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10% writing code. 90% reading and understanding code

Meh. I would've been more bothered back in the day when Coursera was a treasure trove of high quality courses, but it went downhill.

So to add Udemy's infinite catalogue of poorly structured courses, it only adds to the decline


But processing and retranssmission of the data at every network node still takes energy

And plenty of that hardware is more than ten years old.

Well I hope it's not installed into the roaming profile

Apple's approach has always been "You'll do as we say and thank us for it"


You'd barely pick up anything with a lora antenna that small


Dr pepper zero doesn't use as much aspartame as dr pepper diet. It uses more of a mix of different sweeteners


I much prefer sucralose to aspartame



Most people don't suffer from IBD though. IBS is very common, IBD isn't


There's not "nothing" wrong with MSG. But msg is fine in moderation, just like salt, fat and sugar are all fine in moderation too


If there's anything wrong with MSG that isn't simply due to sodium intake, I think it's unknown to science (at least in the sense that there's no theory about it with any wide uptake). MSG is also intensively studied and has a very similar mechanistic story to aspartame.


One thing that is "wrong" with MSG is that a lot of restaurants overuse it as a condiment. So you're paying money for a good food experience, but you're getting the taste equivalent of instant ramen noodles.

I actually _like_ instant ramen noodles and MSG, and I use MSG when cooking. But it feels like cheating when fancy restaurants also use it.


> So you're paying money for a good food experience, but you're getting the taste equivalent of instant ramen noodles.

Restaurants, even nicer ones, cut corners. This especially flared up in the news a couple of years ago when a posh UK restaurant served a cheese plate at a decently high price, where the label was still on the cheese and revealed it had come from an ordinary supermarket’s house brand.

I’ve seen this personally, too. I ate sushi today at a sushi place where the menu said “crab sticks” were an ingredient of some rolls, but these were surely the imitation crab meat called surimi.

Or another Asian place in my area is known for offering “duck” on the menu, but what you get is mock duck[0] wrapped around the meat, to make people think it’s the duck skin, but the meat itself is chicken.

[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mock_duck


Sure, but it feels like a silly distinction. The famous example is water, which fits those same criteria. Would we that that there's not "nothing" wrong with water?


*Would we say that there's not "nothing" wrong with water?


What's wrong with it?


It contributes to sodium intake, if you're watching out for that. Probably at about a third of table salt's sodium by mass, though.

Might cause overeating too, because it's tasty.

That's it.


Tasty food will be my downfall.


And water


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