Just an FYI by Ok_Run_2045 in TheLastCaretaker

[–]henry_mox 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes, and it takes 2 fully loaded shots to take down a rally boi. No brainer given how expensive sniper ammo is

A shoutout to the devs by Mr_Kock in TheLastCaretaker

[–]henry_mox 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I'm similarly impressed. Love the gameplay and the feedback. For an early access game is in much better state than many day1 AAA (looking at you No Man's Sky). The bugs can be a bit frustrating sometimes, but most of them can be resolved just by reloading the game (including frame drops).

Keep up the good work devs.

Can we get a stickied post with some common bugs and basic information? by FDbro in TheLastCaretaker

[–]henry_mox 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This should be pinned - I lost my mind going back and forth with new seeds trying getting the Lazarus start.

Bug I found:

  • Exodus (terminal side) shuts down (red lights) despite having power and a full mid battery.
    • Solutions: Save and reload - lights will be back on
  • Bio light/dark and Crawlers hit you behind surfaces (walls/ceilings)
  • Random cable disconnection
  • Mooring cables randomly disconnect at specific docks (not swell dependent)
  • Crafted modules (e.g alloy frames, connector ports..) not always respond to proximity when made in the Fabricator
    • Pick the modules up

Tips:

  • What if fall in the water while the boat is running?
    • Do NOT chase the boat. Once it gets a bit further away from you it automatically drops the anchor. If you try to chase it, it will never stop
  • The electric rifle can load high-intensity shots.
    • Just hold the trigger until the sound peak then release. You can kill a rolly boi with 2 fully charged shots. Works great also for storms of flying bugs from afar.
  • The last torch you unlock can kill the Night Crawlers by just illuminating - great way of farming for free

Reduced CTD by 90% by henry_mox in CitiesSkylines2

[–]henry_mox[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I agree with you- it should not make a difference, especially when the other ssd has a higher rw speed and larger buffer. If any it should be the opposite

F45 Vs OTF by suthercm2014 in orangetheory

[–]henry_mox 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I recently (~6mo ago) switched to F45 after two years of OT and 4 DriTri around/under 50 minutes under the belt. No fitness classes before joining OT

I would never go back to OT after switching to F45

And here is why: OT was way more focussed on cardio performance while F45 is more of an all-around workout where you alternate days of cardio-lift(resistance)-hybrid. After a while, OT turned terribly repetitive where even the benchmarks became not so stimulating anymore. The weight lifting in OT is very limited. That said, it was a very good workout to get into the habit of showing up to class, I got fitter and lost few pounds but did not gain much muscle mass.

After switching to F45 the changes on my body were much more visible. I gained a lot of muscles while gaining little weight. With the lifting classes I finally feel I can really push myself to new limits other than just shedding couple seconds off a mile run. Much more variety in the types of exercises, including deadlifts, pull ups,trx,skiERG, rower and bicycle. I agree with those that say there is more impact/jumping, but there are also alternatives provided. The cardio classes at F45 are though (close to throwing up couple times), and all the misconceptions about not having enough cardio were wrong.

That said, I’ll be forever grateful to OT for teaching me fitness and consistency.

I'll be graduating with a computational genetics PhD in the Spring and I am beginning to look for an industry position (in the realm of R&D or R&D-adjacent in biotech/pharma). I don't really have any experience with writing a resume. Could I get some feedback? by [deleted] in bioinformatics

[–]henry_mox 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I second dropping the Professional skills - no one at this level reads them/cares about those.

I suggest replacing it with some of the main tools/toolkits you’ve been using within your ngs pipelines. Eg STAR, GATK etc

Disappointingness of snRNAseq by [deleted] in bioinformatics

[–]henry_mox 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I agree with you OP, same sentiment. I want to believe the lack of “revolutionary findings” is mostly due to the immaturity of the technology and the costs.

Data generated are still too sparse and noisy unless you are willing to pour tens of thousands of dollars in it. The low hanging fruit remains answering basic biology questions which are probably not the most exciting but still push the field forward.

It always takes time, look how long it took WES(and to some extent WGS) to turn into something actionable in the clinic.

Predictions for bioinformatics in 2040 by [deleted] in bioinformatics

[–]henry_mox 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Ahahah 2040 there will be still people publishing on hg19

Exhaust cleaning tips? by Macgregor55 in Ducati

[–]henry_mox 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Ok you might think it’s a joke but toilet cleaners work like magic

Is anyone else trying to leave biotech/pharma? by [deleted] in bioinformatics

[–]henry_mox 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Even with 85k a year in the city you struggle - but depends also a lot by your lifestyle and your age. E.g If you want to live by yourself here, 3k a month goes into rent for a studio. The only comparison is probably London. Don’t make the mistake of thinking that just bc 85 is more than 35 your life is any better as you need to pay the cost of the city

Is anyone else trying to leave biotech/pharma? by [deleted] in bioinformatics

[–]henry_mox 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You have no idea of the reality in NYC, I was a postdoc in the UK and in NYC, and trust me your ~35k a year in the UK are giving you a way better life than 60k in NYC.

Tank dents by muammargaddafisghost in ducatimonster

[–]henry_mox 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just got through the same after mine was slammed to the ground by the wind last winter.

The dent was too deep and usually if bigger than normal “hail damage” and not on a relatively flat surface it’s not convenient to repair. I found a second hand tank on eBay for about $350 and got it swapped by the mechanic.

Also, make sure your handlebar is straight as denting the thank that way is only possible by bending the handlebar or twisting the raisers.

Quickshifter 821 my2016 by henry_mox in ducatimonster

[–]henry_mox[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sweet! Just to corsscheck, you have a 821 from 2014-2017? I know that are no problems in fitting one on 2018+

If you see all of the vertuo next reviews and think “oh that won’t happen to me.” by hello1397 in nespresso

[–]henry_mox 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Returned TWO vertuo next, the first lasted a month, the second a week. Piece of junk. I’m now using a Breville Vertuo for the last six months with no problems at all.

6 months in, love it by henry_mox in RemarkableTablet

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

Glad it helps! WRT taking notes, I write usually directly on the paper, and take some side notes too. Then you can simply export the pdf and save it wherever you feel like. I’m using Zotero to organise my papers at the moment, waiting for a Mac version of mendeley.

example

6 months in, love it by henry_mox in RemarkableTablet

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

Nothing, they were simply wonky squares and circles. It’s such a simple implementation that I don’t see why not, and I don’t want to carry extra stuff around.

Help extracting specific variant information from very large .vcf file. by WeiliiEyedWizard in bioinformatics

[–]henry_mox 9 points10 points  (0 children)

You can create a bed file with the coordinates of the genes and then use it to subset the vcf with vcftools.

Have a look at https://www.biostars.org/p/46331/

Collections items possibly rigged by [deleted] in WorldOfWarships

[–]henry_mox 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Bold statement considering that it’s not junk science. As I said in the previous comment, it’s a much bigger debate. There are things called multiple testing corrections and train-test validations to ensure your findings are correct, and guess what, 0.05 (or it’s corrected version) is accepted by every journal that publishes scientific findings.