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Have you found a way to have the AI assist in analyzing?


> You're absolutely right

Claude! Get off HN and get back to work.


Oh my, that was unintentional. What have I become...


Caffeine is an example. Coffee and energy drinks are doing well I'd say.


Caffeine is grandfathered in as a Generally Recognized as Safe food additive. If energy drink companies had to go through clinical trials with no patent protection for each drink formula, they wouldn't make them.


I think the current regulatory regime in many US states allows companies to make a killing off of selling naturally occurring bioactive substances as dietary supplements with few regulatory hurdles.

Kratom, CBD, and delta-8 THC are naturally occurring bioactive substances that are newer to the US market. Both have carved out a pretty nice economic niche with a bunch of claimed health benefits.

A couple of years back, I saw a sign outside a fancy legal highs shop in Fishtown, Philadelphia touting the benefits of kratom as a pre-workout supplement. The insanity that a business was advertising an addictive opioid to healthy, opioid-naive people for better gains in the gym almost makes me want more regulation in this area.


Your point is a bit undermined by the fact that two out of your three examples are cannabis extracts, where cannabis proper - literally a leaf - is still very much illegal and has to be "laundered" through chemical processes to make it less fun and therefore "medicine" instead of "recreational drugs".


I think your point and mine can both be true at the same time. Cannabis is the subject of a past regulatory regime that restricted nearly all psychoactive substances popular at the time (natural or synthetic). The actions of that regime do not go away when the zeitgeist changes. The current regulatory regime is much more dovish, and that is visible in the difference between the controlled status of chemicals that became popular recently versus similar ones that were popular 50 years ago.


Isn't it relatively easy to sell anything "naturally occurring" as a supplement? I think there is very little regulation (of course if you want to claim it's a drug and presumably charge much more for it it's another matter).

Even synthetic research chemicals are generally legal as long as you add a "not for human consumption" label (and they aren't explicitly banned or analogous to other illegal/regulated drugs).


Why was caffeine studied? Why does it continue to be studied?


The global coffee market is worth $138 billion, the soft drink industry is $556 billion (and growing). The vast majority of which being caffeinated. Starbucks the company is #116 on the Fortune 500 and #1 in food services. There's sufficient economic activity to warrant continued research in the area.


It’s a lot cheaper to study something in academia than to do a full clinical trial.


That’s an excellent point


If you haven’t already, get yourself to Wellington and take the tours at Weta. You might even recognize a few of the faces that still work there.


Phoenix Channels


A set of nice flashlights. Why walk around in the dark? Some that I like: Sofirn SP36 BLF, LT1, SC21, HS10. Wurkkos TS10 (and I’ll be getting a TS11 soon.)


> Why walk around in the dark?

Walking around in the dark outside can actually be really nice. Your eyes adjust and, of course, it's never completely dark (moonlight, starlight, etc).

Torches (flashlights) are fine, but ppl tend to overuse them, in my experience.


Love my hexbright.

If they were still being made, I'd get more.


I can’t believe it’s already been ten years. My hexbright is still kicking. I’ll miss it when it will finally dies on me.


>I’ll miss it when it will finally dies on me.

It will never.

Most common faults have well documented repairs. Worst case scenario you can get a new PCB made.

You'd have to physically destroy the enclosure to really lose your hexbright. I don't think anyone makes replacement ones.

But as I understand it, even that is documented, and the source hexagonal prism is common, so at least it's not impossible.


It varies. I roast at home, and some beans are great the next day. Some are great the next week. The cafe I used to live next to would rest their beans for a week.


Same. I have noticed that the lighter the roast, the happier the beans are with less rest.

That being said, the best coffee I've had was Ethiopian style, roasted dark and brewed right in front of me with no rest.


SEEKING WORK | Full-stack, Elixir, Python, React, PHP | REMOTE

Location: FL, USA

Remote: Yes

Willing to relocate: No

Do you need a little dev help during this season? I’m available full time December to jump in and squash bugs, clean data or automate processes.

Email: robby.ronk at gmail


Location: Orlando, FL

Remote: Yes, Hybrid OK

Willing to relocate: Would consider relocating after Q3 2024

Technologies: Python, React/Redux/Sagas, Elixir, PHP/Laravel, Linux, AWS, MySQL/PostgreSQL

Résumé/CV: Upon request. Let’s chat!

Email: robby.ronk@gmail.com

I’m a Full Stack Software Engineer with 13+ years of experience.

I love to learn and share what I know! As a full stack Python developer at a cinema VFX company, I brought React to my team and set them up with a toolkit that enable them to build apps 4x faster. I ran workshops, mentored 1:1 and developed best practices to clarify to my team how to build with Python and React. At a national Internet company, I solved browser breaking artifacts on the national Broadband Map using Python and PostGIS. At a Solar SaaS, I used Python to abstract bespoke Solar Lender APIs so that the Sales Platform could onboard new lenders with minimal changes, ultimately leading to gigawatts of panels on roofs and billions of dollars of deals done. Recently, I've maintained a legacy Django platform while executing a migration into a new platform.

I'm proud that my Python and React has helped create movies with box offices in the billions, helped an entire country find broadband and installed gigawatts of clean energy. I'm excited to leverage my Python and React skills to contribute to your team's success.


It doesn't have to be a small team. See "They Write The Right Stuff".


And even they make mistakes, software contains much more moving parts than hardware.

https://space.stackexchange.com/questions/37110/what-was-the...


> Use of pointers required a written, approved, variance from the SW standards board. All the code was formally peer reviewed by at least 6 people. More complicated code would be reviewed by 20+ people - in the same room.


Wow, thats a hell of a HN thing to say.


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