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Teen walks at graduation after completing doctoral degree at 17
  • I feel like you're weirdly aggro about this discussion. I don't want my message to come off as criticism or hate, I'm trying to express that I'm concerned about another person. If she really is happier because of her path, then that's great and more kids should attempt this lifestyle. But I just don't have enough evidence for that fact, and I would like to hear more. Most of the positive evidence is from a short article.

    Right now I have more anecdotal evidence saying this is unhealthy in this comment section than I do the contrary, so I want to be proven wrong. I don't want to be correct that someone had a bad experience.

    Your other questions are answered in the article.

    They really aren't. Of course she'll say she's thankful, most people would when talking to a reporter. I don't imagine many 17 year olds would immediately start bad-mouthing their parents right away, especially considering I'd expect the parents to be present in the interview process since she's a minor by U.S. standards.

    And of course the instructors are complimentary, you'd hear the same compliments about any student who asked questions and went to office hours. They aren't particularly unique for her experience, frankly. I wouldn't put too much weight on them being evidence of her happiness.

    Perhaps down the road she'll give an interview and talk about her experience more, once she's more independent and had more time to process and reflect. Then perhaps my questions will be properly answered. I can only hope so, and I can only hope she reflects positively.

    A kid who blew it all on Minecraft missed out on a lot as well if we’re going to be honest.

    I never said anything to the contrary. Both can be true, they aren't mutually exclusive. I would agree spending too much time glued to a screen is also not a healthy lifestyle for a child

  • boiled chicken eggs
  • Boy this is... Something else

  • Teen walks at graduation after completing doctoral degree at 17
  • We don't know, and that's precisely what my comment was talking about. I want to know more.

    Although we can use an educated guess that if you're getting a doctorate you probably don't have a ton of free time, at least not nearly as much as a normal student her age has. Even if we assume she doesn't need to study at all, a doctorate still takes up a lot of someone's time, and doesn't leave a ton of time for watching cartoons.

  • Getting older so I've decided I need to get into a routine of working out.
  • Great channels, they look like good resources. Maybe a little more intense for my liking, but I'll definitely watch some of the videos.

    Seems like most of the recommendations in the comments are all these absolute monsters whose biceps are larger than my leg. I'll be honest, it's a bit intimidating. I'd love a Regular JoeTM who just wants to workout a couple times a week and be a little healthier.

    However, I won't let my trepidation prevent me from watching the videos and learning what I can! Thanks for the recommendations.

  • Getting older so I've decided I need to get into a routine of working out.
  • what fun goals do you want to achieve with movement

    Be able to put on socks without pulling a muscle in my back 🌠

  • Why Didn't Democrats Do More When They Controlled Both Houses of Legislature, The White House, and The Supreme Court During Obama's First Term?
  • I would imagine its a case of mutually assured destruction. Neither wants to repeal it because they know once they do, they open up Pandora's box and Congress will be even more of a disaster than it currently is

  • All things bodyweight @lemmy.ml NotNotMike @programming.dev
    Getting older so I've decided I need to get into a routine of working out.

    Reached 30 and the wheels started falling off. Gained 20 pounds and back pain out of nowhere, it's like a damn sitcom. I feel uncomfortable in clothes I've worn for a decade so its time to put in effort. Better late than never I guess.

    I want advice on good beginner resources. I'm talking really beginner, like how many reps to do, how long between reps, what machines to hit, etc. I've been to gyms before but just kinda rode the reclined bike them made shit up when I got to the weight machines. I also am terrible at not doing too much with my back, which is almost certainly where my back pain originates from, so extra instruction on how to properly engage my core is a bonus.

    The one advantage I have is that I'm very good at tracking calories. I've just gotten lazy since Covid. So I've downloaded MacroFactor to try out some new technology. I've used Waistline recently but it's just too cumbersome to add food, and I lose motivation.

    Appreciate the help in advance!

    P.S. the one upside to turning 30 is that I can grow a beard now. So at least I've got that going for me

    8
    Why Didn't Democrats Do More When They Controlled Both Houses of Legislature, The White House, and The Supreme Court During Obama's First Term?
  • Less nice, more realizing that would remove their ability to stop the Republicans when the political winds inevitability shift the other way

  • Open source LaTeX book first release
  • Well yes, but also no. You can't reproduce a book because that violates copyrights.

    Open source in this context just means that nobody owns the book, you can reproduce it however many times you want, and distribute it where you want as long as you include the original license in the reproduction (MIT license).

    Also, there's a bit of a colloquial understanding that others are able to contribute or fork the original source material.

  • What's your favorite budget "little treat"?
  • Definitely make your own, if you can stomach the time. You can buy molds online for a cheap initial investment, then just water down some fruit juice.

    You can also use real fruit if you don't mind a chunkier texture and own a food processor already.

  • Teen walks at graduation after completing doctoral degree at 17
  • Excellent point on the peers, I was thinking about that as well.

    Humans love to talk to other humans who have shared experiences. People get excited when they find someone who went to the same school as them, even if they were years apart. Those shared experiences help us bond and connect with others.

    Who in the world can she bond with? Few people have experienced anything close to what she has. I worry that it will lead to somewhat of a lonely existence, at least until she's old enough that she has some more experiences under her belt and can begin to relate to others more. Until then, the experience that 95% of Americans share is missing.

    I'm hoping it's something that will balance out as she gets older, but I don't see it being a fun time for the first decade at least.

  • What's your favorite budget "little treat"?
  • Cheap popsicles. Relatively low calories (<100 depending on the brand), take a while to eat, and are extremely cheap.

    If you make your own you can drive the price and Calories even lower and drive the flavor way up.

    Side note: I just learned "popsicle" is the brand name and not a term for the food. Kind of like saying Kleenex instead of tissue. I had no idea, I've just always called them popsicles.

  • Nature Valley: 10 bars in 5 packs
  • The US has a lot of bullshit in their labeling requirements. My wife studied food science in university and some of her biggest complaints are:

    • Serving sizes aren't always the entire package*
    • "Natural" has almost no meaning on a package, it is just a hand-waving word
    • They can hide a lot of things in the ingredients under umbrella terms like "spices" and "flavorings"
    • "Made with real juice" does not mean it was made with the juice on the label. For example, a pineapple fruit juice may be more apple juice than actually pineapple juice
    • They can round down to 0 calories if the actual amount is below 5

    The most egregious example I've seen lately was a jar of pickles I bought where the serving size is 1/3 of a pickle (now the website says 1/2). That's just so that the sodium doesn't get out of control and, in all likelihood, because an entire pickle may be more than the 5 Calories allowed to say it's "0 Calories".

    *This is changing, slowly. Manufacturers now have to put servings for the entire container if it's small enough

  • Teen walks at graduation after completing doctoral degree at 17
  • I'm really torn on news like this.

    I'll get it out of the way that I am jealous. I wish I had been able to do what she did. I also think that if more people cared about education on this level, we could really get a significantly smarter population and start to solve some of the problems in the world.

    Having said that, I have concerns over what her life is like. I would need a lot more details to feel comfortable that this kind of lifestyle is healthy for someone. She missed out on most of her childhood at this point, a time most adults look back on fondly as a time when they had no responsibilities. I have so many follow-up questions that the article doesn't address.

    • Is she truly self-motivated or does she have someone like her parents urging her to do this?
    • Given a choice, would she do it again?
    • What was her workload like? Was she constantly studying or is she lucky enough to not need to?

    Also, more for my curiosity than anyone else's well-being:

    • How do you even sign a 10 year old up for college?
    • Do professors give leniency to an 11 year old in class or are they getting the same experience an 18 year old would get?
  • Pros and Cons of using Rider over Visual Studio

    Around two years ago I was on a really small team, just two or three developers, and the other developer decided they wanted us to use Rider. Because I didn't have a preference, I used Rider and rather enjoyed it. However, that developer has since moved teams and now it is just me (for the time being).

    So I was considering moving back to Visual Studio or even switching to Visual Studio Code, but I wanted to see some arguments against this.

    Here is my list so far, but it's probably out of date since I haven't used Visual Studio in a long time.

    Pros of Rider:

    • Much faster than using ReSharper
    • Less sharp interface with a better font
    • I'm used to it at this point
    • I have a Nyan cat loading bar which is kind of fun

    Cons of Rider:

    • Enterprise license is expensive (probably)
    • New versions of C# aren't immediately supported
    • Refactorings are becoming less necessary with the rise of AI assistants
    • Don't really like their source control manager

    Wanted to hear what other users think. What keeps you using Rider?

    3
    Why don't people care about human rights anymore?
  • This is definitely the issue. For most of modern history, humans haven't had to care about anything outside of their city/town/village from day to day. Then social media and 24/7 news came along and suddenly we know everything going on, and most of it is bad because that's what drives viewership.

    We shouldn't expect every person to be worried about every issue all the time. It's just not good for you.

    I'm personally trying not to focus on things outside of my sphere of influence. I'll vote in elections, donate if I can spare the money, volunteer if I can spare the time, and buy products I know are more ethical than alternatives. That's realistically the most anyone should ask of one (frankly unremarkable) person.

  • Removed Deleted
    When Did Actual Woman Agree On The Word “CIS”?
  • Because they are word roots. "trans-" means on the other side of something like "transatlantic" while "cis-" means on the same side like cisatlantic.

  • I'm just here to laugh at Spongebob memes
  • Banned for being a separatist shill

  • Hey Evolution! You know that involuntary flinch I do when I think of embarrassing things in my past, sometimes accompanied by a groan?
  • If I had to come up with a reason for it out of my ass, I'd say it's because being rejected from a tribe would be a death sentence for most, so those that remembered their mistakes were less likely to repeat them and be expelled.

  • What would you ask to a potential partner in a partner compatibility survey?
  • "Do you think fighting can be part of a healthy relationship?"

    My wife and I rarely fight, we've maybe had two or three in our entire relationship, and they weren't yelling matches We just got upset and patched things up relatively quickly. I don't think I could be with someone who thinks raising their voice at another person is okay, and surely not if they think it can be healthy. And hard "hell no" to any violence.

    So, this is a weedout question

  • What is the most downvoted post you've seen on Lemmy?
  • I see a lot of posts that are spam that get a shipload of down votes. Usually advertising some pills or something

    Fortunately, they are removed pretty quickly

    Edit: Hey look one showed up

  • Hey i just wanna know are raccoons evil in some kind of way ?
  • This is a really toxic way to look at animals. You should enjoy them not because they are cute and loving but because they are incredible beings that help craft the ecosystems in which we thrive. If not like them, then hopefully you can at least respect and accept them for what they are.

    As to your original question, raccoons are incredible animals. One of the few species who are so adaptable that they can manage to survive in our concrete world, despite our efforts to stop them. They're very intelligent and dexterous and it's incredible they continue to survive and borderline thrive at times.

  • I can't sit on the couch anymore without one (or both) of these goobers requesting a blanket fort. If they're desperate enough for a fix they'll even share

    I would recommend everyone try this. Just sit down, bend your knees, throw a blanket over, and show them the entrance. Just be warned they will not leave unless you make them

    10
    Pretty sure Mylo is part goat
    i.imgur.com Imgur

    Discover the magic of the internet at Imgur, a community powered entertainment destination. Lift your spirits with funny jokes, trending memes, entertaining gifs, inspiring stories, viral videos, and so much more from users.

    Imgur
    2
    Opinions needed: Best way to develop NuGet packages

    My favorite way to develop applications is microservices, or at least smaller services that can separate concerns a little bit. In our current application, there is an API we've created with an OAS document and an auto-generated .NET SDK based on the document. We then have a web console that makes calls to the backend API using the SDK and, ideally, customers would also use the SDK.

    So my question to everyone is: what is the best "flow" to develop a NuGet package?

    Currently, we have pipelines which publish the NuGet package of the SDK to our internal NuGet repository on every commit within a merge request. We have a manually incrementing semver with an additional build number tacked on (for example 1.2.3+abc123).

    Now this works pretty well, but we often run into problems where a tester's NuGet doesn't pull down the latest version based on the build number if it detects it has the proper semver number. For example, if we create 1.2.3+abc456 NuGet won't pull down this version as long as it has the original 1.2.3+abc123 in its .nuget/packages directory. Testers and developers have to manually delete the version from the packages directory and do a fresh restore.

    So, is there a better way to do build numbers? Or should I be deleting the NuGet package from the private repository every time (doesn't sound ideal...)?

    The other part of this question is what is the best way to develop and test NuGet packages locally?

    My current flow is a PowerShell script which will create the new .nupkg file, publish it to a local/filesystem NuGet directory with some random semver number (i.e., 9.9.9), update the .csproj with the version (temporarily), and then do a fresh dotnet restore on the target project. However, this can be cumbersome and feels like something that should be built into the dotnet command. Am I missing something, or is this really the best way to develop locally?

    5
    Adding Ecosia to Firefox Android without the App

    You can add Ecosia as a search engine to Firefox Android by going to Settings - Default Search Engine - Add then entering the following:

    • Name - Ecosia
    • Search URL - https://ecosia.org/search?q=%s
    • Complete URL - https://ac.ecosia.org/autocomplete?q=%s&type=list

    This will also allow you to use the Firefox Search widget on your home screen to search Ecosia.

    I tried using the Addon to no avail, so I had to manually add the search myself.

    Thanks for creating the community! I had forgotten to use Ecosia on Android for a while now. So much missed opportunity

    0
    Dive into Deep Learning - Free, online, and open source book about deep learning

    https://d2l.ai/

    The book was written originally by a group of Amazon engineers and strives to be a resource on getting started with deep learning.

    Even if you have no interest in developing models, you should be aware of how they work under the hood.

    For the AI enthusiasts, it makes them more interesting. For the AI doomists, it makes them less scary.

    The book being online and an easy to remember URI makes this a great reference book that you can access from any device with an internet connection. You could read the whole thing with cURL if you were feeling wacky. You can also clone the repo and host it locally if you want to "own" a copy.

    They are releasing a physical book in English this week, so for you collectors out there can have something for your shelves.

    0
    cute dogs, cats, and other animals @lemmy.ml NotNotMike @programming.dev
    'Tis the season for fireplaces
    6
    cute dogs, cats, and other animals @lemmy.ml NotNotMike @programming.dev
    This cat bed is heated, so it's naturally the best seat in the house
    9
    notnotmike NotNotMike @programming.dev

    Also find me at @NotNotMike@Notnotmike@beehaw.org and @NotNotMike@NotNotMike@notnotlemmy.com

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