I find screen real estate much more precious on my phone that computer, so bad framing is much more obvious on the phone. Whether because of vertical video syndrome or letterboxed horizontal video, the horizontal action ends up small on a vertical phone. At least in the latter case one has the option of turning their phone without trying to reframe it via zoom.
Don't just follow the recipe on the can: boil the pumpkin , sugar (or maple syrup) & spices down to get a better pumpkin flavor. And use grated frozen ginger. Or go a step further and follow something similar to Cook's Illustrated recipe which is half pumpkin and half candied yams.
Despite having worked at a restaurant, I disagree with nearly everything on that list and think they would be fine. Of course you can say things on the list with a bad attitude, but you can also be polite or at least reasonable with nearly everything on the list too.
I think advertisers know quite well how the products are actually used. A more accurate description of these would be: How the impulsive parts of many people's mind misunderstand the actual use of products (and how advertising exploits that).
18 years in Florida and I had been about 20 yards from a lightning strike & multiple times had to clean up pole pig parts from aftermath of lightning strikes, used to regularly having alligators sunning in the backyard & watching them in waterways visible from the patio, and watched sharks being caught by fishermen at the same beach as people swimming. Although there are unlucky people to get hurt by those, I vaguely remember the statistics for provoked alligator & shark attacks being quite a bit higher than unprovoked, and many lightning deaths were avoidable if people heeded common safety advice. What actually scared me, even if mostly nonfatal, was stingrays, jellyfish, and bad drivers.
This why I ended up watching mostly Chopped, as judges and competitors tend to be friendlier, judges are constructive & supportive, and the focus is on the food even if a competitor has some emotional motivation. Some of the non-American versions, like the South African one, have a bit harsher judging, but it is still about the food.
Even some of the shows with nasty, emotional fights you can tell there is some more normal human interaction going on and it is just how things were edited. I don't blame the shows for how they edit things (in general, some specific cases are a different story) as that is what sells... but I don't like it.
If only the armchair experts would be that polite by actually asking a question. "Have they considered X?," is much rarer than insisting, "They have never considered X," where X varies from things covered in intro textbooks to topics entire conferences are dedicated to addressing.
Of course there is profit to be made by conversion, for all of the people selling new hardware, new tooling for metric threads, a premium for obsolete parts, etc.
Temperature would be an easier switch at least, as it is mostly a relabeling. But I still prefer temperature measured in electron volts. Room temperature is 25 meV, and you probably don't want to go outside if it is below 20 meV or above 27 meV.
You can learn to spot them, as often there is a visible gap in the waves, although it is harder from the water and in some places they move around. Just paying attention to signs and knowing your limits will help a lot. In places where larger channels can form with breaks further out, you could have a rip current that is 50 m wide and goes out a couple hundred meters, which is beyond the limits of some people if they tried going with the flow.
More informative than I expected from the summary I've seen in a couple places so far.
One caveat is that at distances larger than the size of a magnet, the force will start to drop off as 1/r^4, which is really fast. If you had an unobtainium small magnet that can pick up a car at 10 cm, it would struggle to pick up a paperclip at 3 meters.
Afterwards, I found out multiple coworkers and friends had spouses or close relatives go through almost exactly the same thing, sometimes worse because it didn't get caught until the ectopic pregnancy ruptured something. But no one likes talking about such things, so most other people don't have any idea about that as a possibility or how common it could be.
In retrospect, a pregnancy test is cheap, and probably a good idea to have on hand for anyone who has risk factors (even for those with low fertility or on birth control... which don't 100% prevent a pregnancy, and seems to contribute to some of the delayed diagnosis stories I've heard).
I have not any bad experiences with doctors, however my wife has had several. The worst for her is when she had to go to a different clinic because her family doctor was unavailable. Over a few days, she had abdominal pain that got worse to the point of occasional stabbing pain far worse than anything she had felt before (and she's been through enough stuff to know she has reasonable pain tolerance). The doctor spent 5 minutes briefly listening to symptoms, took no family or past condition histories, palpated an area quite a ways away from the pain, then said the problem was indigestion, it would go away on its own, and he would prescribe a stool softener. My wife complained that didn't match the symptoms at all, at the very least because she wasn't having irregular bowel movements when the doctor insisted that was the problem. She asked again about the severe pain, and his response was, "I don't know anything about that," and he left.
A couple days later, her family doctor did a couple quick tests, including a pregnancy test that came back positive. Considering risks based on personal and family history, her family doctor pulled strings to get an ultrasound quickly and to get a specialist to answer some questions. It turned out to be an ectopic pregnancy, and my wife was sent to the hospital for emergency surgery. A specialist said that if my wife waited any longer, there could have been fatal complications. As the pain actually subsided after the first doctor visit, if my wife trusted his diagnosis she would have gone to the hospital much later. At the very least, if the first doctor stuck around a couple minutes longer to let my wife ask her short list of questions she wrote down, the list included, "Is there a chance this is an ectopic pregnancy and what should I look out for in that case?"
https://twitter.com/logicians/status/637432012228300801
Even some of the shows with nasty, emotional fights you can tell there is some more normal human interaction going on and it is just how things were edited. I don't blame the shows for how they edit things (in general, some specific cases are a different story) as that is what sells... but I don't like it.
Temperature would be an easier switch at least, as it is mostly a relabeling. But I still prefer temperature measured in electron volts. Room temperature is 25 meV, and you probably don't want to go outside if it is below 20 meV or above 27 meV.
One caveat is that at distances larger than the size of a magnet, the force will start to drop off as 1/r^4, which is really fast. If you had an unobtainium small magnet that can pick up a car at 10 cm, it would struggle to pick up a paperclip at 3 meters.
In retrospect, a pregnancy test is cheap, and probably a good idea to have on hand for anyone who has risk factors (even for those with low fertility or on birth control... which don't 100% prevent a pregnancy, and seems to contribute to some of the delayed diagnosis stories I've heard).
A couple days later, her family doctor did a couple quick tests, including a pregnancy test that came back positive. Considering risks based on personal and family history, her family doctor pulled strings to get an ultrasound quickly and to get a specialist to answer some questions. It turned out to be an ectopic pregnancy, and my wife was sent to the hospital for emergency surgery. A specialist said that if my wife waited any longer, there could have been fatal complications. As the pain actually subsided after the first doctor visit, if my wife trusted his diagnosis she would have gone to the hospital much later. At the very least, if the first doctor stuck around a couple minutes longer to let my wife ask her short list of questions she wrote down, the list included, "Is there a chance this is an ectopic pregnancy and what should I look out for in that case?"