- Sep 2024
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www.torontomu.ca www.torontomu.ca
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Explore
All information and design of webpage could be simplified
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- May 2024
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a forest actually moves um and and trees move but one of the things that they do is utilize other organisms to move them to move them 00:41:41 because reproduction is a way in which they plant transplant themselves further away from their sight of of of of their rooted site
for - key insight - reproduction is for adaptability, not to reproduce the gene pool
key insight - reproduction is for adaptability, not to reproduce the gene pool - for example, trees reproduce so they can move themselves - They are rooted so they cannot get up and walk - so they produce seeds that are transported by over living organisms and by the wind
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- Jul 2021
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Hill, Ryan, Yian Yin, Carolyn Stein, Dashun Wang, and Benjamin F. Jones. “Adaptability and the Pivot Penalty in Science.” ArXiv:2107.06476 [Physics], July 13, 2021. http://arxiv.org/abs/2107.06476.
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- Apr 2021
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colab.plymouthcreate.net colab.plymouthcreate.net
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<small><cite class='h-cite via'>ᔥ <span class='p-author h-card'>Robin DeRosa</span> in OERxDomains21 Guide (<time class='dt-published'>04/20/2021 06:45:58</time>)</cite></small>
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- Mar 2021
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theadhocracy.co.uk theadhocracy.co.uk
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What's more, watching the debates happening in real-time has really driven home that this approach doesn't just scale, it scales well. For a personal site, incremental improvement measured against real-world testing feels okay. For an industry-level protocol or specification, it feels like it should just collapse. Yet with the IndieWeb, not only is their work surprisingly resilient, it's far more adaptable as a result.
think also "move slow and fix things"...
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