Devil_May_Kare
Devil_May_Kare t1_jdq4mar wrote
If a recessive gene exists in the population, why would you expect it to die out without knowing anything about it? By default, you should expect a gene to stay at the same frequency in the population unless it's helping or harming the organisms that carry it.
Devil_May_Kare t1_ja96rbj wrote
Reply to ELI5 why is jury duty a requirement? by [deleted]
People accused of crimes have a right to have their fate decided by a team of normal people. And normal people have better things to do than decide the fate of someone accused of a crime, so we wouldn't be able to fulfill that right if we didn't make it hard to get out of.
Devil_May_Kare t1_ja94wnk wrote
The dice have no way to remember the times you've rolled them before. Since they don't know you rolled a 6, they can't act differently on later rolls to make 6 less likely.
Devil_May_Kare t1_ja2kggc wrote
Reply to comment by DirtyProtest in ELI5: if you’re lactose intolerant, why does the lactose cause bowel distress instead of passing through inertly? by chemstu69
I don't think there's a significant effect. Just because there's fermentation happening doesn't mean a lot of alcohol is being produced. It's probably similar bacteria to the first population active in sauerkraut, which produce a lot of bubbling and a negligible amount of alcohol.
Also there isn't very much lactose in milk. Even if you ferment it with a yeast that turns it into alcohol fairly efficiently, milk won't pass 2.5% ABV, which is half the strength of beer.
Devil_May_Kare t1_ja295y4 wrote
Reply to ELI5: if you’re lactose intolerant, why does the lactose cause bowel distress instead of passing through inertly? by chemstu69
Lots of common bacteria can make lactase. If you don't break up and absorb the lactose before it reaches the bacteria in your large intestine, they'll consume it for energy and produce carbon dioxide gas in the process. Fermenting a little lactose makes a big volume of carbon dioxide, which pushes on your guts in painful and inconvenient ways.
Devil_May_Kare t1_ja27qhc wrote
Reply to TIL: "Popcorn" is not simply a descriptive term, but also refers to a specific variety of corn which has the unique characteristic of being able to pop, while the other five varieties of corn do not have this capability. by greenappletree
The page for popcorn says flint corn is a distinct type, but the page for flint corn considers popcorn a variety of flint corn.
Devil_May_Kare t1_j9xw0bh wrote
Reply to eli5 what exactly is D.I.D? by SilentCountessVT
When you're a small child in the process of growing up, one of the things you do is integrate together all your emotional states and brain functions into a single cohesive identity for yourself. If something very bad happens to you at that age, sometimes the process of integration doesn't happen properly, and you end up with two or more emotional states that don't feel like being the same person, with different sets of memories and different sets of cognitive abilities accessible in each. That's DID. There's a few related dissociative disorders (such as OSDD-1B) which are fairly similar, but differ in what's shared and what's separate between the different emotional states.
Also, some people seem to end up in a state similar to DID from prolonged overuse of certain drugs (e.g., ketamine) or by having a childhood that wasn't quite bad enough to develop DID followed by something very bad happening to them in adulthood.
Devil_May_Kare t1_j9xv8yo wrote
Reply to comment by veemondumps in eli5 what exactly is D.I.D? by SilentCountessVT
The friend could also have OSDD-1B, which is similar to DID but doesn't have amnesia between alters.
Devil_May_Kare t1_j9xkbpj wrote
Reply to comment by AutoModerator in [WP] A shapeshifter often takes the form of the King to get free drinks in the local Inn. One day a group of knights quickly approch him "Thank God we found you, we thought something terrible had happened!" by D_Price
Suggestion: there is no king, and hasn't been in decades. The "king" everyone sees is just whatever shapeshifter most recently got caught pretending to be the king and got roped into running the kingdom for a while.
Devil_May_Kare t1_j9brkvd wrote
Reply to TIFU by ingesting mold for a year by Krystalinhell
Mold can be food, but wild mold isn't.
Devil_May_Kare t1_j99p9jt wrote
Reply to TIFU by going to therapy with my mum by AdFamiliar6862
I have new career plans. I'm gonna move to the UK and become a therapist. Apparently they'll let any idiot be a therapist over there.
Devil_May_Kare t1_j6nkguq wrote
Reply to TIFU by hooking up with a smoker by [deleted]
If you think a nicotine addiction is pushing you to make unwise relationship decisions, get some nicotine gum or lozenges at a store or online. Then you can have enough nicotine to answer your cravings without doing something unwise in your relationships.
Devil_May_Kare t1_j6m6ugj wrote
Reply to comment by TheReal_AlphaPatriot in TIL your computer keyboard is 20,589 times dirtier than a toilet seat. The average office keyboard has 3,543,000 colony-forming units (CFU) of bacteria per square inch while your average toilet seat only has 172 CFU per square inch by SappyGilmore
A few percent of people are asymptomatic carriers of MRSA in their skin microbiome. MRSA can kill if a few things go wrong at once. It usually sits there being dormant or causing transient infections like pimples, because Staphylococcus aureus gonna S. aureus, but it can sometimes get into your soft tissue and lungs and blood and then kill you if not adequately treated (and adequate treatment is hard because MRSA is immune to a lot of our favorite antibiotics).
Devil_May_Kare t1_j6m4bv6 wrote
Reply to TIL your computer keyboard is 20,589 times dirtier than a toilet seat. The average office keyboard has 3,543,000 colony-forming units (CFU) of bacteria per square inch while your average toilet seat only has 172 CFU per square inch by SappyGilmore
The probiotic supplement I deliberately ingested this evening has something like 10,000,000,000 CFU. CFUs are not equivalent to dirt.
Devil_May_Kare t1_j6m2nq1 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in New study (n = 15,764) shows repeated concussions are linked to worse brain function in later life by unswsydney
Do testicles actually not fully heal after minor injuries? Or are you just memeing?
Devil_May_Kare t1_j6cfvab wrote
Reply to ELi5 : If you can access a website, why cant you steal the source code and make a 1:1 copy of it? by 13lettersinhere
Most websites these days are like a menu at a restaurant. They're decorated objects that sit in front of you to help you make sensible requests. Then the requests you made are passed along to the kitchen (the backend web server) which does what you asked for and sends you back the result.
Stealing the source code for the website and hoping to duplicate the web service is like making a copy of a restaurant's menu and hoping to duplicate the restaurant. You won't know anything about how their kitchen runs. You might find it useful to have a list of what requests the web service needs to answer, but most of the hard work hasn't been done for you.
Devil_May_Kare t1_j69iwzd wrote
In all three of these types of jet engines, air from the front enters, is compressed, and is mixed with fuel. Then the fuel is burned and the resulting hot gas leaves out the back of the engine. Because the fuel heats up the air, it's hotter when it leaves than when it enters, so you get more energy from letting it expand than you spent on compressing it.
In a turbojet, a fan at the front pulls in and compresses the air, and an inverted fan called a turbine captures some energy from the departing air to keep the fan spinning. In a ramjet or scramjet, the engine draws in air by flying forward into it ("ramming" into the air), and compresses the air by having internal geometry that air has to increase in pressure to pass by.
The difference between a ramjet and a scramjet is that in a ramjet, the compressing geometry slows the compressed air to below the speed of sound before the added fuel starts burning, whereas in a scramjet the combustion happens in air that's moving faster than sound. "Scramjet" is short for "supersonic combustion ramjet."
Devil_May_Kare t1_j5ixx1t wrote
Reply to comment by bicbrownboi in What is a neurotransmitter "turnover rate", with reference to acetylcholine? What does it mean if the turnover rate is increased or decreased? by yungPH
Sarin gas works by breaking acetylcholinesterase. That reduces the turnover rate of acetylcholine. Maybe OP was reading about sarin?
Devil_May_Kare t1_j5gw82y wrote
Reply to comment by PLaTinuM_HaZe in Diets with low potassium are associated with kidney injuries and a culprit in cardiovascular disease by giuliomagnifico
Using lite-salt (1:1 mixture of sodium chloride and potassium chloride) to season your food isn't particularly difficult, and will bring your intake closer to balanced. I don't see why it isn't recommended more. Pure potassium chloride tastes bad, but mixed with sodium chloride it's just salty.
Devil_May_Kare t1_j5guybx wrote
Reply to Diets with low potassium are associated with kidney injuries and a culprit in cardiovascular disease by giuliomagnifico
Lean meat has about as much potassium by weight as banana or potato. Fun fact that people rarely tell you when they recommend getting more potassium (I notice that the picture associated with the article is all plants and fungi)
Devil_May_Kare t1_j599xhf wrote
Reply to comment by SillyCubensis in I was asked what my views on pornography were. by Morocco_Llama
Well, that answer is very progressive.
(>!I mean, it isn't interlaced, ya feel?!<)
Devil_May_Kare t1_j3ldq5i wrote
Reply to comment by ThatDaveyGuy in Milkdromeda. by Acuate187
We don't know how likely or unlikely the first abiogenesis event was. It could've been a once-in-a-galactic-supercluster coincidence. And then lots of the evolutionary steps since then were nowhere close to guaranteed.
Devil_May_Kare t1_j1xxboz wrote
If she's freaking out enough that she'd run away from home, she's freaking out enough that she probably didn't consider whether it'd be safe or not before leaving. She's safer than she otherwise would be because of you.
Devil_May_Kare t1_j1pkycq wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Machine learning model reliably predicts risk of opioid use disorder for individual patients, that could aid in prevention by marketrent
Prescription opioids with slow pharmacokinetics are actually a safe and effective treatment for heroin addiction. I don't see how that's a problem. If anything, it's a step towards a solution.
Devil_May_Kare t1_je6asp4 wrote
Reply to ELI5: When a third party app says they offer "end to end encryption," what does that mean? by [deleted]
What they're claiming is that your data gets encrypted on your phone and doesn't get decrypted until the intended recipient gets it. Encrypted data can't be read without decrypting it first, so in principle end-to-end encryption ought to keep the app developer from sitting in the middle of your conversation reading your messages.
In reality, though, it's important to remember that anyone can claim their app uses end-to-end encryption, whether or not it actually does. So you shouldn't rely on an app to do the right thing.