I played it a the computer games museum in Berlin a few years ago. It was a very fun experience. I battled my wife who jumped when the first eletric shock hit here :D and lost afterwards against an employee there, who was quite resistant to any damage ;)
He also showed us the first aid section next to the machine.
For everyone having the chance to play with it: do it :)
Before that, crying/arguing kids (of e.g. friends) always gave me headaches and i never knew what to talk with them or how to interact.
Also when my wife told me she was pregnent, all i felt was 'Ok, now the ... starts' - i did not enjoy the news.
But in hospital, when my daughter was born and i sat in a chair holding here sleeping on my arms for the first time - it changed 180°.
I constantly had a smile on my face and felt warmth and the need to protect here.
I also enjoy beeing around other peoples kids now and i am more open to "little jokes" to make them smile.
So it seemed to be a biological barrier for me, which i needed to be taken over by my daughter to switche to "parent-mode".
It is also quite funny to see the faces of colleagues (without kids) and how they react to kids-stories. It was the same for me before i had my own.
Hetzners dedicated CPU Price is only ~2x and not 8x.
You need to compare the correct hardware. CX31 with CCX11. Both 2vCPU, 8GigRam, 80Gig NVMe Flash and 20TB Traffic.
CX31 for 10.59€ and CCX11 for 23.68€
They are cheap and good.
We compared the lowest plan because higher plans usually have to provide a higher share due to disk and RAM resources being limited when split up in higher amounts.
And yes,they are cheap and they are very reliable, we use them a lot.
"Cancer: Detecting the presence of cancer cells
Nature Communications
December 5, 2018
A test to detect cancerous cells, which can be performed in ten minutes, is presented in Nature Communications this week. The assay exploits the differences between the DNA in cancerous and healthy cells to allow for a quick, initial diagnosis.
The attachment of methyl groups to DNA (in a process called methylation) is genetically programmed. In all ‘mature’ human cells, DNA carries these modifications. The genomic information in cancer cells is significantly different from healthy cells, resulting in a different methylation level and pattern in most types of cancer cells.
Matt Trau and colleagues found that the different methylation landscape in cancer cells affects the physical and chemical properties of DNA. Amongst other features, it binds more strongly to gold nanoparticles and the authors used this behaviour to develop a test to detect cancer. The assay requires a tiny amount of purified genomic DNA from a patient and takes about ten minutes. The outcome of the test can be assessed with the naked eye. They tested their approach on over 100 human samples (genomic DNA from patients with cancer (72) and healthy individuals (31)) representing various cancer types.
At this stage, the assay can only detect the presence of cancer cells, not their type or the stage of the disease. Moving forward, the approach needs further testing with more samples and - possibly - refinement to allow for a more detailed analysis."
My first and only hacks were at the age of 12 where i "patched" the copy protection keywords from the first XWing in 1993 [0].
I only knew 1 password and searched for it in a hex editor. I found it and recognized a pattern with similar words.
Replacing them with the Ascii Space resulted in "press return to pass" password checks :D Damn i was proud.
At the same age, i rewrote the Story Text of "The Adventures of Robin Hood" (1991)[1] via hex and "Try and Errored" all Ascii combinations to develop my own Ascii chart.
You can imagine what a 12 year old rewrote a love story to... my older brother was quite happy :D
I later tried to patch Dune2 Level files to create my own but did not understand a thing.
Now i write medical software and sometimes feel the same ;)
Creator here. There's no visualizations of this yet, but I'll be speaking about it this year at Strange Loop. For that talk, I'll be creating visualizations, so stay tuned!
From research around the Internet, D3 is generally seen as safe (http://www.mayoclinic.org/drugs-supplements/vitamin-d/safety... is pretty typical on the safety information) Personally I take a D3 supplement of 2000IU/day during the dark months (along with some other supplements due to a mostly vegan diet, some of which contain low D2/D3 amounts, so my actual supplemented intake is around 2400 IU).
Better yet: a file the decompresses to multiple slightly different versions of itself. Say, one that is a version of itself with an additional one, and one that is a version of itself with an additional zero.
For everyone having the chance to play with it: do it :)