description":"Season of the Chosen went live in Destiny 2 today, and with it a whole new set of things to grind for. So far, these things—new armor, guns, and exotic gear—seem pretty cool, with interesting new perks to make them worth chasing. But I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t already feeling daunted by yet another set of artifacts, upgrade nodes, and season pass rewards to rank up.","dateline":"02/09/2021 at 19:00","datePublished":"2021-02-09T19:00:00-05:00","dateModified":"2021-02-09T19:00:03-05:00","mainEntityOfPage":{"@type":"WebPage","url":"https://kotaku.com/destiny-2s-season-of-the-chosen-is-good-so-far-1846234532"},"image":{"@type":"ImageObject","height":675,"width":1200,"url":"https://i.kinja-img.com/gawker-media/image/upload/c_fill,f_auto,fl_progressive,g_center,h_675,pg_1,q_80,w_1200/qllyzsvzfppnvounujeg.png","thumbnail":{"@type":"ImageObject","height":180,"width":320,"url":"https://i.kinja-img.com/gawker-media/image/upload/c_fill,f_auto,fl_progressive,g_center,h_180,pg_1,q_80,w_320/qllyzsvzfppnvounujeg.png"}},"articleBody":"Season of the Chosen went live in Destiny 2 today, and with it a whole new set of things to grind for. So far, these things—new armor, guns, and exotic gear—seem pretty cool, with interesting new perks to make them worth chasing. But I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t already feeling daunted by yet another set of artifacts, upgrade nodes, and season pass rewards to rank up.\n\nThe villains du jour this time around are remnants of the Red Legion, a faction that now controls the Cabal and is loosely inspired by the Roman Empire. Empress Caiatl, daughter of year one raid boss Callus, wants you and the Vanguard to pledge allegiance to her, but of course Zavala, Osiris and co. aren’t having it. And so the two sides are at war (again), providing a new reason to shoot legions of lumbering space Goombas in search of new rewards and lore dumps.\n\nI’ve played around with the new content for about three hours now. So far most of my impressions are pretty positive, though I’m less hopeful about the larger existential questions swirling around Destiny 2 as it passes the halfway point of its fourth year. Here’s a quick rundown:\n\nThe launching area for Season of the Chosen is called the H.E.L.M., which is an acronym for Destiny gibberish that exited one ear shortly after entering the other. It’s a big space full of hallways and closed doors that seem likely to open up later in the season or sometime further down the road. In the meantime it’s kind of empty and lonely, though I do love the Star Trek: The Next Generation-style polished wood surrounding the war table.\n\nThe war table is where you grab seasonal bounties, upgrade seasonal nodes, and cash in seasonal currency for new seasonal engrams. It seems modeled after Variks’ upgrade nodes from Europa, which were nice and streamlined compared to seasons past.\n\nThe H.E.L.M. is also where the Prismatic Recaster, brought back from Season 11, is now located. Here you can refocus Umbral Engrams, which have also returned, transforming them into Season of the Chosen weapons and armor or into random gear from the rest of the game’s current loot pool. It appears to be currency-based, rather than upgrade-driven like the original version, which is a relief, since grinding that thing the first time around was painful enough.\n\nThe highlight of Season of the Chosen is the new Battlegrounds activity. It can be accessed from the surface on Nessus and Europa, or from the Strike Playlist after completing some initial story quests. You fight waves of enemies in a patrol area, then head deeper into one of the nearby underground caverns, fight more waves of enemies, and eventually end up at a Cabal boss in a small arena filled with still more waves of enemies. It’s short, varied, and a breezy way to burn through bounties—everything you’d want from a seasonal activity you might be running dozens of times a week.\n\nAt the end of a run you get your normal Strike Playlist rewards chest, followed by a second Battlegrounds chest you can smash open if you’ve charged up your Cabal hammer artifact. This Hammer is like Season of Opulence’s Chalice. You insert gold coins you earn throughout other activities in order to unlock the extra chest, and the way you upgrade the hammer will affect what rewards are inside. Opening treasure chests is fun. Smashing them is even more fun. Again, nothing new here, but this loot loop feels better optimized than many of Destiny 2’s past ones.\n\nThe Crow has finally left the Tangled Shore and is ready to hang. He’s even got a Phantom of the Opera mask Osiris makes him wear so that no one else in the Last City recognizes him and goes “Oh shit, you killed Cayde-6, aka Nathan Fillion.” It’s a nice touch. Hopefully he becomes more involved as the season progresses.\n\nThere’s a new exotic bow called Ticuu’s Divination that reminds me of Gears of War’s Torque Bow. Fire it from the hip and three homing shots will whip around corners to hone in on a target. Hold down and fire a precision shot at that target and it will explode with a detonation that is both satisfying and perfect for ripping through Cabal mobs. I don’t normally like bows, but I like this one. The rest of the new exotic gear looks similarly powerful, which is good for providing new loot to chase but also makes the older stuff I already have feel boring by comparison.\n\nThe new patch is live, and seasonal challenges have replaced weekly bounties. As someone who almost never finished weekly bounties, I’m looking forward to this change. In a game that feels increasingly transient, having season long challenges is both easier to keep track of and feels more substantial. Swords have been nerfed too, but I (and everyone else I see) are still using them just fine in Battlegrounds. Meanwhile, rocket launchers were buffed, but I’m still not sold on them. Bungie also boosted recoil for PC players ahead of the cross-play update planned in the near future. I imagine this will suck for PC players, but I don’t play on PC so I can’t say at the moment.\n\nSunsetting is more of a bummer than ever. As some of my favorite weapons get closer to their power cap (I’ll never let you go, Gnawing Hunger), Bungie’s current approach to loot sustainability and sandbox balancing feels more misguided than ever. Philosophical disagreements aside, it is still completely bonkers to me that players have to grind for new versions of re-issued weapons rather than being able to infuse up the older but otherwise identical versions. Also I got another Long Shadow sniper rifle in one of my first few Legendary drops this season, and it’s still at an older cap than the current season’s. Why is this loot game wasting my time with arbitrary expiration dates?\n\nThe Devil’s Lair and Fallen SABER strikes from Destiny 1 are back and I missed them. The more time marches on, the more I long for the comparatively simple and straightforward pleasures of the first game.\n\nThere’s a lot planned for Season of the Chosen according to its content roadmap, including new versions of Battlegrounds and a new strike based in the Last City called Proving Grounds. Based on my first few hours with what’s already live, Season 13 seems like it will have as many good reasons for Destiny players to keep playing Destiny as any previous season. But so far it hasn’t shown any signs of doing anything bold to change up the game’s underlying formula or how players interact with it. At times that’s enough for me, but increasingly I find myself hoping for something more, and disappointed when it never quite materializes. \n\n\n","articleSection":"Impressions","keywords":["destiny","windows games","multiplayer video games","cabal","heroes of the storm","grinding","video gaming","games","video games","first person shooters","role playing video games","playerunknowns battlegrounds"],"publisher":{"@type":"Organization","@context":"http://schema.org","name":"Kotaku","url":"https://kotaku.com","logo":{"@type":"ImageObject","url":"https://x.kinja-static.com/assets/images/logos/amp/logo-kotaku-amp.png"},"sameAs":["https://www.facebook.com/kotaku","https://www.youtube.com/user/KotakuNYC","https://twitter.com/kotaku","https://instagram.com/kotakudotcom"]},"video":[]}Ethan GachTuesday 7:00PM411

      5: This is my cited example for my fifth annotation. This is an active article, it is a measurement for audience engagement and success is shown in this bar. As I write this it has 41 comments, one can argue that the more shares, bookmarks, and comments on this article, the more it is pushed to the front page of Kotaku. This is active success, versus my articles passive success. My article merely participates in the visual rhetoric of Kotaku, but still labels it as part of the community.

    1. I have so many ideas about this. The first one being that it's awesome.

      While WordPress is about websites, it's also got a lot of pieces of social media sites hiding under the hood and blogrolls are generally precursors of the following/followed piece.

      Blogrolls were traditionally stuck on a small widget, but I think they now deserve their own full pages. I'd love to have one with a list of all the people I follow (subscribe to) as well as a similar one with those who follow me (and this could be implemented with webmention receipts of others who have me on their blogroll). I've got versions/mock ups of these pages on my own site already as examples.

      Next up is something to make these easier to use and import. I'd love a bookmarklet or a browser extension that I could use one click with to have the person's page imported into my collection of links that parses the page (perhaps the h-card or meta data) and pulls all the data into the link database.

      I always loved the fact that the original generated OPML files (even by category) so that I could dump the list of data from my own site into a feed reader and just go. Keeping this would be awesome, but the original hasn't been updated in so long it doesn't use the updated OPML spec

      If such a currated list is able to be maintained on my site it would also be cool if I could export it in such a way (similar to OPML) as to dovetail it with social readers like Aperture, Yarns, or other Microsub servers to easily transport or mirror the data there.

      Here are some related thoughts: https://boffosocko.com/2017/11/10/a-following-page/

      I'm happy to chat about other useful/related features relating to this any time!

    1. it's just letting it go and allowing certain elements in the 00:01:15 universe and dynamics beyond your control to fall in together which would otherwise be forcefully influenced by neediness or the need to do something that doesn't need to be done

      letting go neediness do that doesn't need to be done

  4. baristaoho.weebly.com baristaoho.weebly.com
    1. Don’t you just love the smell of coffee brewing in the morning? The almost intoxicating smell? I know I do! What about that first sip? It’s addictive, whether or not you take it with sugar, crème, or even just black. I

      This is an amazing start to your introduction paragraph. It grabbed my attention and made me want to continue reading. Great Job!

    1. The idea of a purely linear text is a myth; readers stitch together meanings in much more complex ways than we have traditionally imagined; the true text is more of a network than a single, fixed document.

      The internet isn't a new invention, it's just a more fixed version of the melange of text, ideas, and thought networks that have existed over human existence.

      First there was just the memory and indigenous peoples all over the world creating vast memory palaces to interconnect their thoughts. (cross reference the idea of ancients thinking much the way we do now from the fist episode or so of Literature and History)

      Then we invite writing and texts which help us in terms of greater storage without the work or relying solely on memory. This reaches it's pinnacle in the commonplace book and the ideas of Llull's combinatorial thought.

      Finally we've built the Internet which interconnects so much more.

      But now we need to go back and revisit the commonplace book and memory techniques to tie them altogether. Perhaps Lynne Kelly's concept of The Third Archive is what we should perfect next until another new instantiation comes to augment the system.

    1. He is right, I think, to treat commonplace books as sites to be mined for information about how people thought in a culture based on different assumptions from our own.

      This is an interesting take, and particularly because the writers may not have expected their commonplace books to be read or studied.

      My particular version may be slightly more suspect. While I keep one, it's digital and more public facing. Therefore there is the chance that people (though I suspect a vanishingly small number) may read my words and be influenced by them. Generally however, I feel like 99.9999% of the time I'm writing just to have a conversation with myself and the expectation that it will make me better.

    1. Chances are, if you're like me, that you pick up your phone and use a biometric authentication method (e.g. FaceId) to open it. Then you select the app and the biometrics play again to make sure it's you, and you're in.

      I just had a hilariously opposite experience with Exchange Bank. I'd never tried their mobile app, was happy with the web app which, since having an iPhone, works with Touch ID. But you inspired me to get the app. To which I could not authenticate, not with Touch ID, not with repeated and careful efforts to input the password that works in the web app. Here is how it ended:

      "ATTENTION: We are unable to validate your information Please try again or check that your login credentials are set up correctly in online banking. If problems continue please call us at 1-844-ddd-dddd for assistance."

      Well, not quite. Here's how it ended, after many rings:

      "Thank you for call, we are unavailable to help at this time, please leave a message."

      Wait, there's more. The Touch ID story is more complex than I realized. When I went back and checked, I found it didn't work with my bank. This led to a futile detour during which I connected AutoFill to my password manager (StrongBox, on the iPhone, Keepass elsewhere), and then disconnected it because I didn't want to have to authenticate to the password manager in order to AutoFill. Turning back to the bank auth, I finally figured it out. The Touch ID -> AutoFill connection is based on Safari, but I mainly use a Chromium browser on the iPhone. I had to visit the bank in Safari, and have it remember my bank password, in order for the Touch ID -> AutoFill connection to work. Despite all this, the mobile app still doesn't accept same Touch-ID-acquired credential as the web app does. And it's Saturday, so nobody is answering the phone.

      Now, I am new to the iPhone so I'm sure I'm missing plenty. Also my bad for using the non-default browser I guess. And maybe Exchange Bank's mobile app is an outlier. But still, I'm puzzled. I want to experience this passwordless nirvana of which you speak. How do I get there?

    1. Generally, the less equipment required, the more accessible the tool will be to a broad group of users, regardless of socioeconomic, geographic, or other environmental considerations.

      Agree with that.Like our Remote Class. Some classes require me to turn on the camera, and my camera just broke. This made it impossible for me to meet the requirements of that class. Some classes just require me to be present. Microphones and cameras are not required. It's easier for me. The same is true for web pages. If a web page requires too many tools, some people may have trouble using it. I once visited a website that required Adobe Flash to watch videos, and my Flash software had not been updated, which prevented me from continuing to view the page

    1. When you’re worried that your design isn’t functional, go to Good UI. It’s a static collection of 75 good UI principles. The team has personally implemented and A/B tested each principle with clients, so you can be confident the ideas are sound.

      I like that this project is centered on the functionality of the product, rather than just on its design.

    1. Reviewer #4:

      This manuscript by Huss, P., et al, is a major technological step forward for high throughput phage research and is a deep dive into the deep mutational landscape of a portion of the T7 Phage receptor binding protein (RBP). The author’s develop a new phage genome engineering method, ORACLE, that can generate a library of any region of the phage genome. They apply ORACLE to do a deep mutational scan of the tip domain of T7 RBP and screen for enrichment in several bacteria. The authors find that different hosts give rise to distinct mutational profiles. Exterior loops involved in specialization towards a host appear to have the highest differential mutational sensitivity. The authors follow up these general scans in the background of phage resistant hosts. They find mutations that rescue phage infection. To demonstrate the utility of the approach on a clinically relevant task, the authors apply the library to a urinary tract associated clinical isolate and produce a phage with much higher specificity, creating a potentially powerful narrow scope antibiotic.

      Overall, the ORACLE method will be of tremendous use for the phage field solving a technical challenge associated with phage engineering and will illuminate new aspects of the bacterial host-phage interactions. It was also quite nice to see host-specialization validated and further explored with the screens done in the background of phage resistance mutations. The authors do a tremendous job digging into potential mechanisms when possible by which mutations could be altering fitness. We especially appreciate how well the identity of amino acids tracks host specialization within exterior loops.

      We have no major concerns about the manuscript but have some minor comments to aid interpretation. There are also some minor technical issues. We think this manuscript will be of broad interest, especially for those in the genotype-phenotype, phage biology, and host-pathogen fields.

      Minor comments:

      P5L20: In the introduction to the ORACLE section the authors mention homologous recombination then they mention using 'optimized recombination' that is done with recombinases. This contrast should be mentioned somewhere perhaps to highlight the benefit of having specific recombinases.

      P6L16: Using Cas9 to cut unrecombined variants is clever... Cool! This is a real 21st Century Dpn1 idea.

      P6L27 The authors state that there is a mild skew towards more abundant members after ORACLE. Why might this be? In iterations more abundant members simply become even more abundant? To be clear this isn't a substantial limitation and it's common to see these sorts of changes during library generation. Just curious. Overall looks like a fantastic method.

      P7L6: Authors mention ORACLE increases the throughput of screens by 3-4 orders of magnitude. How many variants can one screen? Is this screen of a little over 1k variants at about the threshold of the assay?

      P8L7: The authors assign functional scores based on enrichment and normalize to wild type. Is a FN=1 equivalent to wild type?

      P9L5: Awesome!

      P10L7: Authors mention R542 forms a hook with a receptor. There should be a citation here.

      P10L21: For N501, R542, G479, D540 there are wonderful mechanistic explanations. However, for D520 there is not. Any hypothesis for why this is distinct from the others? Are there other residues that behave similarly? I feel it would be really helpful to have a color scale that discriminates between FN 1 (assuming wild type) and enriched/depleted w/in figure 3A.

      P12L4: Authors note residues that are surface exposed yet intolerant to mutations in the previous paragraph. Authors also calculate free energy changes with Rosetta and state free energy maps pretty well with tolerance. What is the 93% based on? Perhaps a truth/contingency table would be useful here to discriminate/ compare groupings. What residues are in the 7% others. Can the energy scores help understand the mechanisms behind the mutations better?

      P12L7: Authors state substitutions predicted to stable and classified intolerant could indicate residues necessary for all hosts. What about those that fall outside of the groupings? Unstable residues can also be necessary.

      P14L22L Authors mention comparing systematic truncations, however they do not present any figure. This should be in a figure to aid in looking at the data and would surely be helpful to people in the phage field. A figure should be included here especially because this is one of the main discussion topics at the end of the manuscript.

      P16L2: The authors did the selection in the background of a clinically isolated strained and discussed 3 variants that were clonal characterized. Was this library sequenced similar to before?

      Figures:

      Barplots need significance tests.

      Figure 2C-E ; Fig 3A. All figures are colored white to red. With this color scale it's hard to appreciate which variants are neutral vs those that are enriched. A two or more color scale would be more appropriate. Log-scaling might be wise to get a better sense of the dynamic range that is clearly present in fig2F.

      FIg 4F: Needs a statistical test between bar plots.

      Fig6A-C: These figures have tiny symbols that represent the architecture at an insertion position. It's probably easier to look at if the same annotations from Fig 4B or C for architecture were used.

      Fig6D: needs tests for significance

      Supp fig 4E: This figure is the first evidence that the physics chemistry of amino acids w/in surface exposed loops determine host specificity. This is followed up by Figure 4D and E. I would consider moving this to one of the main figures.

      Supp fig 5: A truth table could be useful here to test for ability to classify based on rosetta compared to FD. It looks like here that the tolerant residues have a distinct pattern

      Why are these colored white to red?

    1. “For auld lang syne.” The weary throat gave out, The last word wavered, and the song was done. He raised again the jug regretfully And shook his head, and was again alone. There was not much that was ahead of him, And there was nothing in the town below– Where strangers would have shut the many doors That many friends had opened long ago.

      This makes me want to cry. This really depicts what it’s like to get old. To have been somebody, to have done things, to have gone places. But when you get old it doesn’t matter because it’s all gone and everyone just sees an old person when they look at you, not a young person who got old. Society marginalizes and dismissed the old. When your old you’ve lost people and there’s no one left to reminisce with who you about who you’ve lost or care that now you yourself are lost with out a community. All these writers and thinkers are coming up with the same conclusions: all things in this world fade and there’s no stopping them. If you cling onto them you’ll only be disappointed. This determines for me,more than ever, that my hope must be placed in something that lasts, something eternal.

    2. alnage of the years.

      I expect the cloth is a reference to the way tapestries were a powerful way to record history. Poets and Kings weave the tapestry of time and it's interesting that this is tinged with sadness. Again this is a burden for people not a blessing, is that due to the horrors of the world, or just the horror of the passing of time itself?

    1. Is anyone impressed by the fact that I own the original baby shoes of my two sons? World’s worst positional good!

      I do think this is a form of "signalling" to yourself, but just a different type. When you wear an expensive rolex, you think to yourself "Wow, I could afford this luxurious accessory", and feel a sense of pride and fulfilment. It works he same way with your son's original baby shoes. However, it's not about money. It's the fact that you went out of your way to keep the shoes for so many years so that you can look at it when you are older or maybe show it to your kids/grandkids. A signalling of love, you might call it.

    2. The inadequacy of the sham Rolex is an embarrassment to sensory theories, but it is also troubling for signaling explanations. If the fake Rolexes are indistinguishable from the real ones, they would work just as well if one’s goal is to impress others.

      I think honesty is the most important factor in people not buying sham Rolexes but not necessarily honesty to ourselves. If you're wearing a fake Rolex and someone asks whether or not its real then you have to either get caught up in a lie or admit that it's fake. Admitting that it's fake would in many cases provoke shameful feelings, especially if the person asking has a real Rolex, and force you to answer some internal questions; why did you buy a fake Rolex? Because it's a high quality watch or because you wanted to seem like somebody that can drop 30k on a watch?

    1. that it’s not just a matter of what you eat

      This is a common false idea that we, non-Natives think. Idegenous people do not solely care about the food they eat, but care about the managemnet of their nature which brings that food.

    1. This altered consumer expectations andtightened food qualityreg-ulations such that blemished produce became unsalable, with the neteffect of further intensifying pesticide use

      The fact that we have to use pesticides on our produce in order for people to eat/ purchase it is crazy. Just because it's a little misshaped doesn't mean it tastes any different! I looked up why this a thing us as consumers do and found a really interesting and informative article here; Ugly Produce

    1. Presentations largely stand or fall depending on the quality, relevance,and integrity of the content. The way to make big improvements ina presentation is to get better content.Designer formats will not salvage weak content. If your numbers areboring, then you've got the wrong numbers. If your words or imagesare not on point, making them dance in color won't make them relevant.Audience boredom is usually a content failure, not a decoration failure.At a minimum, a presentation format should do no harm to content.Yet again and again we have seen that the PP cognitive style routinelydisrupts, dominates, and trivializes content. PP presentations too oftenresemble the school play: very loud, very slow, and very simple.

      This goes way beyond ppts...it's a systemic problem in our country where the "gold standard" used to be write/talk to an 8th grade level, which I've seen get even lower lately: 5th grade level. ppts are just a symptom of a greater problem...

    1. As thefield grew, com-plaints came from various quarters. Conservationbiology was caricatured as a passing fad, a re-sponse to trendy environmental ideas (and mo-mentarily available funds).

      What's so interesting about this quote is that is applies to so much more in our world today, then just conservation biology. Any time someone tries to do good, or create an impacting change, an opposing side will always call it a "fad" or make it as if it's something that will be gone as soon as it arrived. What's so important is that those who've created that change kept pushing for it

    1. <:https://via.hypothes.is/https://www.colbyrussell.com/LP/debut/plain.txt.htm>

      If you do view this document on via.hypothes.is as suggested and you notice some extra script cruft here near the "bottom" of the text, know this: this is in fact not part of the original document, but instead part of the support code that gets inserted by Hypothesis. This could be avoided by more care on the part of Hypothesis. Refer to a series of posts by me from last week (motivated by this case):

      If you're writing bookmarklets or Web extensions or you run a tool like the Wayback machine that requires you for some reason to inject "invisible" elements into the page, then don't just assume they aren't going to show up (especially if adding them to the body and not the head).

      Always include a style attribute on the injected element to mark it "display: none". Always—even if it's a "script", "style", "link", "meta", or whatever other element that makes you think you don't "need" to.

      If you really want to be a pal, also set the class on the injected element to an abbreviated address like <style class="example.org/sidebar/2.4/injected-content/">. And then drop a page there explaining the purpose and requirements (read: assumptions) of your injected element. This is virtually guaranteed not to conflict with any other class use (e.g. CSS rules in applied style sheets), and it makes it easier for other add-ons (or the page author or end user) to avoid conflicts with you.

    1. “In Google Wave you create a wave and add people to it. Everyone on your wave can use richly formatted text, photos, gadgets, and even feeds from other sources on the web. They can insert a reply or edit the wave directly. It’s concurrent rich-text editing, where you see on your screen nearly instantly what your fellow collaborators are typing in your wave. That means Google Wave is just as well suited for quick messages as for persistent content—it allows for both collaboration and communication. You can also use ‘playback’ to rewind the wave and see how it evolved.”

      “在Google Wave中,你可以创建wave,并添加人员。Google Wave中的每个人都可以使用富文本、照片、小工具,以及网络上其他来源的文件。他们可以插入回复或直接编辑wave。这是一款富文本编辑工具,可供多人同时编辑,你可以通过屏幕实时地看到其他协作者在wave中输入的内容。Google Wave既适用于持久性内容,也支持快速消息,可用作协作和交流。你还可以使用回放的功能,重新查看wave的发展经过。”

    1. nd with the same childlike eyes that a little while before those children had—oh, how grown- up they are now!—I sit there, looking at my old children, standing behind these new ones, and there is great compassion in my gaze.

      It ends with just great compassion in his gaze? What do we do with this ending?

      Is it this sort of cliche: appreciate what you have before it's gone?

      Or is it at the end all we have are these generations of family. But what does that do for those people without children?

    1. that a musical performance is a ritual whose relationships mirror, and allow us to explore, the relationships of our world as we imagine them ideally to be.

      While the author has expressed that there is more to music and it's performance than just the music itself, here is a very powerful statement that is taken for granted. We believe this statement to be true, but the way in which we describe music at the present time doesn't reach or even begin to describe music's true power and our interaction with it.

    2. Any attempt to explain the meaning of musicking, and its function in human life, that doesn’t at least try to deal with all kinds of human musicking, however, strange, or primitive, or even antipathetic i may appear to our perceptions, just isn’t worth the paper it’s written on.

      To me this is my favorite line in the entire paper. C. Small brings full awareness that a concert performance isn't just about watching a big musical star show but the entire process. From the equipment team bring in musical props to the people who direct the cars for parking. Each one plays a vital role in the music experience. There is no easy way of explaining how music plays a role in all our lives not just when we turn on the radio or TV but all day everyday.

    3. So it seems to me self-evident that the place to start thinking about the meaning of music and its function in human fife is not with musical works at all but with performance.

      I kind of relate to this and is definitely true that people get the meaning of music when it's being performed. Sometimes I ask why people pay a lot for these performances just to see their artiste meanwhile they could have turn to their devices to listen.

    1. So new opportunities are always being created by the system. And that, in turn, means that it’s essentially meaningless to talk about a complex adaptive system being in equilibrium: the system can never get there. It is always unfolding, always in transition. In fact, if the system ever does reach equilibrium, it isn’t just stable. It’s dead.

      WOW! see @sighswoon 's "I am constantly shapeshifting adapting and evolving"

    1. And really, this stems from the fact that buildings aren't designed by the community that uses them anymore. The community barely factors into the design, even. Buildings were designed to serve a specific purpose, dictated by the higher-ups with the money to purchase the land and fund the development of the building. Again, quoting the article, Unless they are an uber-wealthy client, users of buildings rarely have much input into the design process. Students do not get to say what kind of school they would like, office workers do not get to say whether they would prefer to work in a glass tower or in a leafy complex of wifi-enabled wooden pagodas. ... But that rupture means that architecture becomes something imposed upon people. It isn’t participatory, and it doesn’t adapt in response to their needs. It’s prefabricated, assembled beforehand off-site and then dumped on the unwitting populace. We are not meant to live in modern buildings; they are made for people who do not poop.

      This is very reminiscent of how some people use the internet as well. I can think of personal examples where Goolge apps and services were forced upon workers at companies who didn't want them and weren't comfortable with them.

      Similarly we went from the creativity of MySpace to the corporate strictures of Facebook and Twitter that didn't give users any flexibility or identity. The connective value was apparently worth just a bit more than the identity, so we went there, but why not have it all?

      I'll have to find the reference, but I saw an article with a book reference in the last year about the life of buildings and that well designed ones could stand the test of centuries in their ability to be redesigned and repurposed from the inside out if necessary.

    2. Plus, also, this website? It's like my home, on the internet. I have this online, virtual space that I can decorate any which way I want. I can add all sorts of things for people to read, talk all day about the things that interest me, make it any color, any pattern, any font, any layout. I keep it simple, yes, but it's my space. And there's Park City, the "netgroup" I admin as well, which is like a communal webspace for me and my friends. It's just, I feel such a sense of ownership over my homepage, such a sense of freedom, and I love it. If there's anything this pandemic has taught me, it's that I need this space to express myself. For the vast majority of the pandemic I essentialy did not have a life outside the digital world, besides the bare minimum like eating and sleeping and such. Most places outdoors right now are too dangerous, and I do not feel any sense of ownership at all in my current living space. The computer is all I have. It's all a lot of people right now have.

      This is how one will know that Facebook is heavily declining: when they allow people to customize the look/feel of their own pages.

    1. All that matters here is that it happened, and happened enormously. It’s a Big Thing that impacts all kinds of other topics. Writing in the 1950s, historian Frederick Lewis Allen described the social revolution that took place as the Gilded Age gave way to a more balanced economy: To understand the America of today one must not only realize how vital to its development was the revolt of the American conscience, which implanted in Americans the idea that you could repair the economic and political machinery of the country, so as to make it work better for the majority, without stopping the machine … … through a combination of patchwork revisions of the system–tax laws, minimum wage laws, subsidies and guarantees and regulations of various sorts, plus labor union pressures and new management attitudes–we had repealed the Iron Law of Wages. We had brought about a virtually automatic redistribution of income from the well-to-do to the less well-to-do. And this did not stall the machine but actually stepped up its power. Just as an individual business seemed to run best when it plowed part of its profits into improvements, so the business system as a whole seemed to run better if you plowed some of the national income into improvements in the income and status of the lower income groups, enabling them to buy more goods and thus to expand the market for everybody. We had discovered a new frontier to open up: the purchasing power of the poor. That, it seems to me, is the essence of the Great American Discovery. And it has its corollary: that if you thus bring advantages to a great lot of previously underprivileged people, they will rise to their opportunities and, by and large, will become responsible citizens.

      重要的是,贫富不均正在发生,而且正在广泛、深刻地发生。而这也是另一个足以带来千万种影响的大事件。

      上世纪50年代,历史学家弗雷德里克·刘易斯·艾伦(Frederick Lewis Allen)认为美国从镀金时代(Gilded Age)过渡到一个更平衡的经济时期的过程,其实是爆发了一场社会革命,他在文中写道:

      想要理解今天的美国社会,你要认识到美国各界良知的反抗对美国发展是多么至关重要,这让美国人开始相信自己可以修复这个在国家政治、经济运转中出现的问题,从而可以让整个国家运转得更好,且无需强行终止国家的发展脚步……

      ……经过对国家系统的一系列拼拼凑凑的修订——税法、最低工资法,还有各种津贴、保障和相关规定,再加上来自工会的压力以及全新的管理理念——我们已经打破了“工资铁则”(Iron Law of Wages)。事实上,我们几乎实现了将收入从富裕人群到较富裕人群的自动分配。这并没有让国家这部机器停转,反而提高了它的效率。这就好像当一个企业将部分利润投入到自我改善的工作上,该企业往往就可以提高效率。因此,当你把一部分国家收入投入到改善低收入群体的所得与社会地位的工作中,让这一人群也可以购买更多的商品,从而扩大整个市场,从整体来看经济系统就可以运转得更高效。至此,我们就发现了一个新的开放领域:穷人的购买力。

      在我看来,这才是所有美国伟大发现的本质,而且这还是一种必然:因为如果你因此为大量原本是弱势群体的人谋取了福利,他们将抓住这一机会,并成为负责任的公民。

    1. You’re asked “So basically a book is just words someone said written down?” And you say no, it’s more than that. But how is it more than that?

      I think this is exactly what Hegel meant by Aufhebung, just that technologically speaking there was no concrete way of showing it.

    1. The press will tell you that "the concept" is great but the execution is bad. What should I tell you? The experience is shallow. The game is mediocre. But listen carefully, when a game is mediocre and can't even make you feel something then it's the worst kind of gaming. I will give it a 4 out of 10. You know, if this was a test in a school then this game should be marked D (someone answered a few questions, but overall missed the point). I understand that many people care about the "concept" of this game, but why if the experience is just... not here. I'm talking about the experience becaus We. The Revolution tried to be an actual experience. And it fails so badly.
    1. The major responsibility of employees in a learning ecosystem is to learn. But they can’t just aimlessly surf through learning content; they must pursue measurable learning goals that align with personal and business OKRs. And they must pay attention to gaps in their learning content and communicate them to managers and L&D — this kind of communication helps L&D perpetually assess and fulfill training needs.

      I've seen learning courses in a way, that is 'here is a budget, and go watch some video's

      and when it's not suited to their needs, or able to apply it to what they are working on right now, it's more like edutainment - learned a thing, but now back to my real work.

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    1. The most perfect Valentine’s Day gift cards, no matter who you’re trying to impress!

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    1. He has no patience with faith, an intense horror of superstition, and he scoffs openly at any talk of things not to be felt and seen and put down in figures.

      Followed by "...but one expects that in marriage," compared with the gothic genre, it's apparent that this story takes place in a time where men considered women to be the inferior sex. "He has no patience with faith," implies that he bases his knowledge primarily off of logistics and "an intense horror of superstition" could mean that he's too scared to believe that spirits exist-- not just spirits but the idea of positive and negative sources of energy that can't be explained by science and logic.

    2. The paint and paper look as if a boys’ school had used it. It is stripped off—the paper—in great patches all around the head of my bed

      This is so creepy. So did she scratch up the wall paper from going crazy but not remembering the episode? Or was there someone else before her? This room sounds like it’s old, like others were locked in there before her, but maybe she scratched up the wall and even scratched in all the “designs” that remind her of suicide and dying. But maybe she just doesn’t remember.

    1. This is a story about a story. The original, by Matt Stopera, appeared on BuzzFeed, and its title describes, and evokes, all of what followed in a four-part meme gone wild: “Who Is This Man And Why Are His Photos Showing Up On My Phone?” Its subtitle, “This weird thing happened to me,” is the perfect distillation of the BuzzFeed mode. The story is an agglomeration of homemade phone photos, GIFs, Twitter snapshots, listicles, and some writing, too, much of it in one-sentence paragraphs. (“Bali!” “So I go to China.”) It has no form any writing teacher would ever understand, but it’s filled with the wonder and joy that’s missing from most everything else I read. It is the story of a man in China (he’s mostly known as Orange Man, or Orange Brother) who unwittingly acquired a phone that Stopera had lost on the Lower East Side in New York, and what happened when their photo streams crossed, and then the Internet got involved.But this is a crafty recommendation, because, while I am essentially admitting that I totally enjoyed Stopera’s story, which had all the style of a DQ Blizzard, and was just as tasty, I am not actually technically saying I am jealous of it. I am saying I am jealous of Chris Beam’s sensitive, restrained, human take on his story, which probably way fewer people read. Beam, who is a terrific writer, went to visit Orange Man, the subject of Stopera’s piece, and found a much more complicated person, in a much more complicated situation. But Beam doesn’t arrive at the expected place either. We don’t learn that Matt Stopera cynically used Orange Man or anything like that. It’s just an odd, totally real story that gets more interesting with every post, or article, or tweet, or whatever. —Bryant Urstadt

      这是一篇关于新闻报道的故事。马特•斯托佩拉(Matt Stopera)的原创帖子发表在BuzzFeed网站上,标题非常醒目,描述了这个四部分组成的帖子中发生的所有事情:“这个男人是谁,他的照片为什么出现在我的手机上?”副标题是“发生在我身上的这件奇怪事情”,本文在网络上迅速走红,完美诠释了BuzzFeed的模式。这个帖子综合了手机自拍照片、动图、Twitter快照、列表和部分文字,大多都是只有一句话的段落。(“巴厘岛!”“我要去中国。”)作文老师永远也不会理解本文的写作形式,但是其中充满了惊奇和欢乐,我读过的大部分报道都缺少这种特质。帖子讲述了一个中国男人的故事(更多是以橘子哥的外号知名),他不经意买到了斯托佩拉在纽约下东区失窃的手机,在他们的手机照片流交错时发生了怪事,然后整个互联网也加入了进来。

      不过,这是个巧妙的推荐,因为我基本上是在承认,我完全享受阅读斯托佩拉的文章,本文具有冰雪皇后(DQ)冰风暴冰淇淋的所有优点,品味起来美妙无穷,我实际上可没说我对此很嫉妒。我要说的是,我很羡慕克里斯•比姆(Chris Beam),他用敏感内敛、颇有人情味的笔调撰写了这篇报道。比姆是位了不起的作家,他去采访了斯托佩拉文章的主角橘子哥,发现了性格更复杂的主人公,生活在更复杂的环境中。但是比姆也没有达到预期的目的。我们并不知道,马特•斯托佩拉无所顾忌地利用了橘子哥或其他类似的事情。如果配合每篇帖子、文章、推文或其他新闻来看,这篇略显奇怪而完全真实的报道就会变得更有趣。——布莱恩特•乌尔施塔特(Bryant Urstadt)

    1. I think generally people’s thinking process is too bound by convention or analogy to prior experiences. It’s rare that people try to think of something on a first principles basis. They’ll say, “We’ll do that because it’s always been done that way.” Or they’ll not do it because “Well, nobody’s ever done that, so it must not be good.” But that’s just a ridiculous way to think. You have to build up the reasoning from the ground up—“from the first principles” is the phrase that’s used in physics. You look at the fundamentals and construct your reasoning from that, and then you see if you have a conclusion that works or doesn’t work, and it may or may not be different from what people have done in the past.

      我认为,人们的思维过程通常都束缚在常规或类似的经历中。人们很少会试着在第一原则的基础上考虑某些事。他们习惯说:「因为我们以前那样做过,所以我们会这样做。」或者,他们不做这事是因为「好吧,之前没人做过,所以情况肯定不太妙。」但是,这是一种荒谬的思维方式。你必须从头开始推理——「从第一原则开始」是物理学中的一个表述。你注视着那些基本条件,然后从中建构你的推理,之后你可以看看是否得出一个有效或是无效的结论——可能会和人们以往的结论相同,也可能不同。

    1. The school nurse confided tome about farmworking families such as Mrs. Madrigal, “Ihave to say that I don’t really understand that thing aboutnot having the money. Because when you have five fami-lies sharing a house and sharing the rent, then how can younot have the money to pay for dental care? I think what theymean by that is that it’s just not a priority.”

      I believe that this sentence displays the ignorance of individuals who come from a higher socioeconomic background. Privileged with the necessities for achieving "modern" hygiene requirements, the school fails to understand the challenges, discrimination, and lack of access faced by these migrant workers.

    Annotators

    1. The Earth is estimated to have formed, by theaccretion through large and violent impacts ofnumerous bodies, approximately 4.5 billionyears ago (Ga)

      Personally, I think it's crazy that we're able to talk about biodiversity tracing this far back. It's always mind blowing to me thinking about how old the earth is and how far history traces back. Especially, looking at what was on earth this long ago, and comparing it to now and just how much has really changed in the aspect of the environment and life as a whole. It's incredible.

    2. Given the high proportion of species that haveyet to be discovered, it seems highly likely thatthere are entire major taxonomic groups of organ-isms still to be found.

      It's astonishing to consider the idea that human's only know a small minority of species on Earth. Though at the same time, most of the organisms that we have not spotted are very miniscule or remain in unexplored ocean territory. I'm not sure if we'll ever be able to catch up with the vast variety of organisms. It's really difficult to imagine just how many there are considering there's a very rough estimate for every multi-celled species in the oceans.

    1. Those include Israel’s promise not to seek additional funds from Congress beyond what will be guaranteed annually in the new package, and to phase out a special arrangement that has allowed Israel to spend part of its U.S. aid on its own defense industry instead of on American-made weapons, the officials said.

      I love how they want them to promise to not seek addiitional aid -- it's almost like a parent saying "don't ask for more, because I will probably just cave in -- protect me from myself!"

    1. "Yes; but what sort of science?" asked Mustapha Mond sarcastically. "You've had no scientific training, so you can't judge. I was a pretty good physicist in my time. Too good–good enough to realize that all our science is just a cookery book, with an orthodox theory of cooking that nobody's allowed to question, and a list of recipes that mustn't be added to except by special permission from the head cook. I'm the head cook now. But I was an inquisitive young scullion once. I started doing a bit of cooking on my own. Unorthodox cooking, illicit cooking. A bit of real science, in fact." He was silent."What happened?" asked Helmholtz Watson.The Controller sighed. "Very nearly what's going to happen to you young men. I was on the point of being sent to an island."The words galvanized Bernard into violent and unseemly activity. "Send me to an island?" He jumped up, ran across the room, and stood gesticulating in front of the Controller. "You can't send me. I haven't done anything. lt was the others. I swear it was the others." He pointed accusingly to Helmholtz and the Savage. "Oh, please don't send me to Iceland. I promise I'll do what I ought to do. Give me an-other chance. Please give me another chance." The tears began to flow. "I tell you, it's their fault," he sobbed. "And not to Iceland. Oh please, your fordship, please ..." And in a paroxysm of abjection he threw himself on his knees before the Controller. Mustapha Mond tried to make him get up; but Bernard persisted in his grovelling; the stream of words poured out inexhaustibly. In the end the Controller had to ring for his fourth secretary."Bring three men," he ordered, "and take Mr. Marx into a bedroom. Give him a good soma vaporization and then put him to bed and leave him."

      they understand Bernard's backhanded mentality

    1. “They feel more intense. The themes have been very hyper-focused on COVID, on social justice issues, on safety at school,” said Denia-Marie Ollerton, the SafeUT supervisor. “There’s just so many different things in our country, in our state, in our world that are just hitting every

      The world has been so crazy this year for everyone. I think it's sad that such big issues are weighting on teenagers. i think there is enough to worry about. Adults should be helping their kids through this.

    1. If you have any questions, concerns or are unsure if you should go to the hospital, just go :) we are happy to check you out and will tell you if you don’t need medical attention. It’s better to be safe than sorry. These tips (as I said in the beginning) are for MILD symptoms.

      I think this is an emotional appeal because it sort of puts people at ease. Shows them that doctors are there for you and they will be happy to help. The ":)" also adds an emotional aspect that makes us once again feel like we can trust her.

    2. First, purchase a pulse oximeter online or from your local drug store. There are several trustworthy brands for under $15 on Amazon. Monitor your oxygen saturations every few hours, and if they drop below 87% and stay there... it’s time to go to the hospital.

      I think this is a good example of a logical appeal as it appeals to the mind. It is specific and it appeals to the mind when she uses the percentage as it gives you sort of a "fact" that tells you when to go to the hospital. It is specific in the sense that it does not just say "when you are feeling bad, go to the hospital," it tells you when it is logical for you to go from an educated perspective.

    1. The overwhelming majority of children with incarcerated parents have restricted economic resources available for their support. One study found that the family's income was 22 percent lower during the incarceration period and 15 percent lower after the parent's re-entry.[22] (Note that this reduction of income and earning potential does not describe how limited the earning potential may have been before incarceration.) But here too, the impact can be nuanced: Another study found that a mother's incarceration was associated with greater economic detriment, especially if the father did not live with the family. This economic loss might be exacerbated if the child lives with a caregiver who is already responsible for other dependents or with a grandparent who lives on retirement income.[23] A third study found that children of incarcerated parents systemically faced a host of disadvantages, such as monetary hardship; were less likely to live in a two-parent home; and were less likely to have stable housing.[24]

      This whole paragraph just lends more credence to the belief that the war on drugs was created specifically to disadvantage and manipulate the non white citizens of the nation. It's snowballing effect. With more parents in jail, children are put on the path of failure, legally, emotionally, and prospect wise. This leads to greater rates of incarceration and thus the issue exponentially increases. A question that I have is, what would the world look like, and more specifically would the world that which minorities exist in look like. How many more POC professionals would there be, would perception change. How would much more would we have progressed, had millions of children been forced into such circumstance and set up to fail. How many great minds, beautiful lovers, and revolutionary creatives were lost due to targeted attacks on minority communities.

    1. But to be honest with you, what it really taught me is that personal finance is not taught. Nobody knows how to get ahead. That being poor is a systemic condition in North America. It is a disease that's equivalent to diabetes and heart disease or depression or any other kind of mental illness, except that it's structural and institutionalized. It's not something that's wrong with your physiology. Poverty is just something that's conditioned into people in the way that society works in a Western.

      但说实话,真正让我明白的是,个人理财无法被教授。没有人知道如何获得成功。贫穷在北美是一种系统性的症状。它是一种疾病,类似于糖尿病和心脏病或抑郁症或任何其他类型的精神疾病,只不过它是一种结构化和制度化的疾病。它不是你的生理问题,它是由于西方社会的运作方式而产生的一种状况。

    1. I am not what I am.

      this sentence pretty much sums up the whole "twelfth night" concept, as it implies revelation hence the disguise context that this play is all about. It goes straight to the point without obviously doing so. I mean, this sentence fits every life situation so well as it has multiple meanings, such as "I am not who I am from the inside" meaning I am acting and I am not my usual self or "I am not who I am from the outside" meaning I'm literally wearing a costume and pretending to be someone I'm not, physically. this sentence sums it up really well in the meaning that it's so familiar that we could easily say that every single day of our lives is a "twelfth night".

      i just find myself in this sentence since I'm majoring in Psychology, and i just know how, as social beings, we tend to wear a mask once we wake up, we tend to lose our sense of authenticity and just keep on our happy cheery faces, all the while neglecting our truths.

    2. Love’s night is noon.

      It's impossible to hide love, it's bright as day. This is true of many characters – Orsino, Antonio, Malvolio pretty much, Sir Toby, Sebastian once he meets Olivia – pretty much everyone except Viola (or is it just that Orsino is thick?). It's ironic, given all the other hiding and secrecy in the play.

    1. interesting from a music-history perspective

      Transition

      • The author transitions from discussion of reactions to the AI model, to its relevance of music-theory
      • Showing that it's not just about the AI, but it's about a real science that doesn't seem connected to AI
    1. Home sales dipped in April and May

      One of biggest Builders in Utah(Edge homes) reported their 1000 sales per year in the middle of June with total 1600 sales for 2020. It shows that during first part of the year we can see more sales with slowing down for a second part. Compare to year of 2019, that had 1100 sales total it's 45% more than year before. However, it is just a piece of statistics of one builder among dozens in utah.

    1. we are also fighting for human rights.

      People fail to see that feminism and climate change is actually trying to erase systematic inequalities. It's a misconception and the author clerkly defines ecofeminism as a fight for humanity rather than just a fight for women specifically.

    2. We need to make people understand that feminism is not just for women, it’s for every person to demand women’s rights because women have always been left behind and this is affecting them educationally, health-wise, socially, and in every other aspect of their lives.

      It definitely needs to be said that feminism is not just for women, as equality affects everyone, and for there to be a peaceful harmony among all humans, all genders must be included and deemed important and heard.

    1. Yeah watching her lose everything is heartbreaking. Ellie is losing her reason to live, and Abby is finding hers. I love how that Pearl Jam song is used as this reference point for Joel too. And I thought it was so devastating how, right at the end, you realise Joel and Ellie made up. I think some people will say that the game has a clear ending and then goes on for a few more hours, but I think that’s entirely the point. Ellie and Dina get to a place that is for anyone else the perfect life, for the reality they live in. The farm house is beautiful, they have peace, and they’re looking after a baby. It’s the end for a normal person – but not for her. That final stretch in Santa Barbara is supposed to, in my interpretation, feel like one step too far. The game is making you feel this weird dissonance between leaving that idyllic place and going back to something horrible.

      Pathetic appeal: This pathetic appeal works because it aims to establish a connection to the characters in the game. The comparison between Ellie and Abby helps understand just how devastating and traumatic life has been for these characters. It also highlights how Ellie cannot let go of her rage after witnessing her father figures death. In general, this appeals to us because readers can feel her rage, sadness, anxiety and how it is all consuming her.

      Overall, I would say the pathetic appeal was the most effective. This game itself is fueled by emotion and the idea of anger consuming someone. So I think this author does a good job at establishing this point. This digital space is one of speaking freely about your opinion, and this exemplifies that. They openly state how they felt about certain parts of the game while also elaborating on their analysis. Overall, they have a great pathetic appeal.

    1. We will strive to see our interdependence and interconnectedness, and labor for one another.

      As I read this article, I just kept thinking about how the language and wording used seemed to be making me feel a sense of responsibility to watch my words, and consider how they may make another feel. But then again, a major part of this class is going to be communicating with each other, it seems, so it's unavoidable in some ways that some people's comments are going to impact me, and vice versa. Of course, the goal is that these impacts will be positive in a way that helps each other understand content of the class better. This sentence then struck me because, for me, the best way I learn is in this way - by making connections. Connecting to my prior knowledge, experiences, concepts, even to the songs I listen to while I study. (That's just a little quirk I have while I study - I remember the content I read often when I hear the music again that I heard while initially reading it.)

    2. Listen attentively and intently (with intention to understand) first, and forming an opinion after you fully understand their point of view

      Many people jump or judge before fully understanding someone's intentions or actions. We see a lot of "cancel culture" on Twitter and other social media platforms with artists, actors, speakers, and social media influencers themselves being canceled due to something that could potentially be a rumor or a lie. Sometimes it's used properly but you never know someone's full intentions or reasons for their actions from just a screen sometimes It ruins their reputation or even life so I definitely agree with the saying don't judge a book by its cover or in this sense on what you heard.

    1. I found myself trying to find a way of expressing this idea, of rather this linked pair of ideas, first that the essence of music fies in performance, and second that performance is an encounter in which human beings relate to one another.

      I find it interesting to see how much Small values listeners and live musical performance. Maybe it's just how I am perceiving this line, but I feel like in Small's eyes, if I am just sitting at home listening to Spotify, I'm not musicking 'as much' as if I were to be sitting and listening to a live performance. I feel this is because just listening off Spotify eliminates the encounter between musician and listener, which Small clearly values immensely.

    1. Wikipedia is a great place to start a research project. Just make sure you move on from there, because it’s a not a good place to end up with your project. One place to move on to is the sources at the bottom of most Wikipedia pages.

      I would had never though that i would read that Wikipedia is a good starting point. Noted

    1. Note: This rebuttal was posted by the corresponding author to Review Commons. Content has not been altered except for formatting.

      Learn more at Review Commons


      Reply to the reviewers

      RESPONSE TO REVIEWERS

      We thank Review Commons and its three reviewers. Reviewers 2 and 3 provide detailed comments, which we address individually. Reviewer 1, however, gives a general critique of how we have approached asking how genome architecture affects the extent of evolution and the details of evolutionary trajectories. Our interpretation of their comments is that our approach and the one that they advocate represent two philosophically different, but complementary, views about how to study evolution in the laboratory. We begin by discussing this difference and then proceed to a point by point response to the three reviews.

      Reviewer 1

      Philosophical differences with Reviewer 1

      We interpret Reviewer 1’s comments as endorsing a formal, quantitative study of evolution that aims to explain the factors that control the rate at which fitness increases during experimental evolution. This approach derives from classical population genetics and aims to use a mixture of theory and experiment to uncover general principles that would allow rates of evolution and evolutionary trajectories, expressed as population fitness over time, to be predicted from quantitative parameters, such population sizes, mutation rates, distributions of the fitness effects of mutations (including their degree of dominance in diploids), and global descriptions of either general (e.g. diminishing returns) or allele-specific epistasis.

      This approach aims to predict how the average fitness trajectory should be affected by variations in these parameters and describe the variation, at the level of fitness, in the outcomes in a set of parallel experiments. This is an important approach and have previously used it to investigate how the strength of selection influences the advantage of mutators (Thompson, Desai, & Murray, 2006) and to produce and test theory that predicts how mutation rate and population size control the rate of evolution (Desai, Fisher, & Murray, 2007). Like every approach to evolution, this one has limitations: 1) if it doesn’t identify mutations or investigate phenotype other than fitness, it cannot reveal the biological and biochemical basis of adaptation or report on how variations in population genetic parameters (population size, haploids versus diploids, etc.) influence which genes acquire adaptive mutations, and 2) if the details of experiments (e.g. whether populations are clonal or contain standing variation, or which phenotypes are being selected for) have strong effects on the population genetic parameters, these must be measured before theoretical or empirical relationships could be used to predict the mean and variance of fitness trajectories produced by a given selection. A variety of evidence suggests that the second limitation is real. Examples include the absence of a universal finding that diploid populations evolve more slowly than haploids (discussed on Lines 437-442), even within the same experimental organism, and the finding that diminishing returns epistasis applies well to domesticated yeast evolving in a variety of laboratory environments (e. g. papers from the Desai lab, starting with (Kryazhimskiy, Rice, Jerison, & Desai, 2014) but not to the evolutionary repair experiments that we have conducted (Fumasoni & Murray, 2020; Hsieh, Makrantoni, Robertson, Marston, & Murray, 2020; Laan, Koschwanez, & Murray, 2015).

      The second approach to experimental evolution, which we, as molecular geneticists and cell biologists, predominantly take, is to follow the molecular and cell biological details of how organisms adapt to selective pressure. We subject organisms to defined selective forces, identify candidate causative mutations, test them by reconstructing the evolved mutations, individually and in combination, and perform additional experiments to ask how these mutations are increasing fitness. Because these experiments are performed on model organisms and often address phenotypes that have been studied by classical and molecular genetics, we can often say a good deal about the cell biological and biochemical mechanisms that increase fitness and this work can complement and extend what we know from classical and molecular genetics.

      The current manuscript and its predecessor are examples of finding causative mutations and asking how they improve fitness, with the first paper (Fumasoni & Murray, 2020) demonstrating how mutations in three functional modules could overcome most of the fitness cost of removing an important but non-essential protein and the current paper asking how alterations in genome architecture and dynamics (diploidy and eliminating double-strand break-dependent recombination) affect the extent to which populations increase in fitness and which genes and functional modules acquire mutations as they do so.

      By definition, such experiments are anecdotal: they report on how particular genotypes and genome architectures respond to particular selection pressures. Any individual set of experiments can produce conclusions about the effects of variables, such a population size, mutation rate, and genome architecture, on the mutations that increased fitness in response to the specific selection, but they can do more than lead to speculation and inference about what would happen in other experiments: speculation from the results of a single project and inferences from the combined results of multiple projects. Our interpretation is that the evolutionary repair experiments that we have performed, which have perturbed budding, DNA replication, and the linkage between sister chromatids do indeed lead to a common set of inferences: most of the selected mutations reduce or eliminate the function of genes, the interactions between the selected mutations are primarily additive, and the mutations cluster in a few functional modules.

      We believe that the population and molecular genetic approaches to experimental evolution are complementary and that a full understanding of evolution will require combining both of them. We think this will be especially true as we try to use the findings from laboratory studies to improve our understanding of evolution outside the lab, which takes place over longer periods, in more temporally and spatially variable environments, and is subject to variation in multiple population genetic and biological parameters.

      Reviewer #1 (Evidence, reproducibility and clarity (Required)): In their previous work the authors examined adaptation in response to replication stress in haploid yeast, via experimental evolution of batch cultures followed by sequencing. Here they extend this approach to include diploid and recombination-deficient strains to explore the role of genome architecture in evolution under replication stress. On the whole, a common set of functional modules are found to evolve under all genetic architectures. The authors discuss the molecular details of adaptation and use their findings to speculate on the determinants of adaptation rate.

      **SECTION A - Evidence, reproducibility and clarity** Experimental evolution can reveal adaptive pathways, but there are some challenges when applying this approach to compare genetic backgrounds or environments. They key challenge is that adaptation potentially depends on both the rate of mutation and the nature of selection. Distinct adaptation patterns between groups could therefore reflect differential mutation, selection, or both. The authors allude to this dichotomy but have very limited data to address it. The closest effort is engineering putatively-adaptive variants into all genetic background including those where they did not arise; the fact that such variants remain beneficial suggests they did not arise in certain backgrounds because of a lower mutation rate, but this is a difficult issue to tackle quantitatively.

      We agree, wholeheartedly, that adaptation depends on the combination of mutation rates and the nature of selection and our goal was to ask how the molecular nature of adaptation depends on genome architecture when three different architectures are subjected to the same selection: constitutive replication stress caused by removing an important component of replisome. We used a haploid strain as a baseline and compared it to two other strains chosen to influence either the effect of mutations (a diploid, where fully recessive mutations that were beneficial in the haploid would become neutral) or the rate of mutations (a recombination-defective strain that would be unable to use ectopic recombination to amplify segments of the genome). In both cases, we expected to see effects that are closer to qualitative than quantitative: the absence of fully recessive mutations in evolved diploids and absence of segmental amplification in the recombination-deficient haploid. We see both effects and they then allow us to ask two other questions: 1) does influencing the effect of a class of mutation (diploids) or preventing a class of mutation (recombination defect) have a major effect on the rate of evolution, and 2) do these differences affect which modules adaptive mutations occur in. As far as we can tell, the answer is no to both questions. We use “as far as we can tell” because our experiments do have limitations. First, the recombination-defective strain has a higher point mutation rate making it impossible to tell how much this elevation, rather than any other factor, accounts for it showing a greater fitness increase than the recombination-proficient haploid. Unfortunately, to our knowledge, it’s impossible to abolish recombination without affecting mutation rates. Second, we only experimentally tested a subset of the inferred causative mutations meaning that for many genes, our assertion that they are adaptive is a statistical inference and their assignment to a particular functional module is based on prior literature rather than our own experiments. In response to this criticism, we have now rephrased some of our sentences (see below).

      From mutation accumulation experiments, where the influence of selection is minimized, there is evidence that genetic architecture affects the rate and spectrum of spontaneous mutations. In this experiment, the allele used to eliminate recombination, rad52, will also increase the mutation rate generally. The diploid strain is also likely to have a distinct mutational profile--as a null expectation diploids should have twice the mutation rate of haploids. Recent evidence indicates the mutation rate difference between haploid and diploid yeast might be less than two-fold, but that there are additional differences in the mutation spectrum, including rates of structural change. The context for this study is therefore three genetic architectures likely to differ in multiple dimensions of their mutation profiles, but mutation rates are not measured directly.

      The reviewer is correct that we did not explicitly measure mutation rates, although the frequency of synonymous mutations (Figure 3-S1B) is a proxy for the point mutation rate as long as the majority of these mutations are assumed to be neutral. By this measure, the mutation rates for ctf4∆ haploids and ct4∆/ctf4∆ diploids, expressed per haploid genome, are close to each other (1.94 for haploids and 1.37 for diploids) but different enough to return p = 0.044 by Welch’s test, whereas the mutation rate for the recombination-deficient, ctf4∆ rad52∆ haploid is 4 to 5-fold higher (7.03). In contrast, we can infer that the ctf4∆ rad52∆ strain has much lower rates of segmental aneuploidy produced by recombination: we see only one such event in this strain in contrast to 16 in the ctf4∆ haploid and 44 in the ctf4∆/ctf4∆ diploid (Supplementary table 4), even though the amplification of the cohesin loader gene, SCC2, confers similar benefits in all three strains.

      The nature of selection on haploids and diploids is expected to differ because of dominance, but ploidy-specific selection is also possible. The authors discuss how recessive beneficial alleles may be less available to diploids, though this can be offset by relatively rapid loss of heterozygosity. However, diploids should also incur more mutations, all else being equal. The rate of beneficial mutation, as opposed to the rate of mutation generally, will depend on the mutational "target size" of fitness, and the authors findings recapitulate other literature (particularly regarding "compensatory" adaptation) that points to faster adaptation in genotypes with lower starting fitness.

      We agree with the reviewer and tried to make the point that which mutations are fixed is primarily determined by the product of the rate at which they occur and the benefit which they confer (lines 193-196). Evidence in budding yeast suggests that in diploid cells, removing one copy of most genes fails to produce a measurable fitness benefit (Deutschbauer et al., 2005), suggesting that losing one copy of many genesis purely recessive. If this was always the case, it would be very hard for such heterozygous, loss-of-function mutations to contribute to evolution in diploids: a mutation that inactivates one copy of a gene would have to rise to high enough frequency by genetic drift that homozygosis of this mutation mitotic recombination would have a significant probability. Instead we find that heterozygous mutations in some genes (inactivation of RAD9, what are likely to be hypomorphic mutations in SLD5) but not others (inactivation of IXR1) confer benefits in diploids that allow their frequency to rise much more rapidly by selection than they would by drift, allowing them to reach frequencies at which mitotic recombination becomes probable.

      There is ample literature on the above topics, particularly discussions of the evolutionary advantages of haploidy versus diploidy. While adaptation to replication stress provides a novel starting point for this investigation, much of the manuscript is devoted to long-standing questions that are not specific to replication stress. Unfortunately, the data the authors collected is not sufficient to shed light on these questions, because mutation and selection cannot be effectively distinguished. The Discussion states that "We find that the genes that acquire adaptive mutations, the frequency at which they are mutated, and the frequency at which these mutations are selected all differ between architectures but that mutations that confer strong benefits always lie in the same three modules" (line 379), but it is not clear that these statements are all supported by the data.

      The reviewer makes two points: we fail to make a significant contribution to long-standing questions about the evolutionary genetics of adaptation and the we make statements that are not supported by our data. On the first we disagree: unlike much of the previous work which compares the effects of mutation rates and population sizes on the rates of evolution, we sequence genomes, identify putative causative mutations, verify that they increase fitness, and test, by reconstruction, how their contribution to fitness is affected by fully characterized genome architectures. We know of no comparable work and we believe that this is a useful contribution to understanding evolution. In addition, some of the literature, for example the discussion of haploidy versus diploidy, has failed to reach a universal conclusion. On the second point, we realized that the statement that the reviewer quotes is stronger than it should be since we do not show “that mutations that confer strong benefits always lie in the same three modules”. What we do show is that mutations in all three modules are found in all three genome architectures (Figure 5), and that combining one mutation from each module (using mutations in genes that are found in that architecture) can reproduce the observed fitness increase in each architecture (Figure 6 B), but the reviewer is correct that we have not demonstrated that every clone from every population has an adaptive mutation in all three modules. We have therefore modified the quoted sentence as follows (altered wording underlined)

      "We find that the genes that acquire adaptive mutations, the frequency at which they are mutated, and the frequency at which these mutations are selected all differ between architectures but that mutations conferring strong benefits can occur in all three modules in each architecture" (Lines 405-408)

      Focusing on the more novel aspect of their experiment-the presence of replication stress-would arguably be a better approach. On this topic the authors have some interesting observations and speculation, but clear predictions are lacking. The introduction section could be redesigned to explicitly state why genome architecture might affect adaptation in response to replication stress in particular, rather than (or in addition to) adaptation generally. If there were no differences in mutation, does the nature of Ctf4 lead to predictions that the molecular basis of compensatory adaptation should differ among genome architectures? Without such predictions it will be difficult for readers to know whether the observation that different genome architectures follow similar adaptive paths is surprising or not.

      We believe that following this suggestion would diminish the paper. We set out to ask how genome architecture affected adaptation to the strong fitness defect produced by removing an important component of an essential process, DNA replication. We chose replication stress as an example of cell biological damage that cells would have to repair with the hope that the results would give general clues about evolutionary repair, rather than hoping that the experiment would inform us about how replication stress altered the types of mutation (e. g. point mutations versus segmental amplification) that were selected As we point out at the beginning of our response, we recognize that the result of any one such experiment must be anecdotal and any attempt to generalize must be described as speculation if it refers only to this one experiment, or inference if it refers to this experiment and other published work. In those cases where we discuss the effect of genome architecture on evolutionary trajectories, we can draw conclusions that apply to our own experiments, but can only speculate on adaptation to different selections. In others, where we see commonalities between our experiments and previous work on evolutionary repair (cite Review), we can make inferences about evolution to adapt to removing important proteins and speculate about other forms of selection. We have revised the discussion to make it clear where we conclude, where we speculate, and where we infer. We suspect that our finding that genome architecture has a larger effect on which genes acquire adaptive mutations than it does on which modules these mutations alter will generalize to other evolutionary repair experiments and may be true even more broadly.

      We deliberately did not make predictions about the effect of genome architecture on the rate at which population fitness increased or the mechanism of adaptation to replication stress because we believed that our ignorance and the diverging results of previous experiments was sufficient to make both exercises worthless. After the fact, we interpret our results to suggest that mutations that reduce the activity of components, such as Sld5, that are stably associated with replication forks should be semi-dominant, but we were not nearly smart enough to make such a specific prediction before the experiment began!

      **Minor comments:** Shifts in ploidy from diploid to haploid are less common than the reverse change, so the observation of such a shift (Fig. 1) should be discussed in more detail.

      We now mention that haploids becoming diploids is more common than the reverse transformation and point out that genome sequencing reveals that these strains are true haploids rather than aneuploids.

      “One diploid population (EVO14) gave rise to a population with a haploid genome content, suggesting a possible haploidization event during evolution. Sequencing revealed no aneuploidies as a potential explanation of this phenomenon. While diploidization has been recurrently observed during experimental evolution with budding yeast (Aleeza C. Gerstein & Otto, 2011; Aleeza C Gerstein, Chun, Grant, & Otto, 2006; Harari, Ram, Rappoport, Hadany, & Kupiec, 2018; Venkataram et al., 2016), reports of spontaneous haploidization events have been instead scarce. Given the difficulties introduced by the change of ploidy over the 1000 generations, we have excluded EVO14 from all our analyses.” (Lines 122-128)

      We believe that the most likely mechanism is that the strain sporulated to produce haploids that were fitter than their diploid parent, but because this event occurred in only one out of eight populations and the proposed explanation is pure speculation we have not included in the revised manuscript.

      Line 88 typo 'stains'.

      Fixed. Thank you.

      Reviewer #1 (Significance (Required)): **SECTION B - Significance** The novel aspect of this study is the combination of replication stress and genome architecture, but here the significance is limited by a lack of clear predictions on how these factors might interact. On the other hand, much of the manuscript is devoted to why adaptation might vary among genome architectures in general, but this long-standing and important question is not particularly well resolved by this experimental approach, which can't disentangle mutation and selection.

      Our belief is that quantitatively predicting how selection will change fitness is nearly impossible because we lack the detailed knowledge of population genetic parameters that apply to our experiments. Prediction is even harder if the goal is to identify which genes will fix adaptive mutations and understand how these mutations alter cellular phenotypes to increase fitness. Thus our approach is almost entirely empirical: we do experiments that alter interesting variables, collect data, and do our best to interpret them and suggest how the conclusions of individual experiments might generalize.

      The authors highlight the dichotomy when discussing the evolution of ploidy: "We suggest that... genome architecture affects two aspects of the mutations that produce adaptation: the frequency at which they occur and the selective advantage they confer" (line 399), but presenting this as a novel inference does not appropriately acknowledge prior research and discussion of these ideas; several relevant papers are cited by the authors in other contexts. It may be possible to recast these findings as a test of the role of genome architecture in adaptation generally, but the authors should clarify the limitations of experimental evolution and more fully consider the theory and data outlined in previous research. In particular, few studies can claim to directly compare mutation rates between genome architectures, and it is not obvious that the present study is an example of such.

      We have the disadvantage that the reviewer doesn’t identify the literature we fail to cite. To us the argument the reviewer quotes is self-evident. As we mention above, our goal was not to test either general or detailed predictions and the level at which we analyzed our experiment, especially demonstrating that mutations were causal and reconstructing them individually and in combination, is missing from previous work. Finally measuring mutation rates is supremely difficult: you either need good ways of following all possible forms of mutation, quantitatively and without selection, or you resort to selecting mutations with a particular phenotype and molecularly characterizing them, knowing that these assays may well give different ratios of the rates of different types of mutation at different loci. We do make and report one measure of mutation rate, the rate of synonymous mutation in protein coding genes, which we discuss above.

      Reviewer expertise: Evoutionary genetics; experimental evolution; mutation.

      Reviewer #2 (Evidence, reproducibility and clarity (Required)): **Summary** This manuscript investigates the effect of an organism's genotype (or, as the authors call it, an organism's 'genome architecture') on evolutionary trajectories. For this, the authors use Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains that experience some form of replication stress due to specific gene deletions, and that further differ in ploidy and/or the type of gene(s) deleted. They find the same three functional modules (DNA replication, DNA damage checkpoint, sister chromatid cohesion) are affected across the 3 different genotypes tested; although the specific genes that are mutated varies. **Major comments** This is a solid and exceptionally eloquent paper, comprising a large body of work that is in general well presented. That said, I do have some suggestions and questions. At several points in the manuscript, the authors should perhaps be more careful in their wording and avoid to overgeneralize data without providing additional evidence for these claims.

      We thank the reviewer for their constructive review and address their request for more careful wording below.

      • Some key points of the study are not entirely clear to me; possibly because the study builds upon a previous study that was recently published in eLife. Anyhow, I think it would be useful to clarify the following points a bit more:

        • Why exactly was ctf4∆ chosen as a model for replication stress? What is the evidence that ctf4∆ is a good model for replication stress? Without including some evidence for this, it is unclear how well the findings in this study really can be generalized to replication stress (which is what the authors do now).

      We described the reasons for choosing CTF4 deletion to mimic DNA replication stress in our previous eLife paper, to which we refer at. Nevertheless, the reviewer is right in asking us not to assume that the reader will have read our previous work. Briefly: DNA replication stress is a term that is loosely defined as the combination of the defects in DNA metabolism and the cellular response to these defects in cells whose replication has been substantially perturbed (Macheret & Halazonetis, 2015). Established methods in the field to induce DNA replication stress consist of either pharmacological treatments or genetic perturbation. Pharmacological treatments include hydroxyurea, which target the ribonucleotide reductase and hence stalls forks as a result of dNTP depletion (Crabbé et al., 2010), or aphidicolin, which directly inhibits polymerases α, ε and δ (Vesela, Chroma, Turi, & Mistrik, 2017b; Wilhelm et al., 2019). For genetic perturbation, the conditional depletion of replicative polymerases (Zheng, Zhang, Wu, Mieczkowski, & Petes, 2016) is frequently used. These methods are incompatible with experimental evolution, as cells can mutate the targets of replication inhibitors or alter the expression of genes that have been reduced in expression or activity. Removing an important but non-essential component of the replication machinery avoids these problems. We chose CTF4 deletion as a manipulation that affected the coordination of events at the replication fork: in the absence of Ctf4, the polα-primase complex is no longer physically bound to the replicative helicase, and thus the polymerase’s abundance at the replisome decreases (Tanaka et al., 2009). This manipulation achieves the same effects as polymerase depletion and replisome stalling, producing a constitutive DNA replication stress that can only be overcome by mutations in other genes. Multiple studies have shown that ctf4**D cells display replication intermediates commonly associated to DNA replication stress, such as the accumulation of ssDNA gaps and reversed forks (Abe et al., 2018; Fumasoni, Zwicky, Vanoli, Lopes, & Branzei, 2015), fork stalling (Fumasoni & Murray, 2020), checkpoint activation (Poli et al., 2012; Tanaka et al., 2009) and altered chromosome metabolism (Kouprina et al., 1992).

      We now justify our choice of deleting CTF4 at line 74:

      “DNA replication stress is often induced with drugs or by reducing the level of DNA polymerases (Crabbé et al., 2010; Vesela, Chroma, Turi, & Mistrik, 2017a; Wilhelm et al., 2019; Zheng et al., 2016). To avoid evolving drug resistance or increased polymerase expression, which would rapidly overcome DNA replication stress,** we deleted the CTF4 gene, which encodes a non-essential subunit of the DNA replication machinery (the replisome) (Kouprina NYu, Pashina, Nikolaishwili, Tsouladze, & Larionov, 1988). Ctf4 is a homo-trimer that functions as a structural hub within the replisome (Villa et al., 2016; Yuan et al., 2019) by binding to the replicative DNA helicase, primase (the enzyme that makes the RNA primers that initiate DNA replication), and other accessory factors (Gambus et al., 2009; Samora et al., 2016; Simon et al., 2014; Villa et al., 2016). In the absence of Ctf4, the Pol**a-primase and other lagging strand processing factors are poorly recruited to the replisome (Samora et al., 2016; Tanaka et al., 2009; Villa et al., 2016), causing several characteristic features of DNA replication stress, such as accumulation of single strand DNA (ssDNA) gaps (Abe et al., 2018; Fumasoni et al., 2015), reversed and stalled forks (Fumasoni & Murray, 2020; Fumasoni et al., 2015), cell cycle checkpoint activation (Poli et al., 2012; Tanaka et al., 2009) and altered chromosome metabolism (Hanna, Kroll, Lundblad, & Spencer, 2001; Kouprina et al., 1992). As a consequence of these defects, ctf4**D cells have substantially reduced reproductive fitness (Fumasoni & Murray, 2020).**”

      Would the authors expect to see similar routes of adaptation if a 'genomic architecture' with a less severe/other replication defect would have been used? I realize the last question is perhaps difficult to address without actually doing the experiment (which I am not suggesting the authors should do); I just want to point out that perhaps some data should not be over-generalized.

      We share the reviewer’s interest in asking whether different forms of DNA replication stress would lead to the same results described, and we plan to rigorously investigate this question in a separate paper. We note that the careful comparison between different forms of DNA replication stress has never been made and that authors studying this phenomenon often rely on a single perturbation to induce DNA replication stress (Crabbé et al., 2010; Wilhelm et al., 2019; Zheng et al., 2016). We agree that such a comparison will be useful, but we believe (as indicated by the reviewer) it will require an amount of work that goes beyond the scope of our study. To avoid over-generalization, we are using now using “a form of DNA replication stress” in lines 33, 244, 401, 414 and 461, to make it clear that our conclusions (as opposed to inferences and speculations) are restricted to the response to a single example of replication stress.

      Likewise, why was RAD52 selected as the gene to delete to affect homologous recombination? I understand that it is a key gene, but on the flipside, absence of RAD52 affects multiple cellular pathways and (as the authors also observe in their populations) also results in increased mutation rates which might confound some of the results.

      We aimed to observe the largest deficiency in DNA recombination possible and therefore chose to delete RAD52 because of its many roles in different forms of homologous recombination (Pâques & Haber, 1999) . The choice of other genes, such as RAD51, would have inhibited canonical double strand break (DSB) repair, but allowed other mechanisms that can rescue stalled replication forks (Ait Saada, Lambert, & Carr, 2018), such as break induced replication (BIR) or single strand annealing (SSA) (Ira & Haber, 2002).

      Our position regarding the inevitable increase in mutations rates obtained while working with genome maintenance process has been instead elaborated in response to reviewer #1 above.

      A sentence describing our choice to delete RAD52 has now been included at line 86:

      “…as well as from haploids impaired in homologous recombination due to the deletion of RAD52 (Figure 1A), which encodes a conserved enzyme required for pairing homologous DNA sequences during recombination (Pâques & Haber, 1999). Because Rad52 is involved in different forms of homologous recombination, it’s absence produces the most severe recombination defects and thus allows us to achieve the largest recombination defect achievable with a single gene deletion (Symington, 2002)..”

      Related to the first comment, it is also unclear to me how well the system chosen by the authors is representative of the replication stress experienced by tumor cells (as briefly touched upon in the final section of the discussion). Are some of the homologs key oncogenes that drive carcinogenesis?

      We should have been clearer. Our goal was to argue that the lesions and responses produced by replication stress in tumor cells, such as stalled replication forks and checkpoint activation, were similar to those seen in yeast cells lacking Ctf4. We did not mean to imply removing Ctf4 from yeast cells had the same effects on cell proliferation and survival as inactivating tumor suppressors and activating proto-oncogenes have in mammalian cells. Despite the difference between direct (removing Ctf4) and indirect effects on DNA replication (tumor cells), the replication intermediates (ssDNA, stalled and reversed forks), the cell cycle defects (G2/M delay), the genetic instability (increased mutagenesis and chromosome loss) and chromosome dynamics (late replication zones and chromosome bridges) generated by the absence of Ctf4 are similar to those observed in oncogene-induced DNA replication stress in mammalian cells (Kotsantis, Petermann, & Boulton, 2018). We therefore believe our experiments reveal evolutionary responses to a constitutive DNA replication stress that resembles the replication stress seen in cancer cells. Nevertheless, we agree that the comparison with cancer evolution remains speculative and we therefore avoided mentioning cancer in the title our paper or our conclusions, and only discuss it in a speculative section of the discussion.

      We have modified this section of the discussion as follows (line 554):

      “While generated through a different mechanism (unrestrained proliferation, rather than replisome perturbation), oncogene induced DNA replication stress produces cellular consequences (Kotsantis et al., 2018) which are remarkably similar to those seen in the absence of Ctf4, such as the accumulation of ssDNA, stalled and reversed forks (Abe et al., 2018; Fumasoni & Murray, 2020; Fumasoni et al., 2015), genetic instability (Fumasoni et al., 2015; Hanna et al., 2001; Kouprina et al., 1992) and DNA damage response activation (Poli et al., 2012; Tanaka et al., 2009). Based on these similarities we speculate that evolutionary adaptation to DNA replication stress could reduce its negative effects on cellular fitness and thus assist tumor evolution.”

      The authors should consider rephrasing some sentences regarding the occurrence of adaptive mutations. Sentences such as 'which genes are mutated depends on the selective advantage' (p1; lines 15-16); 'genome architecture controls the frequency at which mutations occur' (p15), "genome architecture controls which genes are mutated" (p1, line 20) makes it sound like the initial occurrence of mutations is not random, whereas in reality, the mutational landscape is the result of the combined effect of occurrence and fitness effect of the mutations, with the later rather than the former likely being the main driver behind the observed patterns.

      We thank the reviewer for asking for more precision in the above sentences, whose proposed changes we now list:

      “Mutations in individual genes are selected at different frequencies in different architectures, but the benefits these mutations confer are similar in all three architectures, and combinations of these mutations reproduce the fitness gains of evolved populations.” (Lines 13-15)

      “Genome architecture influences the distribution of adaptive mutants” (Line 277)

      "genome architecture influences the frequency at which mutations occur, the fitness benefit they confer, and the extent of overall adaptation." (Lines 462-463)

      Some important methodological information is missing or unclear in the manuscript:

      The authors should provide more details on how they decided which clones to select for sequencing. Did they select the biggest colonies; were colonies picked randomly, ...

      This following sentence is now reported in the materials and methods section (Line 603)

      “To capture the within-population genetic variability we selected the clones displaying the largest divergence of phenotypes in terms of resistance to genotoxic agents (methyl-methanesulfonate, hydroxyurea and camptothecin).”

      What is the population size during the evolution experiment?

      We now added the following sentence at line 599:

      “In this regime, the effective population size is calculated as N0 x g where N0 is the size of the population bottleneck at transfer and g is the number of generations achieved during a batch growth cycle and corresponds to approximately to 107 cells.”

      Sequencing of populations and clones: coverage should be mentioned

      The following sentence has now been added at line 616:

      “Clones and populations were sequenced at approximately the following depths: 25-30X for haploid clones, 50-60X for diploid clones, 50-60X for haploid populations and 120-130X for diploid populations.”

      Identification of mutations (p19, line 573): Is this really how the authors defined whether a variant is a mutation? Based on the definition given here, DNA mutations that lead to a synonymous mutation in the protein are not considered as mutations?

      We apologize for this typo. We do identify and consider synonymous mutations as evidenced by Figure 3-S1B. Now the sentence at line 626 correctly reports:

      “A variant that occurs between the ancestor and an evolved strain is labeled as a mutation if it either (1) causes a substitution in a coding sequence or (2) occurs in a regulatory region, defined as the 500 bp upstream and downstream of the coding sequence.”

      Perhaps the information can be found elsewhere, but the source data excel files for mutations is incomplete and should at the very least contain information on the type of mutation (eg. T->A), as well as the location of this mutation in the respective gene.

      Perhaps the reviewer is referring to Supplementary table 2, where we list the number of times a gene has been mutated in different populations (and thus summaries different types of mutations affecting the same gene). The information they request is reported in Supplementary table 1 for all the variants detected in populations and clones sequencing.

      **Minor comments** • While the author already cite several significant papers relevant for their manuscript, some other studies could also be included:

      We thank the reviewer for highlighting these references, which are now cited at line 28

      From the text in the abstract, it is unclear what the three genomic architectures (line 13) exactly are, the authors should consider spelling this out.

      In repose o the reviewer request for clarity we now propose the following change in line 13:

      “We asked how these trajectories depend on a population’s genome architecture by comparing the adaptation of haploids to that diploids and recombination deficient haploids.” (Lines 9-11)

      Can the authors speculate on why a homozygous ctf4D/ctf4D rad52D/rad52D would be lethal, and a haploid not?

      See below

      The authors note that a diploid ctf4D/ctf4D strain is less fit than its haploid counterpart. Why do the authors think this is the case?

      In response to the two previous questions, we now propose the following speculations that we include in the text (Line 97):

      “Diploid cells require twice as many forks as haploids and Ctf4-deficient diploids are thus more likely to have forks that cause severe cell-cycle delays or cell lethality. We speculate that this increased probability explains the more prominent fitness defect displayed by diploid cells. Interestingly, homologs of Ctf4 are absent in prokaryotes, where the primase is physically linked to the replicative helicase (Lu, Ratnakar, Mohanty, & Bastia, 1996) and Ctf4 is essential in the cells of eukaryotes with larger genomes such as chickens (Abe et al., 2018) and humans (Yoshizawa-Sugata & Masai, 2009). Rad52 is likely involved in rescuing stalled replication forks by recombination-dependent mechanisms (Fumasoni et al., 2015; Yeeles, Poli, Marians, & Pasero, 2013). We speculate that the absence of Rad52 increases the duration of these stalls and leads some of them to become double-stranded breaks resulting in cell lethality and explaining the decreased fitness of ctf4D rad52D haploid double mutants. In diploids ctf4D rad52D cells, which have twice as many chromosomes, the number of irreparably stalled fork may be sufficient to kill most of the cells in a population, thus explaining the unviability of the strain.”

      The authors passage their cells for 100 cycles and assume that this corresponds to around 1000 generations for each population. However, the fitness differences between the different starting strains (see also Figure 1B) are likely to cause considerable differences in number of generations between the different strains. Do the authors have more precise measurements of number of generations per population? If not, perhaps it should be noted that some lineages may have undergone more doublings than others, and perhaps also discuss if and how this could influence the results?

      In a batch culture regime, where populations are allowed to reach saturation after each dilution, the number of generations at each passage are dictated by the dilution factor (Van den Bergh, Swings, Fauvart, & Michiels, 2018). A dilution of 1:1000 from a saturated culture will allow for approximately 10 generations before populations reach a new saturated phase. As long as saturation is allowed to occur, this number is independent of the fitness of the cultured strains: Slower-dividing strains will simply employ more time to reach saturation after each dilution. At the beginning of the experiment, we had to dilute the ctf4D rad52**D strains being passaged every 48hrs instead of 24hrs. After generation 50, ctf4D rad52**D strains reached saturation within 24hrs and were then diluted daily. The total count considers the number of passages a culture has undergone, and not the number of days of culture, and thus should guarantee approximately the same number of generations in all three genome architectures.

      Panel A of figure 1A is somewhat confusing; as this seems to indicate that the ctf4∆ was introduced after strains were made, for example, haploid recombination deficient (which is not how these strains were constructed). Perhaps a better way of representing would be to have the indication of DNA replication stress pictured inside the yeast cells.

      We have modified Figure 1A to better represent the way the strains were constructed. For space reasons we have not represented a perturbed fork within each cell, but rather above all of them.

      Legend to Figure 1: is fitness expressed relative to haploid or diploid WT cells for the diploid strains?

      We apologize for having missed this detail in the figure legends. Throughout the figures, haploid and diploid cells were competed against reference strains with the same ploidy. We now add this sentence in Figure 1 and in the materials and methods (line 686).

      Figure 3: to improve readability of this figure, the authors could consider placing the legend of the different symbols (#, *,..) in the figure as well and not just in the figure legend.

      We now include the symbols legend in Figure 3.

      Figure 5 shows Indels, but if I am correct, these mutations are not discussed in the text; nor is it mentioned what the authors used as a cut-off to determine indels (the authors use the term 'small indels' without defining it)? For example, the data shown in Figure 3 and Figure 4 only includes SNPs and not indels (correct?) - but the indels should also be taken into account when investigating which modules are hit.

      Gapped alignments of the relatively long 150 paired-end reads in our data set permits the identification of small indels ranging in size from 1–55 bp using VarScan pileup2indels tool (Koboldt et al., 2012). All small indels (and the respective sequence affected) are listed together with SNPs in Supplementary table 1. Figure 3A, Figure 4 and Figure 5B are representation of ‘gene mutations’ which include both SNPs and small InDels. Large chromosomal Insertion and deletions, not detectable by short read gap alignment are instead identified using the VarScan pileup2copynumber tool (Koboldt et al., 2012), and are represented as amplifications or deletions in Figure 3B and 5C.

      The following sentence has been added to the material and methods at line 629:

      “Gapped alignments of the 150 paired-end reads in our data set permits the identification of small indels ranging in size from 1–55 bp using VarScan pileup2indels tool (Koboldt et al., 2012). All small indels (and the respective sequence affected) are listed together with SNPs in Supplementary table 1.”

      The following definition has been added in Figure legends 3A, 4 and 5A and B.

      “Gene mutations (SNPs and small InDels 1-55bp)”

      Figure 5 mentions: # gene mutations. So these are only the mutations in genes, and not in their up- or downstream regulatory regions?

      We use a broader definition of a gene, not restricted to the open reading frame, and including its regulatory regions. The following definition has been added to figure 5’s legend.

      “Frequency of SNPs and small InDels (1-55bp) affecting genes (Open reading frames and associated regulatory regions).”

      Figure 3-S1: labels of C panels are missing.

      Labels are now included in Figure 3-S1

      Figure 3-S1, panel B: why did the authors focus on synonymous mutations?

      The panel B is commented upon in line 186 and contrasted with panel A to argue that the increased number of mutations detected in ctf4∆ rad52∆ strains is due to a higher mutation rate(which is expected to increase synonymous mutations) instead of an higher number of adaptive mutations (which are less likely to be synonymous) being selected.

      Reviewer #2 (Significance (Required)): This is a solid and clearly written study, comprising a large body of work that is generally well presented and that will be of interest to scientists active in the field of (experimental) evolution and replication. However, many aspects studied in this manuscript have already been studied and reported before; including the recent eLife paper by the same group, as well as studies by other labs that have investigated how genome architecture / genotype affects evolutionary trajectories, the effect of ploidy on evolution, .... Because of this, I do feel that the authors should put their findings more in the context of existing literature context, including a general description of which results are truly novel, which confirm previous findings and which results seem to go against previous reports. This is already so at some points in the text, but I feel this could be done even more.

      We now rephrase the following paragraphs in our discussion to better highlight the main conclusions in contrast to the existing literature:

      “Engineering one mutation in each module into an ancestral strain lacking Ctf4 is enough to produce the evolved fitness increase in all three genomic architectures. Furthermore, engineering mutations in individual genes confer benefits in all three architectures (Fig. 6A) ,even in those where the mutations in these genes was rare, and combining these mutations recapitulated the evolved fitness increase in all three architectures (Fig. 6B). Altogether our results demonstrate the existence of a common pathway for yeast cells to adapt to a form of constitutive DNA replication stress.” (Lines 409-414)

      “Our results thus go against the trend of slower adaptation in diploids as compared to haploids reported by the majority other studies (A. C. Gerstein, Cleathero, Mandegar, & Otto, 2011; Marad, Buskirk, & Lang, 2018; Zeyl, Vanderford, & Carter, 2003). This effect is not limited to populations experiencing DNA replication stress (Figure 2A) but is also present in control wild-type populations (Figure 2B). Our results support the idea that the details of genotypes, selections, and experimental protocols can determine the effect of ploidy on adaptation.” (Lines 437-442)

      “Our results therefore agree with previous reports observing declining adaptability across strains with different initial fitness but largely fail to observe diminishing return epistasis as a potential justification of this phenomenon. Our experiments and two previous evolutionary repair experiments (Hsieh et al., 2020; Laan et al., 2015) both show interactions that are approximately additive between different selected mutations. The reasons for this difference are currently unknown.” (Lines 450-455)

      Additionally, I think the authors should be more careful not to over-generalize their findings, which come from only a few specific genetic manipulations that might not be representative for general replication stress. For example (p15), can the authors really claim that they have unraveled general principles of adaptation to constitutive DNA replication stress? Perhaps a better motivation of the choice of ctf4 as a model mutation for DNA replication stress could also help (see also my earlier comments). A similar comment applies to the molecular mechanisms affecting adaptation in diploid cells - what evidence do the authors have that their findings are not specific to the one specific type of diploid strain they used in their study? Adding a bit more background information or nuance for some of the claims would help tackle this issue.

      We now followed the suggestions made previously by the reviewer to justify our experimental choices better and to use a language that avoids over-generalizations.

      Field of expertise of this reviewer: genetics, evolution, genomics

      Reviewer #3 (Evidence, reproducibility and clarity (Required)): **Summary:** Here the authors carry out an evolution experiment, propagating replicate populations of the budding yeast with the CTF 4 gene deleted in three different genetic backgrounds: haploid , diploid and recombination deficient (RAD52 deletion). The authors find that the rate of evolution depends on the initial fitness of the different genetic backgrounds which is consistent with a repeated finding of evolution experiments: that beneficial mutations tend to have a smaller fitness effect in high fitness genetic backgrounds. Curiously even though the targets of selection tended to be specific to each of the three different genetic backgrounds, genetic reconstruction experiments showed beneficial mutations convert a fitness increase in all genetics backgrounds. The authors go on to provide a plausible explanation for why each of the three genetic backgrounds are predisposed to certain types of beneficial mutations. Overall, these results provide important context and caveats for an emerging consensus that genetic background determines the rate of evolution, a comprehensive molecular breakdown of adaptation to DNA replication stress and a mechanistic explanation for why different beneficial mutations are favoured in diploids, haploids and recombination deficient strains. This is a well-executed study that is beautifully presented and easy to follow. This will be of great interest to those in the experimental evolution community and the data an excellent resource.

      We thank reviewer #3 for emphasizing that reconstructed mutations are beneficial even in architectures where they were not ultimately detected at the end of the experiment. We have now highlighted this point in our conclusions as a response to the reviewer’s #1 and #2 request for more clarity regarding our novel findings.

      “We find that the genes that acquire adaptive mutations, the frequency at which they are mutated, and the frequency at which these mutations are selected all differ between architectures but that mutations that confer strong benefits can occur in all three modules in each architecture. Engineering one mutation in each module into an ancestral strain lacking Ctf4 is enough to produce the evolved fitness increase in all three genomic architectures. Furthermore, reconstruction of a panel of mutations into all three architectures proved they are adaptive even in architectures where the affected genes were not found significantly mutated by the end of the experiment. Altogether our results demonstrate the existence of a common pathway for yeast cells to adapt to a form of constitutive DNA replication stress.” (Lines 405-414)

      **Major comments:**

      • Are the key conclusions convincing? Yes, the convergent evolution analysis, fitness assays, and genetic reconstructions are sufficient to characterise the genetic causes of adaptation in this experiment, and are of the highest standard. The authors do particularly well to fully recover the fitness increases that evolved with their genetic reconstructions, which imparts a completeness to their understanding of what happened in their evolution experiment.
      • Should the authors qualify some of their claims as preliminary or speculative, or remove them altogether? No, in nearly all cases the authors make reasonable claims. One exception is on L419 in the discussion, where the authors speculate why some mutations do not follow diminishing returns epistasis, but this idea does not really have any basis (no citation or reasons to suggest that DNA repair genes are less connected with other genes in the genome). If the authors cannot support this statement, it should be removed, and instead write that is currently unknown why some individual mutations do not follow the pattern of diminishing returns.

      On reflection, we agree with the reviewer and now state,

      “Our results confirm previous reports observing declining adaptability across strains with different initial fitness but largely fail to observe diminishing return epistasis as a potential justification of this phenomenon. Our experiments and two previous evolutionary repair experiments (Hsieh et al., 2020; Laan et al., 2015) both show interactions that are approximately additive between different selected mutations. The reasons for this difference are currently unknown.

      A hypothesis, which would need experimental validation, could be that the different mutations have different degrees of epistatic interactions with the rest of the genome. Ixr1, whose mutation follows diminishing return epistasis, is a transcription factor that could in principle affect the expression of many other genes implicated in different cellular modules. Sld5, Scc2 and Rad9 instead, whose mutations have the same effect across different genome architectures, having more mechanistic roles in genome maintenance may have strong epistatic interactions only with a restricted number of cellular modules implicated with DNA metabolism.

      • Would additional experiments be essential to support the claims of the paper? No.
        • Are the data and the methods presented in such a way that they can be reproduced? Yes, but some more details are needed for the convergent evolution analysis, see minor comments.
        • Are the experiments adequately replicated and statistical analysis adequate? Yes, but some more statistic reporting in the main text or figure legends would be helpful, for example. L159: Please report the statistical test, test statistic and p value in the text or in the figure legend. Currently significance is indicated, but the methods do not specify the test.

      We apologize for the lack of clarity in the main text. The test used for all fitness analysis was only reported in the materials and methods as follow:

      “The P-values reported in figures are the result of t-tests assuming unequal variances (Welch’s test)”

      We now include the test and the associated p-value in line 184, and write the above sentence in all the relevant figures.

      This should also be done for the GO analysis shown in figure 3A.

      We thank reviewer #3 pointing out this omission. We now include the following section:

      “Gene ontology (GO) enrichment analysis:

      The list of genes with putatively selected mutations (Figure 3A) or homozygous mutations in diploids (Figure 4) were input as ‘multiple proteins’ in the STRING database, which reports on the network of interactions between the input genes (https://string-db.org). The GO term enrichment analysis provided by STRING are reported in Supplementary Table 3 and Supplementary Table 6 respectively. Briefly, the strength of the enrichment is calculated as Log10(O/E), where O is the number of ‘observed’ genes in the provided list (of length N) which belong to the GO-term, and E is the number of ‘expected’ genes we would expect to find matching the GO-term providing a list of the same length N made of randomly picked genes. P-values are computed using a Hypergeometric test and corrected for multiple testing using the Benjamini-Hochberg procedure. The resulting P-values are represented as ‘False discovery rate’ in the supplementary tables and describe the significance of the GO terms enrichment (Franceschini et al., 2013).”

      **Minor comments:**

      • Specific experimental issues that are easily addressable. Not a new experiment, but extra details are required. The authors carried out both clone and whole population sequencing. For their convergent evolution analysis, what is the criteria for a mutation to be included- ie, does it need to be fixed, have attained a certain frequency? This is important- if the criteria were low (say 5%), it would be important to know whether gene A had fixed in 4 populations, while gene B had attained a frequency of 10% in 5 populations. As it stands both would be described as examples of convergent evolution. This can be handled by providing these details in the methods.

      For the population sequencing we disregarded variants found at less than 25% and 35% of the reads in haploid and diploid populations respectively as we observed they were largely the product of alignment errors. All the variants found at frequencies higher than the thresholds indicated were used for the parallel evolution analysis. The frequency at which each individual variant was detected in each population is reported in Supplementary table 1, while the average frequency at which a gene has been found mutated across different populations is reported in Supplementary table 2. The reason why we didn’t solely focus on fixed mutations for our convergent evolution analysis was that from previous work we knew of the existence of clonal interference which kept the frequency of verified adaptive mutations that coexisted in the same population (e.g. ixr1 and sld5) well below 90% (Fumasoni & Murray, 2020).

      For clarity we now add the following sentence in the material and methods:

      “Variants found in less than 25% and 35% of the reads in haploid and diploid populations respectively were discarded, since many of these corresponded to misalignment of repeated regions. For clone sequencing, only variants found in more than 75% of the reads in haploids and 35% of the reads in diploids (to account for heterozygosity) were considered mutations. The frequency of the reads associated with all the variants detected are reported in Supplementary table 1”

      • Are prior studies referenced appropriately? I note that the authors use the term declining adaptability where as other papers use the term diminishing returns epistasis- I am sure the authors have good reasons for their choice of nomenclature but I think it would be helpful for their readers to connect this work to other work by mentioning that declining adaptability is also referred to as diminishing returns.

      We use both terms (for instance in line 446 and line 448) with a different meaning : By ‘declining adaptability’ we refer the phenomenon where more fit strains display lower adaptation rates than less fit ones. By ‘diminishing returns epistasis’ we refer to a possible explanation of such a phenomenon, where adaptive mutations have different fitness effects due to their ‘global’ epistatic interactions with other alleles. It has to be noted that ‘diminishing returns epistasis’ is not the only proposed explanation of the phenomenon of declining adaptability (Couce & Tenaillon, 2015). In our case, we do find evidence of declining adaptability but very limited evidence for diminishing return epistasis (only 1 mutation in 5 has a different fitness effect in different architectures).

      A reference the authors have missed: L419, as well as citing the Desai Lab bioxive paper, they should cite another theory paper that obtained similar conclusions. Lyons, D.M., et al. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41559-020-01286-y.

      We thank the reviewer for the suggested reference, which is now cited at line 450.

      • Are the text and figures clear and accurate? This paper is beautifully written and easy to follow, a lot of thought has gone into the figures which are aesthetically pleasing and easy to navigate.

        • Do you have suggestions that would help the authors improve the presentation of their data and conclusions? No.

        **Typos**

        L32 "do" should be "to" L95 analyzed L219 are the authors referring to ref 15 here? I think so, but please specify

      We thank the reviewer for carefully finding the typos, which are now all corrected.

      Reviewer #3 (Significance (Required)):

      • Describe the nature and significance of the advance (e.g. conceptual, technical, clinical) for the field. This paper is an important conceptual result and an immediate advance for basic research. The authors have done an outstanding job of showing the potential for the clinical translation of this research, especially regarding cancer biology.
      • Place the work in the context of the existing literature (provide references, where appropriate). This study follows up on and builds upon an earlier paper by these same authors published in E-life in 2020. Conceptually this work is most closely related to work in Michael Desai's, Sergey Kryazhimskiy's, Tim Coopers and Chris Marx's labs work looking at diminishing returns epistasis in yeast, and studies contrasting evolution of haploids and diploids led by Greg Lang's and Sarah Otto's labs.
      • State what audience might be interested in and influenced by the reported findings. This work will be of great interest to the Experimental evolution and molecular evolution communities and also of interest to those who study cancer genomics and DNA replication and repair.
      • Define your field of expertise with a few keywords to help the authors contextualize your point of view. Indicate if there are any parts of the paper that you do not have sufficient expertise to evaluate. Microbial experimental evolution.

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    1. If you ask Shepsle, Krehbiel, or their fellow rational choicers how they've gotten so far so fast, they will tell you it's simply because they are that good—and because they are the only ones in the field who carry out work that qualifies as science

      This "article" is a fucking bravado against RCT for no reason, just because.

    1. Marginalized people already know that we’re supposed to “assume good intent” in others. We are told every day that we’re “paranoid,” “overreacting,” or just plain “crazy” if we don’t feel good about being treated badly. This process is called ‘gaslighting,’ and it’s a way of making marginalized people distrust our own perceptions so we won’t object to being mistreated.

      assume good intentions plays into corporate gaslighting

    1. yes, they’re little angels! here’s mine

      Here, @milanmumm uses a pathetic appeal to contribute to the argument that it is unacceptable to hate cats. This user includes both an emoji and a cute photo of a cat to evoke emotion in the reader. I think this is a very effective method of persuasion in general as it is hard for a reader to deny the objectivity of how cute a cat photo is. However, it's difficult to see if this appeal was effective in the context of this specific tweet, as most of the replies are just other cat owners sharing photos of their own cats, and we already know that they do not hate cats.

    1. "_label": "Geschiedenis van Kalilah en Daminah",

      This label is just for internal documentation, so that when the resource is displayed, systems can pick the _label up and use it without needing to worry about different languages, document structures and so forth. It's always a single string, and can be whatever is useful. It should NOT be displayed directly to end users however, that's what the Name structure is for.

    1. Rodeo allowed Travis Scott to carve his own corner of hip-hop, especially in the time it was released while trap was finally evolving into the go-to sound of hip-hop. With this project, he showed that it's possible to do a trap-based sound in a melodic way while also projecting the grit that the hi-hats and 808s possess. On top of that, he really pushed the idea of "Rodeo" as a concept and created an environment for the listener to immerse themselves into and I think that is what made it so special.

      For this comment, in terms of rhetorical analysis, I feel that it fits best with the aspect of logical appeal. The logical appeal can be found in the commentator's remarks on the aspects of what makes the album so memorable not just within the trap sub genre, but hip hop as a whole such as the overall concept behind the album as well as its production. In turn, these aspects also allowed Travis Scott to distinguish himself as an artist among his contemporaries.

    1. Mill. It's a general maxim among the know­ing part of mankind, that a woman without virtue, like a man without honour or honesty, 40 is capable of any action, tho' never so vile; and yet, what pains will they not take, what arts not use, to seduce us from our innocence, and make us contemptible and wicked, even in their own opinions! Then is it not just, the villains, 45 to their cost, should find us so.-But guilt makes them suspicious, and keeps them on their guard; therefore we can take advantage only of the young and innocent part of the sex, who, ✓ having never injured women, apprehend no so injury from them. L11cy. Ay, they m

      This paragraph is such an important part of defining Sarah Millwood's character because it shows not only her motivation in seducing George, but the ethical code she has set for herself and the society around her. She is able to defend her actions and the scheme that she has planned for Barnwell by always comparing herself to the 'bigger fish', which in this case would be men who have jaded her. She knows that her targets are young and innocent, but this conversation between her and Lucy shines light on how she has no guilt in taking advantage of innocent people to get what she wants. On the either side of the coin we see Lucy, who like Millwood, hasn't received a rich or luxurious upbringing, yet still doesn't approve of her actions. This conversation is a wonderful way of highlighting the power dynamics between the genders of this era, and the conflicts within the same sex and class.