1. Apr 2024
    1. RRID:AB_390204

      DOI: 10.1101/2024.04.05.588321

      Resource: (Millipore Cat# AB152, RRID:AB_390204)

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:AB_390204


      What is this?

    2. RRID:AB_3083500

      DOI: 10.1101/2024.04.05.588321

      Resource: (Takara Bio Cat# 632393, RRID:AB_3083500)

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:AB_3083500


      What is this?

    3. RRID:SCR_000441

      DOI: 10.1101/2024.04.05.588321

      Resource: EthoVision XT (RRID:SCR_000441)

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:SCR_000441


      What is this?

    4. RRID:SCR_001622

      DOI: 10.1101/2024.04.05.588321

      Resource: MATLAB (RRID:SCR_001622)

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:SCR_001622


      What is this?

    5. RRID:SCR_024878

      DOI: 10.1101/2024.04.05.588321

      Resource: RZ5P Fiber Photometry Processor (RRID:SCR_024878)

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:SCR_024878


      What is this?

    6. RRID:SCR_024880

      DOI: 10.1101/2024.04.05.588321

      Resource: Wireless Running Wheel Hub (RRID:SCR_024880)

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:SCR_024880


      What is this?

    7. RRID:IMSR_JAX:030328

      DOI: 10.1101/2024.04.05.588321

      Resource: (IMSR Cat# JAX_030328,RRID:IMSR_JAX:030328)

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:IMSR_JAX:030328


      What is this?

    8. RRID:SCR_024879

      DOI: 10.1101/2024.04.05.588321

      Resource: Wireless Running Wheel (RRID:SCR_024879)

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:SCR_024879


      What is this?

    9. RRID:Addgene_50459

      DOI: 10.1101/2024.04.05.588321

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_50459

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_50459


      What is this?

    10. RRID:IMSR_JAX:006660

      DOI: 10.1101/2024.04.05.588321

      Resource: (IMSR Cat# JAX_006660,RRID:IMSR_JAX:006660)

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:IMSR_JAX:006660


      What is this?

    11. RRID:IMSR_JAX:000664

      DOI: 10.1101/2024.04.05.588321

      Resource: (IMSR Cat# JAX_000664,RRID:IMSR_JAX:000664)

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:IMSR_JAX:000664


      What is this?

    1. Addgene_109392

      DOI: 10.1101/2024.04.08.588465

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_109392

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_109392


      What is this?

    2. Addgene_66076

      DOI: 10.1101/2024.04.08.588465

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_66076

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_66076


      What is this?

    3. Addgene_66073

      DOI: 10.1101/2024.04.08.588465

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_66073

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_66073


      What is this?

    1. plasmid_46919

      DOI: 10.1093/hmg/ddae003

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_46919

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_46919


      What is this?

    2. plasmid_52961

      DOI: 10.1093/hmg/ddae003

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_52961

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_52961


      What is this?

    3. plasmid_86708

      DOI: 10.1093/hmg/ddae003

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_86708

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_86708


      What is this?

    4. Addgene_99248

      DOI: 10.1093/hmg/ddae003

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_99248

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_99248


      What is this?

    1. plasmid_50374

      DOI: 10.1091/mbc.E23-06-0257

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_50374

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_50374


      What is this?

    2. plasmid_54742

      DOI: 10.1091/mbc.E23-06-0257

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_54742

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_54742


      What is this?

    3. plasmid_54640

      DOI: 10.1091/mbc.E23-06-0257

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_54640

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_54640


      What is this?

    4. plasmid_166894

      DOI: 10.1091/mbc.E23-06-0257

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_166894

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_166894


      What is this?

    1. RRID:AB_621841

      DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2024.113851

      Resource: (LI-COR Biosciences Cat# 926-32221, RRID:AB_621841)

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:AB_621841


      What is this?

    2. RRID:AB_621847

      DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2024.113851

      Resource: (LI-COR Biosciences Cat# 926-32212, RRID:AB_621847)

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:AB_621847


      What is this?

    1. Addgene_65196

      DOI: 10.7554/eLife.92819

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_65196

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_65196


      What is this?

    2. Addgene_206043

      DOI: 10.7554/eLife.92819

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_206043

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_206043


      What is this?

    3. Addgene_206042

      DOI: 10.7554/eLife.92819

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_206042

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_206042


      What is this?

    4. Addgene_80491

      DOI: 10.7554/eLife.92819

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_80491

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_80491


      What is this?

    1. Addgene_53739

      DOI: 10.1038/s41556-024-01368-0

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_53739

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_53739


      What is this?

    2. Addgene_15029

      DOI: 10.1038/s41556-024-01368-0

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_15029

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_15029


      What is this?

    3. Addgene_20011

      DOI: 10.1038/s41556-024-01368-0

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_20011

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_20011


      What is this?

    1. Addgene_71236

      DOI: 10.1038/s41419-024-06681-y

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_71236

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_71236


      What is this?

    2. Addgene_52961

      DOI: 10.1038/s41419-024-06681-y

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_52961

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_52961


      What is this?

    3. Addgene_12247

      DOI: 10.1038/s41419-024-06681-y

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_12247

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_12247


      What is this?

    1. plasmid_62225

      DOI: 10.1021/acssynbio.3c00628

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_62225

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_62225


      What is this?

    2. plasmid_62226

      DOI: 10.1021/acssynbio.3c00628

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_62226

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_62226


      What is this?

    3. plasmid_103063

      DOI: 10.1021/acssynbio.3c00628

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_103063

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_103063


      What is this?

    1. RRID:Addgene_126859

      DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkae189

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_126859

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_126859


      What is this?

    2. RRID:Addgene_160732

      DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkae189

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_160732

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_160732


      What is this?

    3. RRID:Addgene_160731

      DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkae189

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_160731

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_160731


      What is this?

    1. Addgene_127078

      DOI: 10.1016/j.mec.2024.e00233

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_127078

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_127078


      What is this?

    1. Addgene_72666

      DOI: 10.1038/s42003-024-06190-w

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_72666

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_72666


      What is this?

    2. Addgene_67975

      DOI: 10.1038/s42003-024-06190-w

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_67975

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_67975


      What is this?

    3. Addgene_34615

      DOI: 10.1038/s42003-024-06190-w

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_34615

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_34615


      What is this?

    4. plasmid_61426

      DOI: 10.1038/s42003-024-06190-w

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_61426

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_61426


      What is this?

    5. Addgene_67980

      DOI: 10.1038/s42003-024-06190-w

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_67980

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_67980


      What is this?

    6. Addgene_68343

      DOI: 10.1038/s42003-024-06190-w

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_68343

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_68343


      What is this?

    7. Addgene_12260

      DOI: 10.1038/s42003-024-06190-w

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_12260

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_12260


      What is this?

    1. SCR_008394

      DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2024.113807

      Resource: Python Programming Language (RRID:SCR_008394)

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:SCR_008394


      What is this?

    2. SCR_001622

      DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2024.113807

      Resource: MATLAB (RRID:SCR_001622)

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:SCR_001622


      What is this?

    3. Plasmid_26969

      DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2024.113807

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_26969

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_26969


      What is this?

    4. JAX:006474

      DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2024.113807

      Resource: (IMSR Cat# JAX_006474,RRID:IMSR_JAX:006474)

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:IMSR_JAX:006474


      What is this?

    5. CRL:027

      DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2024.113807

      Resource: (IMSR Cat# CRL_027,RRID:IMSR_CRL:027)

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:IMSR_CRL:027


      What is this?

    1. Addgene_135672

      DOI: 10.1101/2024.04.11.589139

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_135672

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_135672


      What is this?

    2. plasmid_135667

      DOI: 10.1101/2024.04.11.589139

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_135667

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_135667


      What is this?

    3. plasmid_17448

      DOI: 10.1101/2024.04.11.589139

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_17448

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_17448


      What is this?

    4. plasmid_21850

      DOI: 10.1101/2024.04.11.589139

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_21850

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_21850


      What is this?

    5. plasmid_111177

      DOI: 10.1101/2024.04.11.589139

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_111177

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_111177


      What is this?

    1. Addgene_27080

      DOI: 10.1038/s41598-024-59033-3

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_27080

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_27080


      What is this?

    2. Addgene_27077

      DOI: 10.1038/s41598-024-59033-3

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_27077

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_27077


      What is this?

    3. Addgene_52394

      DOI: 10.1038/s41598-024-59033-3

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_52394

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_52394


      What is this?

    1. plasmid_31937

      DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-47680-z

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_31937

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_31937


      What is this?

    2. RRID:Addgene_12457

      DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-47680-z

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_12457

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_12457


      What is this?

    3. RRID:Addgene_12456

      DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-47680-z

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_12456

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_12456


      What is this?

    4. RRID:Addgene_41824

      DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-47680-z

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_41824

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_41824


      What is this?

    5. RRID:Addgene_63800

      DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-47680-z

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_63800

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_63800


      What is this?

    6. RRID:Addgene_73501

      DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-47680-z

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_73501

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_73501


      What is this?

    7. RRID:Addgene_73498

      DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-47680-z

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_73498

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_73498


      What is this?

    1. RRID:Addgene_61887

      DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-47928-8

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_61887

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_61887


      What is this?

    2. RRID:Addgene_61885

      DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-47928-8

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_61885

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_61885


      What is this?

    3. RRID:Addgene_61884

      DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-47928-8

      Resource: RRID:Addgene_61884

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_61884


      What is this?

    1. RRID:AB_1071127

      DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-48010-z

      Resource: (Thermo Fisher Scientific Cat# MA1-19543, RRID:AB_1071127)

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:AB_1071127


      What is this?

    2. RRID:AB_494012

      DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-48010-z

      Resource: (Thermo Fisher Scientific Cat# 56-0441-80, RRID:AB_494012)

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:AB_494012


      What is this?

    3. RRID:AB_2860344

      DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-48010-z

      Resource: (Sino Biological Cat# 11388-MM03-P, RRID:AB_2860344)

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:AB_2860344


      What is this?

    4. RRID:AB_2535710

      DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-48010-z

      Resource: (Thermo Fisher Scientific Cat# A-21039, RRID:AB_2535710)

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:AB_2535710


      What is this?

    5. RRID:AB_2338714

      DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-48010-z

      Resource: (Jackson ImmunoResearch Labs Cat# 115-175-166, RRID:AB_2338714)

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:AB_2338714


      What is this?

    6. RRID:AB_2341188

      DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-48010-z

      Resource: (Cell Signaling Technology Cat# 9661, RRID:AB_2341188)

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:AB_2341188


      What is this?

    7. RRID:AB_2117114

      DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-48010-z

      Resource: (Bethyl Cat# A300-286A, RRID:AB_2117114)

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:AB_2117114


      What is this?

    8. RRID:AB_2082644

      DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-48010-z

      Resource: (Bio-Rad Cat# 2150-0140, RRID:AB_2082644)

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:AB_2082644


      What is this?

    9. RRID:AB_2910138

      DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-48010-z

      Resource: (Sigma-Aldrich Cat# SAB5600105, RRID:AB_2910138)

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:AB_2910138


      What is this?

    10. RRID:AB_2114471

      DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-48010-z

      Resource: (Agilent Cat# M0823, RRID:AB_2114471)

      Curator: @scibot

      SciCrunch record: RRID:AB_2114471


      What is this?

    1. RRID:IMSR_000664

      DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2024.114149

      Resource: (IMSR Cat# JAX_000664,RRID:IMSR_JAX:000664)

      Curator: @abever99

      SciCrunch record: RRID:IMSR_JAX:000664


      What is this?

    2. RRID:AB_221958

      DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2024.114149

      Resource: (R and D Systems Cat# AF3074, RRID:AB_2201958)

      Curator: @abever99

      SciCrunch record: RRID:AB_2201958


      What is this?

    1. s Jimhad written,themagicofChristianitywasitspotentialtobreakthevendettaand endthecycleofviolence.Andithad. Looking aroundthissmallgathering provided ampleevidence.AgenerationagoTomowouldhave hadtoavengeTofio’sdeathbykillingWepe.Wepe’sgroup had beenraided byKento’sfather,Niiwa.Wepeinturnhad raidedKowe. Noneofthemcouldbe sittingtogether.What-everelseithadwrought,Christianity had stoppedthespearingraidsthe killingofinnocentwomen,infanticide, andtheliveburialofchildren.

      hmmmm... interesting point but worthy of a critical lens here I think

    2. HowdoyougiveEnglishwordstoalanguagesorichinonomatopoeiaandpunctuatedwiththesoundsoftheforest

      importance of language

    1. Muslims should be treated as free men, not as slaves

      I believe this to be an inherent property of Islamic society, but not the overarching goal of it. As we've discussed a good portion of Arabic philosophy stems from translation of Aristotle. While he values political science as the highest good and notes the importance of political freedom, I believe it is his concept of philia that is the center of the Islamic political world. I think achieving political freedom is ensured in the cultivation of philia in a society. Philia holds the notion that we should all treat another as if we are a friend. Rather than just random faces on the street, applying philia makes society more interpersonal. In order to treat someone like a friend, a true friend, equality of persons is required. One could not apply philia to someone they treat like a slave. Political freedom is not necessarily the goal, but an ensured outcome in reaching for the goal of cultivation of philia. Ultimately, I think the goal of Islamic society is to be a virtuous one, under aristotle's definition and conditions. Respecting other's political freedom is simply one aspect of that.

    Annotators

    1. [:doc | | fileName | fileName := (doc url asString splitOn: $:) last , '.md'. doc file: folder / fileName. doc exportAsFile. ]

      Bloque compuesto por las siguientes variables:

      • Iterador: :doc

      • Argumento: | fileName := (doc url asString splitOn: $:) last , '.md'. doc file: folder / fileName. doc exportAsFile.

      • Objetos: a fileName y a doc file se les mandan unas asignaciones.

      • Mensaje: exportAsFile.

    2. memories do: [:doc | | fileName | fileName := (doc url asString splitOn: $:) last , '.md'. doc file: folder / fileName. doc exportAsFile. ]

      Se hace uso de un iterador y se manda un mensaje al bloque.

      • Objeto: memories.
      • Mensaje: do.
      • Argumento: bloque [:doc | | fileName | fileName := (doc url asString splitOn: $:) last , '.md'. doc file: folder / fileName. doc exportAsFile. ]
    3. memories doWithIndex: [:item :index | item metadata at: 'title' put: 'Unidades semanticas, sesión ', index asString ].

      Esto también vendría siendo un bloque, ciclo e iterador, ya que utiliza los iteradores :item e :index para mandar un mensaje dentro de un bloque.

      • Objeto: memories
      • Mensaje: doWithIndex
      • Argumento: el bloque [:item :index | item metadata at: 'title' put: 'Unidades semanticas, sesión ', index asString ].
    4. [:item :index | item metadata at: 'title' put: 'Unidades semanticas, sesión ', index asString ].

      Esto es un bloque que tiene las siguientes variables:

      • Iteradores: :item e :index

      • Argumento: | item metadata at: 'title' put: 'Unidades semanticas, sesión ', index asString

      • La barra vertical "|" separa la definición de cada argumento con la parte que indica qué se debe hacer con cada elemento.

      • Mensaje: se le pide que a cada item se le ponga el título de 'Unidades semanticas, sesión '. En este caso, title put son mensajes.

      • El index asString indica que se forme una colección para el índice.

    5. [:session | doc := HedgeDoc new url: commonAddress, session asString; retrieveContents. ]

      Esto vendría siendo un bloque y sus variables serían:

      • Iterador: :session

      • Argumento: | doc := HedgeDoc new url: commonAddress, session asString; retrieveContents.

      • La barra vertical "|" separa la definición de cada argumento con la parte que indica qué se debe hacer con cada elemento.

      • Objetos: Doc y url son objetos que se les manda un mensaje.

      • Mensajes: new, ya que pide crear un nuevo HedgedDoc y retrieveContents ya que pide recuperarlos.

      • asString, pide la colección de las sesiones.

    1. For platens 83-98 Shore A depending on the amount of copies being typed. From personal experience though 83A is super soft and the slugs sink into it a bit too much, the sweet spot is around 87-90 Shore A imo.
    1. Considera un formato de versión X.Y.Z (Mayor.Menor.Parche). Las correcciones de errores que no afectan el API incrementan la versión parche. Adiciones o sustracciones compatibles con versiones anteriores incrementan la versión menor, y cambios en el API incompatibles con versiones anteriores incrementan la versión mayor.

      Explica las reglas de versionado semántico sobre cómo incrementar las versiones según el tipo de cambio.

    2. Si las especificaciones de la dependencias son muy estrictas, estarás en peligro de bloquear una versión (la inhabilidad de actualizar un paquete sin tener que publicar una nueva versión de cada otro paquete dependiente). Si las dependencias son especificadas de forma muy relajada, inevitablemente serás mordido por versiones promiscuas (asumir la compatibilidad con próximas versiones más allá de lo razonable). El Infierno de Dependencias es donde estás cuando una versión bloqueada y/o promiscua previenen que muevas tu proyecto adelante de forma fácil y segura.

      Los dos problemas principales son: bloqueo de versiones (no poder actualizar sin afectar otras dependencias) y versiones promiscuas (asumir compatibilidad con nuevas versiones sin garantías).

    1. In addition, water infrastructure is often destroyed during military operations in deliberate attacks, which violates international humanitarian law.

      Amnesty International “Troubled Waters,” 15.

    2. . Furthermore, water tariffs are considered too high as well.

      Al-Kjatib Issam, et al, “Analysis of a current water tariff and attitudes towards change: A representative study from a Palestinian city,” Water and Environment Journal 37, no. 4: 770-781.

    3. 97% of water is not drinkable, and a quarter of all disease in Gaza is caused by water contamination. Al Jazeera

      “Weaponising water in Palestine”

    1. Military Order 92 of 1967: the Israeli army was granted complete authority over all water-related issues in the regionMilitary Order 291 of 1968: annulled all land and water-related arrangements which existed prior to Israel’s occupation of the West BankMilitary order 158 of 1967: Palestinians are not allowed to construct any new water infrastructure without an Israeli military permitAmnesty International states that “These and other Israeli Military Orders remain in force today in the OPT [occupied Palestinian territory] and apply only to Palestinians. They do NOT apply to Israeli settlers in the OPT, who are subject to Israeli civilian law.”

      Amnesty International “Troubled Waters: Palestinians Denied Fair Access to Water.” Accessed 30 March 2024. www.amnesty.org/en/documents/mde15/027/2009/en/

    1. ‘You have to feel the land in you and drink its water.” Um Muhammed, midwife and healer

      Naguib, Women, Water and Memory, 76.

    2. “Water is life, and people’s life can be grasped and studied through water.” Nefissa Naguib, anthropologist

      Naguib, Nefissa. Women, Water and Memory : Recasting Lives in Palestine (BRILL, 2008), 1, ProQuest Ebook Central, https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/lafayettecol-ebooks/detail.action?docID=468287.

    1. Mix thoroughly and incubate for 5 minutes with periodic shaking

      How essential is this periodic shaking? OmegaBiotek's similar protocol doesn't have this

      1. Pipet up and down 5-10 times or vortex for 30 seconds.
      2. Let sit at room temperature for 5 minutes. source: Manual for Mag-Bind® TotalPure NGS
    1. “When we built this settlement, we never took one square inch of Palestinian land…Look at the hills of this landscape…They [Palestinians] don’t plant! They don’t cultivate. We made something here.” Ron Nahman, mayor of Israeli Ariel settlement

      Fields, Gary. “‘This is Our Land’: Collective Violence, Property Law, and Imagining the Geography of Palestine.” Journal of Cultural Geography 29, no. 3 (Oct. 2012): 279.

    2. “From the first moment of the Zionist idea, the Zionist propaganda described the land to which we were headed as desolate and forsaken, impatiently waiting for its redeemers” Moshe Smilansky, founder of the agricultural colony of Rehovot

      Leshem, N. (2013). Repopulating the Emptiness: A Spatial Critique of Ruination in Israel/Palestine,” Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 31, no. 3: 522-537.

    1. In contrast, Israeli citizens do not have to worry about taps running dry.

      “Weaponising Water in Palestine” Al Jazeera, 27 Jul. 2023, www.aljazeera.com/program/people-power/2023/7/27/weaponising-water-in-palestine.

    2. Palestinians receive only 75% of their allocated water and must purchase often low quality water at high prices to meet their needs.

      Spreadborough, Natasha. “From the River to the Sea,” 470.

    3. Palestine is not recognized as a state under the Oslo accords, and its main governing body, the Palestinian Authority, has little control over resources.

      Spreadborough, Natasha. “From the River to the Sea,” 469.

    4. These main water sources are under the practical and legal control of Israel

      Spreadborough, Natasha. “From the River to the Sea: Water Conflict and International Law in Israel and Palestine.” Wisconsin International Law Journal, vol. 39, no. 3, Mar. 2022, pp. 459–84. EBSCOhost, research.ebsco.com/linkprocessor/plink?id=14061435-aac2-3bf6-b3a6-6b1efa90ece5. Accessed 6 March 2024, 468.

    1. Think carefully before you post. Anything you share online can stay there a long time, even after you delete it.

      When posting something out in the internet, you have to be careful. Anything and everything stays online even when you delete something.

    2. Social media can allow you to connect with others, both people you’ve met in person and people you meet online.

      Social media is becoming more prominent in both school and out in the world. We text our friends when were bored and we use social media to see those we haven't seen in awhile. Social Media is a great way to connect with new and old friends.

    1. Ain't it possible that every message I send or forward will just be replaced to the outbox and will be send by Thunderbird in the background ? I really hate it that every message sends itself away, running on top of all other windows, and it makes me wait till it has been sent from reading my other messages...
    1. memories do: [:doc | | fileName | fileName := (doc url asString splitOn: $:) last , '.md'. doc file: folder / fileName. doc exportAsFile. ]

      -memories do: [:doc | ... ] es un mensaje keyword do: enviado a la colección memories. El argumento es un bloque de código que se ejecutará para cada elemento de la colección.

      -[:doc | ... ] es el bloque de código que se ejecutará para cada elemento de la colección memories. El argumento doc representa cada elemento individual de la colección.

      -| fileName | es una declaración de variable temporal dentro del bloque. Esta variable fileName solo existe dentro del ámbito del bloque.

      -fileName := (doc url asString splitOn: $:) last , '.md' asigna un valor a la variable fileName.

      -doc file: folder / fileName envía el mensaje keyword file: al objeto doc, pasando como argumento la ruta completa folder / fileName. Esto asigna la ruta de archivo al objeto doc.

      -doc exportAsFile envía el mensaje exportAsFile al objeto doc, lo que probablemente guardará el contenido del objeto doc en el archivo especificado anteriormente.

    2. folder := FileLocator temp / 'Semanticas'.

      -FileLocator es una clase de Pharo que proporciona acceso a ubicaciones de archivos y carpetas en el sistema de archivos.

      -temp es un mensaje unario enviado a la clase FileLocator que devuelve una referencia al directorio temporal del sistema operativo.

      -El resultado de FileLocator temp / 'Semanticas' es un objeto Folder (carpeta) que representa la ruta completa al directorio temporal más la subcarpeta 'Semanticas'.

    3. memories doWithIndex: [:item :index | item metadata at: 'title' put: 'Unidades semanticas, sesión ', index asString ].

      -item metadata accede al diccionario de metadatos del objeto item actual.

      -at: 'title' busca la clave 'title' en el diccionario de metadatos. put: 'Unidades semanticas, sesión '

      -, index asString asigna un nuevo valor a la clave 'title' en el diccionario de metadatos. Este nuevo valor es una cadena que combina el texto 'Unidades semanticas, sesión ' con la representación en cadena del índice actual (index asString).

    4. memories := sessions collect: [:session | doc := HedgeDoc new url: commonAddress, session asString; retrieveContents. ]

      -sessions es una colección de objetos

      -collect: es un mensaje que se envía a la colección sessions. Este mensaje toma un bloque de código (representado por [:session | ... ]) como argumento.

      -El bloque de código [:session | ... ] se ejecuta una vez por cada elemento de la colección sessions. En cada iteración, el valor actual se asigna al parámetro session dentro del bloque.

      -Dentro del bloque, se crea una nueva instancia de HedgeDoc llamada doc. Esta instancia se inicializa con dos argumentos:

      -commonAddress: una cadena de texto que representa una URL o dirección común.

      -session asString: Convierte el objeto session actual en una cadena de texto.

      -Después de crear la instancia doc, se envía el mensaje retrieveContents a esta instancia.

      -El resultado de la evaluación del bloque [:session | ... ] para cada elemento de sessions se recolecta en una nueva colección llamada memories.

    5. commonAddress := 'https://docutopia.sustrato.red/semanticas:24A'. sessions := 1 to: 11

      En Pharo, un "mensaje unario" se refiere a un mensaje que se envía a un objeto sin necesidad de proporcionar argumentos adicionales.

      • commonAddress es el nombre del mensaje unario que se está enviando a un objeto.
      • 'https://docutopia.sustrato.red/semanticas:24A' es el objeto receptor del mensaje commonAddress.
    1. The Selfish Gene. December 2023. Page Version ID: 1188207750. URL: https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_Selfish_Gene&oldid=1188207750 (visited on 2023-12-08).

      The book argues that genes are the primary unit of natural selection, acting selfishly to ensure their own survival. It introduces the concept of "selfish genes" to explain why certain biological traits persist across generations. It further states that organisms can be viewed as vehicles for their genes.

    2. Pyramid scheme. December 2023. Page Version ID: 1188350070. URL: https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Pyramid_scheme&oldid=1188350070 (visited on 2023-12-08).

      This article discussed about Pyramid schemes and how the business model work. It states how as more and more people are entering the schemes, it gets harder for them to be profitable and majority of the time to be illegal. I seen many Pyramid schemes during covid, crypto scams and etc. I always knew that there was some sort of hidden secret to them and always wonder how they work. However, I did not know they were illegal.

    3. Drew Harwell and Taylor Lorenz. Sorry you went viral. Washington Post, October 2022. URL: https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/interactive/2022/tiktok-viral-fame-harassment/ (visited on 2023-12-08).

      This article tells the story of "TikTok stars", and how stressful and damaging that can be. Going viral on TikTok is an invitation for harassment and death threats on and offline, especially for those that are a part of the LGBTQ+ community. There are also issues with TikTok's unfair and unclear moderation, which has higher stakes if creators depend on TikTok for their income.

    4. Oliver Tearle. Who Said, ‘A Lie Is Halfway Round the World Before the Truth Has Got Its Boots On’? June 2021. URL: https://interestingliterature.com/2021/06/lie-halfway-round-world-before-truth-boots-on-quote-origin-meaning/ (visited on 2023-12-08).

      Oliver Tearle's article explores the origins and meaning of the famous saying: "A lie is halfway around the world before the truth arrives." This quote illustrates how quickly misinformation spreads, while accurate information spreads more slowly. This quote highlights the challenges we face in combating false information and disinformation. In an age dominated by social media and instant messaging, the ability of false information to spread quickly has only increased. The public is drawn to some fake stunts on social media. This reality highlights the importance of critical thinking and fact-checking in our daily lives. It also reminds us that combating the spread of lies and pursuing the truth is what we need to do. Don't be blinded by lies.

    1. Summary of Raph Levien's Blog: "Towards principled reactive UI"

      Introduction

      • Diversity of Reactive UI Systems: The blog notes the diversity in reactive UI systems primarily sourced from open-source projects. Levien highlights a lack of comprehensive literature but acknowledges existing sources offer insights into better practices. His previous post aimed to organize these diverse patterns.
        • "There is an astonishing diversity of 'literature' on reactive UI systems."

      Goals of the Inquiry

      • Clarifying Inquiry Goals: Levien sets goals not to review but to guide inquiry into promising avenues of reactive UI in Rust, likening it to mining for rich veins of ore rather than stamp collecting.
        • "I want to do mining, not stamp collecting."

      Main Principles Explored

      • Observable Objects vs. Future-like Polling: Discusses the importance of how systems manage observable objects or utilize future-like polling for efficient UI updates.
      • Tree Mutations: How to express mutation in the render object tree is crucial, focusing on maintaining stable node identities within the tree.
        • "Then I will go into deeper into three principles, which I feel are critically important in any reactive UI framework."

      Crochet: A Research Prototype

      • Introduction of Crochet: Introduces 'Crochet', a prototype exploring these principles, acknowledging its current limitations and potential for development.
        • "Finally, I will introduce Crochet, a research prototype built for the purpose of exploring these ideas."

      Goals for Reactive UI

      • Concise Application Logic: Emphasizes the need for concise, clear application logic that drives UI efficiently, with reactive UI allowing declarative state expressions of the view tree.
        • "The main point of a reactive UI architecture is so that the app can express its logic clearly and concisely."
      • Incremental Updates: Advocates for incremental updates in UI rendering to avoid performance issues related to full re-renders, highlighting the limitations of systems like imgui and the potential of systems like Conrod, despite its shortcomings.
        • "While imgui can express UI concisely, it cheats somewhat by not being incremental."

      Evaluation of Existing Systems

      • Comparison with Other Systems: Mentions SwiftUI, imgui, React, and Svelte, discussing their approaches to handling reactive UI and their adaptability to Rust.
        • "SwiftUI has gained considerable attention due to its excellent ergonomics in this regard."

      Technical Challenges and Proposals

      • Challenges in Tree Mutation and Stable Identity: Discusses the challenges in tree mutation techniques and the importance of stable identity in UI components to preserve user interaction states.
        • "Mutation of the DOM is expressed through a well-specified and reasonably ergonomic, if inefficient, interface."

      Conclusion and Future Work

      • Future Directions and Experiments: Encourages experimentation with the Crochet prototype and discusses the ongoing development and research in making reactive UIs more efficient and user-friendly.
        • "I encourage people to experiment with the Crochet code."

      This blog post encapsulates Levien's ongoing exploration into developing a principled approach to reactive UI in Rust, highlighting the complexity of the task and his experimental prototype, Crochet, as a step towards solving these challenges.

    1. Paid promotion and ads, where someone pays money to have their content replicated

      A lot of people on social media cares about the "replicate volume", which is how many times the video or article has been forwarding by people. Therefore, if the data is good, more people are likely to look at the content.

    2. There are ways of duplicating that are built into social media platforms:

      There is "duplication" on social media. For example, if I see a funny post on TikTok, I can forward it to my friends and they will see the same thing. There are also variations/mutations. Let's say my friends and I want to shoot a TikTok and upload it online. We will learn the background music or dance of other bloggers. On the basis of these, we will add some extra movements or other things. This kind of "borrowing" is very common on social media. We will find that after a background music or dance becomes popular, everyone will create or imitate it based on it.

    1. p = 0.04 means there is only 4% probability of observing this 5-point difference (in either direction) between the two groups if in fact there was no difference between the groups (i.e., the null hypothesis that the difference is zero). In other words, there is only 4% probability that the differences found between the two groups were just due to chance (i.e., they are not “true differences”).

      These descriptions of a p-value are erroneous. Should be 5 point difference or more; and the p-value is not the probability the difference was "just due to chance". See items #2 and #9 of "Statistical tests, confidence intervals, and power: A guide to misinterpretations". The American Statistician, 70, https://www.jstor.org/stable/44851769

    1. DeSo is an example of a purpose built blockchain that is storage oriented and specially equipped to handle a lot of post-sized content.

      You may have described the project better than they have right here

    2. “decentralizing the social graph”

      What was that other social graph application that people used? The one where you have to be refered? I know clubhouse and wechat require referals to get added to the app but there was some blockchain app, let's ask ChatGPT

    1. Robust to the inclusion of other features of culture such as individualism and residential mobility in the statistical models, the findings revealed that display rules in heterogeneous cultures favor higher emotion expressivity than in homogeneous cultures

      more out there

    2. Results revealed that the heterogeneity of the country of the expresser (but not the perceiver) was related to emotion recognition accuracy, such that expressers from historically heterogeneous cultures made displays that were easier to recognize across cultures. This finding supports the idea that a boost in the signal value of emotion in the face and the voice may constitute an adaptation to the pressure of interacting with individuals with whom one shares few expectations about emotions, and no nuanced emotion language. In other words, the intermingling of people from diverse cultural backgrounds over an extended time period appears to be associated with the use of facial and vocal expressions that are relatively unambiguous and easily decoded by unfamiliar others.

      you can only play twelve-dimensional irony games with others who share twelve-dimensional irony rulebooks

    1. When is it ok to not cite sources for content? When should sources be cited, and how should they be cited?

      I believe that it is okay not to cite sources or content when you are making your own version of the content that is very distinct, or when you drawn inspiration but formulate your own creation. However, I still believe that it is still common courtesy to cite your inspiration or source. I believe that sources should be cited from you are pulling information, use clips or any form of content relating to your content, or when you use something that needs to be credited such as samples and etc.

    1. For the intern, knowing what their job will entail by first completing an internship can make the transition to a full-time position a smooth one

      I see this as a helpful sidenote. if one does an internship, they already have an idea of how the company works and functions. It will make it easier for them to adapt to the environment if they join as a full-time employee than someone who just got accepted with no prior knowledge to the company.

    1. bout theorizing agency as outside Orientalist dis-course become simply untenable. I will discuss this point further in chapter2. But now let me turn to the discussion of binarism that seems to be oneof the major weaknesses in Said's analysi

      Judith Butler's Critique: Butler challenges the traditional understanding of the body as an extra-discursive object, arguing that it is constructed through discourse. She asserts that referring to the body presupposes delimiting it within discourse, thereby forming it through discourse itself. Butler sees materiality as an effect of power, emphasizing that the body's materialization is a result of citation and accumulation of regulatory norms over time. Agency and Resistance: Critics argue that constructivist views diminish agency by suggesting determinism. Butler counters by asserting that agency lies in appropriating or rearticulating regulatory norms, implying the potential to produce them differently. She suggests that reiteration of norms doesn't lead to determinism but opens up spaces for resistance, as it exposes instabilities in constructions, allowing for the escape or exceeding of norms. Orientalism and Discursive Construction: Said's analysis of Orientalism is critiqued for allegedly neglecting agency and counter-histories. However, redefining Orientalist discourse as a constitutive practice challenges this criticism. Orientalism is seen not just as constraining or distorting but also as actively constituting subjectivity, enabling resistance to colonial power. The discursive constitution of subjects doesn't imply total pacification but also entails an enabling process. Binaries in Said's Analysis: The passage concludes by suggesting that one of the weaknesses in Said's analysis is its reliance on binaries. Said's portrayal of Orientalism in totalizing terms overlooks its enabling aspects, leading to criticisms about the negation of agency. However, understanding Orientalist discourse as constitutive undermines the notion of theorizing agency outside of it. Overall, the passage explores how discursive constitution shapes our understanding of the body and subjects, challenges deterministic views, and redefines Orientalism as a constitutive practice that both constrains and enables agency.

    2. uisticism, then we should entertain the possibility that themateriality of the Orient is indistinguishable from the essentializing dis-course of Orientalism.

      Lösung der Kritik: the possibility thar the materiality of the rient is ununterscheidbar von the essentialiszing disocurse of orientalism.

    3. Orient" is just a representation, if he also wantsto claim that "Orientalism" provided the necessary knowledge for theactual colonial conquest."24Young's critique does not seem to be well taken, for in attempting to over-come the dualistic account which characterizes Said's analysis, he himselfdevelops another dualism, that of between reality and

      beste zusammenfassung von der kritik

    4. nd, he argues that the knowledge produced in andby Orientalism was put in the service of colonial conquest. These two argu-ments, according to Young, contradict each other, for, if Said wants toclaim that Orientalism as a body of knowledge be

      contradiction nochmal kritisiuert vin Young dieses mal

    5. he mental character of discourse. According to Laclau and Mouffe, tosuggest that the object of discourse is constituted does not imply a rejec-tion of the materialist idea that there is a world external to thought. Nordoes this thesis have anything to do with the opposition between realismand idealism - a trap which Said seems to fall into. What Laclau andMouffe contest is not that there are objects existing in the world, but theassumption that "they could constitute themselves as objects outside anydiscursive condition of emergence."23 Hence, with a restricted notion oflanguage, Said's analysis is bound to consider Orientalist discourse as acollection of images and ideas about the Orient, having no real efficacy inthe construction of its materiality or the Orientalness of the Orient. Suchan understanding runs counter to his continual emphasis on the "creation"and "constitution" or t

      weiter diese kritikpunkt. ist es jetzt kriert oder nicht?

    6. tion to the nature of the relation Said establishes between repre-sentation, knowledge, and power.

      relationship between representation, knowledge and power.

    7. age with. As I men-tioned above, on the one hand he argues that Orientalism "creates" theOrient and on the other hand he cautions us not to conclude that the Orientis just an idea, with no corresponding reality.

      wiedersprüchlich dabei manchmal. Oreint ist eien kreation aber er sagt nicht dass es nur eine idea ohne correspondierende realität ist.

    8. Said's position vacillates between accepting something called"the real Orient" and regarding "the Orient" as the construct of a question-able mental operation.15 It is to these contradictory methodological posi-tions that I want to turn now.

      es ist kein misunderstadning keine misrepresentation of the truth of the orient. Becasue there. is no real or tru orient. . Dieese kategorien sind formations of power. Es geht ihm um den process insitutionnn parctises and discourss in dnen oriental identity geformt wird.

    9. Said suggests that the effect ofOrientalist discourse is "to formulate the Orient, to give it shape, identity,definition with full recognition of its place in memory, its importance toimperial strategy, and its 'natural' role as an appendage to Europe

      give the orient shape identitiy and imperial stategy , natural role as an appendage to Europe!

    10. Foucault's notion of power

      definition Power: against notion of power in a narrow sense; (power effecrs negative or repressive) er und Foucault sagen power also productiove in knowledge and sicourse production. it produces effects of truth

    11. is "fabricated" in theservice of colonial power.

      orientalsim as discoursive regime is fabricated in the service of colonial power.

    1. There is a conceit in musical theater that when a character becomes too emotional to talk, that’s when they begin to sing, and when they become too emotional still, that is when they dance. This concept applies to blogging as well; when you become too emotional to simply write, you write a screed, and when you become too exasperated to screed, then and only then do you write a hate read.

      me on Andy Matuschak on books

    1. An alternative way to remove the All Mail folder would be to login into Gmail webmail using a browser, left click on the gear icon in the upper right corner and select Settings, select the Labels tab, find All Mail, click on Hide and uncheck "Show in IMAP". Logout and delete "All Mail." and "All Mail.msf" in the Gmail accounts local directory in the Thunderbird profile.

      How did I not know about this before?

    2. Do NOT try to delete the All Mail folder by deleting its contents. That will delete all of the messages for the account when Thunderbird syncs the folder.
    3. The "All Mail" folder in a Gmail IMAP account has a copy of all messages for that account, doubling the number of messages downloaded for offline folders. Thunderbird tries to download only one copy of a message from a Gmail IMAP account and have the folders point to that copy. However, that doesn't help if the message was created using Thunderbird. [1] If you decide to keep offline folders enabled and have a Gmail IMAP account, uncheck "All Mail" in Tools -> Account Settings -> Account Name -> Synchronization & Storage -> Advanced. As a precaution right click on the Gmail account name in the folder pane, select subscribe in the context menu, expand the folder listing and verify the All Mail folder is not subscribed. Disabling it from being synced should have unsubscribed it. Exit Thunderbird and delete "All Mail." and "All Mail.msf" in the accounts local directory.
    1. I wrote a thank-you letter to a supervisor who positively impacted me and embodies many of these insights as well!

      What a great letter! I'm sure he will hold onto it for years to come.

    2. sheapeading

      is this the correct spelling?

    1. have built long-lasting relationships

      good job!

    2. regluar

      typo

    3. I made a connection with the volunteer coordinator who handles volunteer events and scheduling, the secretary, the food pantry coordinator, the marketing manager, and many other regular volunteers.

      good specifics