My understanding is that it's quite long. I saw cited a 90% effectiveness at 30 years.
SOB_Van_Owen
Would also recommend Jesse Welles and Carsie Blanton.
Chronic Inflammatory Demyelinating Polyneuropathy.
Agreed.
Yes! Lots of folks with chronic illness find themselves in a limbo where they can't get decent treatment or often precise diagnosis. Crowdsourcing relief has mixed results, but in such circumstances reports of rigorous trial and error with various approaches is sometimes helpful in the absence of the sort of care a lot of Americans now can't even hope for. I know this because I've been there. CIDP here since 2010.
Peppers go well from cuttings and sometimes seeds. Sorta secondhand action there
I got really sick and debilitated. Got a grim prognosis that I'd just get worse. Got me to really take my health seriously and do all I personally could through a lot of trial and error to see what might make for a better quality of life. Lost massive weight, kept it off long-term, defied all expectations for over 2 decades, did some extraordinary stuff I'd probably not have attempted if not faced with the end of my life as I've known it.
Are you me?
There's that possibly apocryphal story in The Fly reboot with Jeff Goldblum about how Einstein had like seven identical sets of clothes so he didn't have to waste effort on deciding what to wear.
Ask Appalachia about company towns. Folks here at least ought to know better.
This is a fascinating project but I'm always frustrated when they don't share the formulation of their materials. Looks like a lot of reinforcement. A major downside to modular geodesic construction is the number of seams that invite leakage over time. A more monolithic application of a slower-setting material over a frame would be preferable to me.
Having experimented with a lot of concrete composites I'm always looking for the sweet spots of frugality, obtainablity, practically. This appears to be some geopolymer or magnesium cement -fairly exotic materials for me. Geopolymers often require a strong alkali to set. Not a huge fan of Portland, but at least it's obtainable and relatively inexpensive for sustainable use cases.
The Orville sorta confused me about their focus. Having not read anything about it, at first I thought it was a show solely to poke fun at Star Trek tropes. Then it appeared to try to actually emulate ST.
Seem to recall Blood Music had a pretty ok outcome. Though maybe it was overly optimistic.
Jesse Welles might be the Guthrie of our time.