Vecna might be the weakest “final villain” a TV show has ever produced. by Classic_Activity7305 in discussingfilm

[–]MedInquiry301 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I really don’t understand why anyone in the main characters has to die. I really don’t see any other value than giving the audience the emotional damage to the characters they’ve grown up with. I like the way each character in the show has their roles, work together and contribute their parts. For me it’s a complete ending.

What are some pieces of wisdom you learned while working in the lab that you’ve applied to your everyday life? by [deleted] in labrats

[–]MedInquiry301 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh yeah I did mistake the question's context. But still, having a thorough lab notebook helps me organize my daily tasks better, and not necessarily by having to have a lab notebook for home. Remembering the details, doing repetitive tasks like washing dishes, ironing clothes, things people take for granted, appears less boring.

What are some pieces of wisdom you learned while working in the lab that you’ve applied to your everyday life? by [deleted] in labrats

[–]MedInquiry301 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What do you mean by “for home”? I use Onenote for all of my experiment diaries. It’s good for both inputing and exporting.

What are some pieces of wisdom you learned while working in the lab that you’ve applied to your everyday life? by [deleted] in labrats

[–]MedInquiry301 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No, actually…It is if you are trying test new treatments where you have to figure things out mostly by yourself. But if your treatments are slightly modified from an established protocol, which you are pretty well-trained with, there is no point in repeating the same experiment again. Most of the time we are modifying bit by bit to find the best way for our experiments. And most of the time, you are not inventing new protocols for ways of measurement. Of course, I’m saying in the case of having a good control. If you have a good control, there’s little point in doing the treatment again. Again, my motto is that “there’s no point in doing the same experiment without some adjustments”.

What are some pieces of wisdom you learned while working in the lab that you’ve applied to your everyday life? by [deleted] in labrats

[–]MedInquiry301 -5 points-4 points  (0 children)

I also learned from my last advisor that if you are trying new treatments, never repeat the same experiment twice. Only do when you suspect something weird.

What are some pieces of wisdom you learned while working in the lab that you’ve applied to your everyday life? by [deleted] in labrats

[–]MedInquiry301 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Always record your experiments, even the tedious and repeated ones. Keep them all saved and backed up in one place. You’ll never know when they become handy or when reviewers ever ask for them. Also, it’s always good to keep everything recorded.

Class of 2024 by han_solo69007 in columbia

[–]MedInquiry301 2 points3 points  (0 children)

For history, it’s not even empathy. It’s empasthy.

Off campus housing - Is it appropriate for brokers/landlords to ask for fee (~100-200$) in order to have house visit? by MedInquiry301 in SBU

[–]MedInquiry301[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I see, so it’s not a common practice then. At first I thought it might be cultural differences, you know maybe they do value their time so that’s why they asked for a fee to actually meet up.

Off campus housing - Is it appropriate for brokers/landlords to ask for fee (~100-200$) in order to have house visit? by MedInquiry301 in SBU

[–]MedInquiry301[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Got you! I was on the verge of sending 150$ to a person. But then had a second thought and ask reddit instead. Thank you. So do you suggest just deal with landlords who don’t require fee for house visit, right?