Holy shit we might have a cure for sickle cell anemia
Robert Evans (the Only Robert Evans)
Fool me once, shame on you
Fool me twice, shame on you
Fool me thrice, shame on you
Fool me four t
The unintended consequences of the Fitts’s Law!
I bet a stupid technical reason is something like: “most recent” is cheap to calculate over all of your emails, but “most relevant” is not – and some code path needs it calculated for all to select all.
Is that the maglev one?
Answering my own question: yes! Didn’t know that’s how they refer to it.
Karen Potter
We had only written the pilot of Halt and Catch Fire when we read Soul of the New Machine. That book had a huge impact not only on the content of our show, but the tone. The humanity at the center of the work. The book is still on my desk and will be forever. We owe Tracy a lot.
2h30 in regular (no TSA-Pre) line in LaGuardia. Didn’t see a lot of ICE people. Staff handing out water bottles and lollipops.
Added nine more books. Thank you so much for everyone who suggested them!
aresluna.org/ux-books-not...
www.theguardian.com
Writer looked to topics such as computer engineering and life in a nursing home to produce richly researched books
Thompson's hematologist at Johns Hopkins, Dr. Robert A. Brodsky, published a study revealing that the research now has an overall 94% disease-free survival rate.
"[A cure is now] available to the majority, almost the entirety, of sickle cell patients.”
#GoodNews #BlackSky 🌱
Chris Cantwell
Tatyana Thompson, who was diagnosed with sickle cell disease when she was 2 months old, was successfully cured of the disease after she participated in Johns Hopkins research on sickle cell treatment.