Juls7243
Juls7243 t1_j8f1o6x wrote
Reply to comment by AlternativeSign272 in I am a 15f with diagnosed aquagenic urticaria - an allergy to water. Ask me anything! by AlternativeSign272
Have you tried taking a lot of anti-histamines (like benadryl) before showering? like take 2x the suggested dose 45 minutes before hand. It might help (could be use sparingly when desired).
Juls7243 t1_j6n3zm7 wrote
Yes.You can learn to past the test for sure.
However, you won't be a "good" driver until you've had more experience.
Juls7243 t1_j6gc3ii wrote
Reply to comment by SammiK504 in LPT: Do not have the mindset the you are going to "save money" by quitting alcohol AND getting healthy. by [deleted]
True - but sometimes switching addictions is a great thing!
Going from drugs to exercise is not a bad thing to do!
Juls7243 t1_j6gbwnr wrote
Reply to LPT: Do not have the mindset the you are going to "save money" by quitting alcohol AND getting healthy. by [deleted]
The thing is - you don't NEED to spend that much on supplements/protein/creative/clothing and shoes....
just a basic multivitamin, more vegetables and solid calisthenics - perfect for your health.
Juls7243 t1_j6g63qw wrote
Reply to comment by MastrovNL in LPT request: how to get rid of a bad renter? by MastrovNL
Offer her cash to move. Say “listen we don’t get along. If your stuff is out by date Y and you return the keys I’ll give you $X”.
Sounds crazy… but its often how landlords get bad tenants out.
Juls7243 t1_j5zpkh7 wrote
Reply to comment by Drakolyik in Are most of our predictions wrong? by Sasuke_1738
It’s not just economics - it’s any science. What math problems will be solved in 50 years? Chemisty? Martials science? It’s every subject
Juls7243 t1_j5ykd9x wrote
Reply to Are most of our predictions wrong? by Sasuke_1738
Yes.
Predicting the future is INSANELY hard. For example, most of the companies on wall street hire the smartest people on the planet to try and figure out what will happen to stocks only 6 MONTHS into the future and are more wrong than right.
The smartest, most educated people, (on a given subject) are MORE WRONG than they are right in predicting the future in their specialized area. The default assumption is that you are WRONG.
Juls7243 t1_j4q587v wrote
Reply to New study shows: Black Adults Experienced Early Signs of Brain Aging Faster Than Other Ethnic Minority Groups by PaulHasselbaink
I wonder if this is related to income? To obesity? To stress.
Very complicated issue.
Juls7243 t1_j1rbk67 wrote
Reply to What do you see happening over the next 300 years to a millennia? In what way will it be different to how it is today? by Serious_Final_989
I think any predictions beyond 50-100 years is kinda pointless.
Juls7243 t1_iymt1bv wrote
Reply to Is it possible that nuclear defense technologies will surpass the abilities of nuclear weapons in the future, rendering them near useless? by Wide-Escape-5618
Doubt it.
The main issue is that you have to block ALL the nukes - a 95% success rate is still a failure.
If a country launches 50 Missiles, each with 8 warheads…. That’s 400 deadly explosions
Juls7243 t1_iyeof1z wrote
Does it do anything actually useful or worth paying for? Not really.
Does it make its revenue by spying on its consumers and selling their data - yea.
Juls7243 t1_iux3izl wrote
Reply to New data from the VA and HUD shows there was an 11% decline in veteran homelessness since 2020 and 55% since 2010. by NewsYouCanShmooze
Why? How?
Did the homeless veterans all die or were they housed? Pieces of information like this aren't helpful or meaningful as they don't give you a sense of whats actually happening.
Juls7243 t1_irb7q8o wrote
Yes absolutely! If you're really interested you can look into a very famous chemistry professor named Samuel Danishefsky - he carried out the total synthesis of a fully glycosylated Erythropoietin protein. This took probably ~200-400 Phd years (20 people ~ 10- 20 years) to fully complete as there are MANY challenges that come along the way.
Fundamentally, its much much easier to do semi-synthesis or coupling of large chunks of proteins that have been synthesized by cells in cell culture. If you're interested in semi-synthesis you can look at famous chemical biologists like Tom Muir.
The VAST majority of times, when researchers/scientists want a protein, they simply ask bateria/yeast to express it by adding in the DNA that encodes for that protein. The cells natural protein producing machinery produces it, the cells are killed, and that protein is extracted and purified. This is FAR cheaper and more reliable than other methods to date. IF you want to make an unnatural protein - you can simply just change the DNA sequence that you're transfecting the bacteria with.
SYNTHETICALLY we can make proteins from total scratch. Its a TON of work, but has been done before (mostly for the purpose of understanding and optimizing really hard chemistry - not for large scale production).
- Coupling amino acids in LARGE iterations has poor yields. - if you make a protein with 500 amino acids, and want to couple them step by step, that would be (excluding intermediate steps) 1000 reactions. EVEN at a 99.5% efficiency you're going to have huge problems (0.995^500) = an 8.1% yield. What is EVEN worse is the remaining 91.9% of the material is VERY similar to your product and you will have issues separating it (unless you tag it and use special chromatography).
- Chemical reactions become HARDER (substantially) as molecules get larger. Fundamentally to reaction kinetics is the "number of productive collisions". If two objects (molecules) collide and they're small a huge fraction of their surface (say 10%) is reactive. If these molecules are much larger the portion of their surface that is reactive decreases with the surface area of the molecule making is much lower (say 0.1%). This slow down in rate makes some reactions on a large scale simply too slow to function.
- Mammalian Proteins are Glycosylated - this process is inherently heterogeneous. Most of proteins that are produced in humans and other mammals are covered with glycans (sugars) of varying length (1-20 monomer sugars). This post-transnational labeling of proteins is not consisten (same animal, same protein, may exist with a distribution of types/locations of sugars). Sugar chemistry is FAR more difficult that protein synthesis and this proposes a MASSIVE challenge in ensuring you get the "correct/natural" protein that is in your body. The exact source of the protein (yeast, human tissue, bacteria) will produce the "same protein (amino acid sequence)", but variants of their attached glycans.
NOTE* Anything with 50 amino acids or less (very small proteins or peptides) CAN be produced on scale chemically quite easily with a process known as Solid-Phase Peptide synthesis. For large scale, industries actually do liquid phase peptide synthesis as its higher yielding (but very labor/time intensive for a single person).
Juls7243 t1_j9d1jh8 wrote
Reply to LPT request: how to feel happier and more upbeat when waking up super early? by FoxCharacter5108
Go to bed really early. If you have enough sleep you should be okay.