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that's the work site. The residential town is about 10km SW of that marker.


For elementary school age kids, maybe even middle school, try getting them started with the app "Euclidea".

They won't think of it as math. It's gamified geometric constructions. Starts simple, "how do you bisect an angle" with a compass and a straight edge. It goes to a very high level that will challenge anyone.


Yeah, people underestimate how hard it is to get a movie into a theatre AND get people to pay for a ticket.

Hollywood can barely get any well made movies past $100 million these days unless it's based on some well known franchise (minecraft, Captain America, Snow White) or it has some well known actor.


PBRs have contracts with medical insurance. They get paid based on how much money they "save" the insurance company.

"Save" is defined as list price minus contracted price that the insurance pays for the drug.

PBRs manipulate the list price to be higher so that they "save" the insurance company more money.

They also manipulate the co-pays so that patients will choose drugs that "save" the most, as opposed to the lowest price drug.


If you use an abbreviation like PBR, it helps to either explain what it means or use the correct one. Do you mean PBM = pharmacy benefit manager?


Technically they want to limit indirect costs to 15%. This currently ranges from 50%-100%. Indirect costs have two components, facilities and administration.

Facilites are the cost of buildings, electricity, janitorial service, etc. Think of this as things that might be included in the rent if you were renting a place to do the research.

Administration costs are mostly salaries for people, administrative and clerical staff. Not the people directly doing the research (that's a direct cost), but the people in charge of safety/compliance/legal, etc.

Administrative costs have been capped at 25% for a few decades. Facilities costs are not capped.


I think part of the problem is that universities have lots of people who do one job and that job is not everyday. For instance, where I'm at we have two people in charge of summer enrollment. That seems to be it. They are way way overworked for about two weeks at beginning of the summer. I have no idea what they do the other 50 weeks of the year. I think their boss is happy as long as they deal with summer courses.


“I have no idea what these other people I don’t work with do, so it must be nothing” is a really naive and insulting thing to say. They probably don’t know what you do either, would it be fair to say you do nothing of value?


Same with siliconinvestor.com

It was an early stock discussion forum. It grew rapidly when search engines started indexing everything and this forum had a URL for each message that was easily indexable.

It's still around, but nothing like the old days.


I find these old school forums fascinating. How does that even work, to have a thread of 192,211 posts about Qualcomm?

https://www.siliconinvestor.com/subject.aspx?subjectid=36035

Suppose the average post is about 1 paragraph long. One paragraph is about 150 words. So 192211 * 150 = about 29 million words. For comparison, the Lord of the Rings trilogy is only around half a million words.

It wouldn't surprise me if there are more words about Qualcomm in that thread than the total amount of internal and external documentation and financial guidance that Qualcomm itself has ever produced.

Surely users aren't expected to read the entire thread before adding a post? But I think I remember seeing old forums where that basically is the expectation. And honestly... that's pretty cool. It seems better than the new social media, where we keep having low-effort recurring debates. I like the idea of adding to an enormous pile of scholarship in cyberspace. A Ship of Theseus discussion which may outlive any individual participant, but has a semblance of continuity all the same, like an undergraduate college society with a 100+ year history.

Time for a cyberpunk revival. Retro-cyberpunk, we could call it.


People like to talk at scale, even if no one is listening.


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