_BlueFire_
_BlueFire_ t1_ja6sx84 wrote
This seems the exact description of The Scarecrow album, by Avantasia
_BlueFire_ t1_j9kke4g wrote
Reply to comment by TheBeginningOfMe in Does anyone else listen to music this way? by [deleted]
Student, when I study I often loop throughout the day. However I dive into an album before going to the next one (I also need to find something to get fixated, if it doesn't I listen it kinda normally, but it can get annoying wanting to listen something and not knowing what. A big fridge full of unfilling left overs)
_BlueFire_ t1_j9kjlgf wrote
Reply to comment by lellololes in Does anyone else listen to music this way? by [deleted]
I mostly need to know it well enough to be able to background it. Not being an native English speaker helps, but for example the 6-8-times-a-day album was Italian so lol (I also liked the exam, which helped even though I hated what of the exam had to be studied).
I listen a lot of music, but that's my approach to the new one. I need to get fixated on something for a while to propey register it
_BlueFire_ t1_j9jwak3 wrote
Reply to comment by lellololes in Does anyone else listen to music this way? by [deleted]
Yeah, but more than the amount of times it's that music was essential to properly study (from here the amount). It keeps one piece of my mind occupied so it doesn't wander around lol It frightens knowing that I'm still in the "able to properly function" side of the spectrum
_BlueFire_ t1_j9j3hos wrote
Reply to comment by lellololes in Does anyone else listen to music this way? by [deleted]
Not regular, but when I was able to manage focusing on my studies I could easily loop something 3-4 times a day minimum. There was one album which lasted precisely a pomodoro cycle of 1h and I even used it to have a rhythm. My average then was probably like 6-8 times a day and there's when I probably peaked at 10.
Then fast forward on year and I got diagnosed mild ADHD lol
_BlueFire_ t1_j9hgk81 wrote
Reply to comment by lellololes in Does anyone else listen to music this way? by [deleted]
Is it common for people to listen the same album like 2-10 times a day (depending on what you're doing) for a couple of months? I've always been told I'm weird because of that
_BlueFire_ t1_j9hg7jn wrote
Reply to Does anyone else listen to music this way? by [deleted]
This. That's literally how it works for me most of the times!
It's actually curious that it's now happening with 2 different albums.
_BlueFire_ t1_j8se2ww wrote
Reply to comment by ramasamymd in I'm Dr. Ranjith Ramasamy, the Director of Reproductive Urology at the University of Miami. I'm here today to answer any questions you have about vasectomies. Ask me anything! by ramasamymd
Thanks for the answer!
_BlueFire_ t1_j8qtdix wrote
Reply to I'm Dr. Ranjith Ramasamy, the Director of Reproductive Urology at the University of Miami. I'm here today to answer any questions you have about vasectomies. Ask me anything! by ramasamymd
Is there any significative hormonal change after a vasectomy? I'm seeing different answers all around and even being a pharm chemist I can get which ones are right. We don't really go deep on biology...
_BlueFire_ t1_j6n9jdo wrote
Reply to [WP] Out of all the superpowers out there, you consider yours the most sadistic; you can save any number of innocent people from death in the face of danger, but to gain that ability, you must kill an innocent person. Named after the infamous moral thought experiment, you are... Trolley Man. by MarauderOnReddit
"Tough. Not difficult, not painful, not annoying, just tough, that's how I would describe what my life had been like since I discovered my gift. I didn't live a hard life, but everything I saw was followed by the unstoppable chain of thought which someone like was bound to.
I discovered this ability to twist reality relatively young, so I had enough time to explore some nuances, for example how it can work for other species too, but not between different ones, and how it's not an unlimited power. How it is, sometimes, immediate and sometimes it takes its time. The more lives I mean to save, the more time it takes to properly set the conditions. One important thing I noticed, though, is the consequence-related death-limit: it doesn't work if saving someone will lead to the direct harm of someone else. The other interesting detail is that it's all influenced by my intention: I can choose who to save. But it's not what you're interested to, even if it's related, right? I will try to go straight to the point.
Since middle school I was influenced by this gift, as I said I got more and more interested into matters of life and death sooner than a child should be. I wouldn't recommend it. At first I began experimenting on animals. That scarred me, it's probably what made me somewhat insensible. Ants were the first of my conscious experiments: I established that a single one couldn't save an anthill, but a queen could. I didn't think about eggs and when I did I was already dedicated to more complex beings. Stray cats were next, and... Oh, sorry, the point, sure.
During High school, young and rebellious, I dove into ethics as a hobby, and into sciences for my future career. Chemistry turned out useful and I realised that right before enrolling to university. Easy choice. Before university I also experimented with the first human, maybe you remember the robbery it was on the national news for a while: many hostages were taken and the police intervention seemed too risky to even attempt safely, they eventually tried and nobody was harmed. Right after I strangled a homeless guy. It was defined a miracle, but I still feel guilty for the poor dude. Oh, interesting fact: it doesn't work if I kill someone who's already almost dead. Yes I'm the killer who disconnected those people in the hospital in my county. Yes, I know it's not the point, sorry, again, I'm too used to my thoughts' stream.
During university is when I both befriended the activists' groups and discovered that the definition of innocent could be stretched by a wide margin. I managed to successfully graduate, but as you've certainly read the papers you know it wasn't for a day to day job. I took part to some, as you would call them, terroristic assaults. That's when I discovered that I had to be the direct cause of the sacrifices' death and that's why after the first two none of them made victims. I know how to design bombs and thank my physicists and engineers colleagues, as well as google. And that brings us, finally, to the point.
You see, maybe your generation doesn't care enough for the planet, but you should think about mine, and the next too. We also live here and the climate crisis already claimed millions of lives. And that's why I plead guilty, your honour. I plead guilty of the attacks. I did run the organisation. And, most importantly, I did, during the span of the last six months, kill nineteen among the heads of the major oil companies and fossil fuel conglomerates of the world. I consider myself perfectly conscious of my actions and I was only stopped by the impossibility of doing more. It would be pointless trying to lie at this point.
I am confident that on the long run this will make its share and I will accept my punishment, if you find it ethical. I only pulled the lever, and hit those who broke the trolley's brakes."
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I write very rarely, please don't be harsh
_BlueFire_ t1_j6b3ogs wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in The Sad Truth About Today's World Illustrated By Steve Cutts, 2015 by Dmitry975
Exactly! These shows that the artist put at least a little bit of thinking into that. They're not as profound as the average elementary school essay
_BlueFire_ t1_j68p8p4 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in The Sad Truth About Today's World Illustrated By Steve Cutts, 2015 by Dmitry975
This. It has a base of truth, but it's cheesy to the point of feeling like being considered a preschool kid. And also so "i want this to be obvious and explicit" that it misses any possible shade (like, fuck, I'm born poor and I won't die poor, anyone reposting stuff like that never had to budget groceries)
_BlueFire_ t1_j4j46m1 wrote
Reply to comment by BafangFan in There’s a strong relationship between diet in early life and food preferences in adulthood, research finds by Additional-Two-7312
I can assure you from personal experience that varied diet is as much a social construct as mental health is
_BlueFire_ t1_j4j3odz wrote
Reply to comment by wallowsfan289 in There’s a strong relationship between diet in early life and food preferences in adulthood, research finds by Additional-Two-7312
Idk, I get my nutrients from veggies that I cook. That seems not enjoyable...
_BlueFire_ t1_j4dr0k2 wrote
Reply to comment by theythembian in How are animals given specific types of cancer for the purpose of medical experimentation? by InZerSchtinker
We're looking for alternatives, but until we'll be able to replicate an entire system in vitro the results won't be as reliable. That would lead to less reliable drugs or a much slower progress, as we would need human testing for more possible drugs.
There are those who see one way or the other as the better, it really depends on your "ethical priorities"
_BlueFire_ t1_j4dq8qt wrote
Reply to How are animals given specific types of cancer for the purpose of medical experimentation? by InZerSchtinker
It depends on the cancer: different animals behave in a more or less similar way to the human system, so after you've gone past the mice stage you choose the ones whose system more closely resembles the human one
_BlueFire_ t1_j2kp7ur wrote
Reply to When pharmaceutical companies develop new prescription drugs, do they test every method of delivery to the human body? For example, injected, orally, topically, rectally, etc? by scottyboy218
Hey, my field here (still in pharm school, but I'll specialize in delivery).
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Getting an approval is a long, hard and expensive process, all things that you want to avoid. On top of that, a patent expires after a while, so other companies who didn't spend money on the research process can manifacture the med and sell it (the so-called generic drugs), BUT you can extend the patent if you re-patent it in a different-enough formulation.
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Each route has its advantages and disadvantages, and the main ones are actually different enough to just choose in advance depending on the effect you need (instant vs slow release, for instance). However, there are A LOT of finer delivery methods which can be used, that can modulate the release (targeting something like a tumor or releasing through a precise pattern like concerta / ritalin XR, not to mention advanced methods that involves heat or other external stimuli).
Now, given 1) and 2), you can understand how the first try for at least a general method, the ones that fits the reason why it's being developed, patent and get the AIC (Italian for Autorizzazione all'Immissione in Commercio, don't know the English term, basically authorization to sell it) as soon as possible, after refining the chosen one.
After it's on sale, they'll find a way to repurpose or formulate it differently, maybe trying for an XR version, and testing for different delivery methods, which will be patented right before the other one expires. They calculate it to day precision.
_BlueFire_ t1_j2dzssy wrote
Reply to In opposite : could you list things cheap today that will be unaffordable in 2030 ? (and why) by salutbobby
Depending on "cheap" and "unaffordable" it may be a lot of things.
Cocoa will likely cost much more and will be less accessible, but depending on the climate situation and governments' policies we could begin to see beef price rise significantly (due, for example, to higher taxation on products which produces higher emissions)
_BlueFire_ t1_j26vkde wrote
Reply to A17 chip for iPhone 15 may focus more on battery life than power, suggests report by MicroSofty88
Finally! As an android user I've been hoping for this since at least 3 years ago. Hopefully once Apple will do that, it will set the trend.
_BlueFire_ t1_ixjra84 wrote
Reply to [WP] The ritual calls for 100 sacrifices, but after reading it carefully you realize that it never specified they had to be human. Deciding to be the smartass that you are, you got a petri dish full of bacteria and sacrificed them instead. by Prompt_Dude
The grand master had spoken: 100 sacrifices. That was the most important part of the ritual and creating your own, blank, grimoire was probably the most efficient initiation test, as you would have needed it to be a dark sorcerer in the first place and it was difficult enough to skim away the weak and less determined ones.
I was close to completing my task, it had taken an average amount of months to get the materials and the usual weeks to perfect the spells and set everything as needed. The only missing thing were the 100 sacrifices... The most laborious part and the one you shouldn't talk about. Some of the grand masters of the past had found creative ways to make wars begin and quickly got even more material, once they found a way to bond their death to the spell. Others had waited years to reach the number. Others were quicker, but somehow they never managed to become very powerful. Well, damn it, I would have changed things, I would have sacrificed millions... Millions of bacteria! Fungi, to be precise. I had thought about growing my culture, but a cut of fine cheese would have done the trick anyway.
​
"... and then you got nothing and wasted everything, didn't you?"
"FUCK! How is it possible? I did everything to the perfection, I focused on their lives, I have taken them, I-"
"Shut up, Alexander. You've always been so smart, yet so dumb..."
"But-"
"Value. The sacrifices are value. You're not the first one trying to sacrifice lesser means of life. Many quicken the process using dogs instead, after all it's needed that it's one hundred of something, obviously the result depends on what you use. If it's the same species you get finer results but it doesn't even need to be that way."
"So, the reason why you can't talk about it..."
"People would get suspicious about large amount of animals disappearing at once. They try to mitigate the inconvenience of inept trying this way. Yet, 100 chickens barely makes a book you can write a minor spell on, so that would be pointless. Now start again, we'll hang ut once you get your job done. You have potential and you know that. And don't ask me again how I'm finding 100 people: everyone has their personal way"
"Damn, it will be tedious, but I already have some ideas... Two years from tomorrow, the pub under the shortest tower, where we first met, vesper time at the table near the cellar door. I'll wait you there"
​
Now, I wouldn't have sacrificed him, he was my friend after all. But sneaking as much mages as I could among the 100 people would have made everything way more interesting...
_BlueFire_ t1_ixjisfn wrote
Reply to comment by IAmRobertoSanchez in Nano-robot antibodies that fight cancer enter first human drug trial by rmuktader
As a pharm technology major... As this time it doesn't involve other people's health, well, 100% their problem. Had enough of them during those last 3 years.
_BlueFire_ t1_ixjifl6 wrote
Reply to comment by GoldenRamoth in Nano-robot antibodies that fight cancer enter first human drug trial by rmuktader
Yeah, basically during the last 10ish years we've managed to better understand, study and make both specific antibodies and delivery means. Kay principles of this field and both pretty much unknown before 2000's
Edit.
Of course we knew about antibodies, but there have been terrific advancement in molecular biology and everything related to it, so now they can be designed and closely studied
_BlueFire_ t1_ixji0sy wrote
Fuck, yeah! Science!
I'm also very excited as after my degree and PhD I'd likely be designing the nanocarriers for such cures!
_BlueFire_ t1_it7k5wr wrote
Reply to comment by bofh000 in Why are black people inexistant in the fantasy/sci-fi genre by hater_first
Good point
_BlueFire_ t1_jdq2b0f wrote
Reply to LPT Request: What are some things you can do to improve your forgetfulness? by Fkingmeow
One of the many common symptoms of ADHD. Do a little research on the common symptoms, then if you can relate and are able to afford it do a screening. Please, don't self diagnose, there are enough people claiming to have whatever, which makes it pretty fucking difficult to be credible when you actually are diagnosed.