I have solved 18 consecutive redactle puzzles, sometimes using outside information. I always solve the wordle and usually get the worldle by using Google Earth.
At this time (11 hours after its release) just under 12,000 people have solved today’s redactle (a typical day). That’s not really a large number.
Precision medicine. A sister and a brother are suffering from autism and intellectual disability. Doctors found that the sister has a deletion affecting SHANK3, and her brother has likely pathogenic variations in seven different genes pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35743796
This is cool.
SHANK3 affects the workings of synapses, and its mutations are linked both to autism and schizophrenia (subtype schizophrenia 15)
I'm reading neuropsychiatry news instead of political news.
I thought you were getting all these articles as translation assignments. So you're following news releases from journal publishers?
I'm following the Jan 6 committee meetings only very slightly (out of the corner of my eye) (for similar reasons as @CowperKettle is avoiding his news)
But the thing that jumps out at me is that all these people they are interviewing and are saying TFG was trying to install an incompetent lawyer to head the DOJ and something something voter fraud in his favor, all these people said they'd resign immediately because it was illegal...well these people sound so forthright and principled and doing the right thing...
but before that all these people were totally pro-TFG.
So I'm bewildered, wondering what was the cutoff point for them? "TFG is great, he's doing what we want, pushing our awful backwards-in-1950 agenda of eating dead babies, plain with no sauce... but holy shit that other guy who also totally pro-TFG is my subordinate and TFG might make him my boss? Hell no!"
> Raffles City is suite of eight buildings in Yuzhong District, Chongqing, China. It features a 300-m-long horizontal skybridge called "Crystal" that connects the top of four of the skycrapers.
What makes us human, at the neuronal network level? We discovered a dramatic (10-fold) expansion of interneuron-to-interneuron networks in the human brain compared to mouse: science.org/doi/10.1126/science.abo0924
In cartoons and comics it's not uncommon to see a series of Z's to indicate that a person is in deep slumber, such as in the following political cartoon.
(source: Berkeley Daily Planet)
How and when did the letter Z come to be associated with sleeping?
@M.A.R. On second thought, there is a single z used to pluralize lol (lolz, or lulz), so multiple instances of the z (lolzzzzzzzzz) is just an emphasis, similar to strings of exclamation points.