This doesn’t answer your question, but if you conclude that adding water is likely to make rice more filling per calorie (I have no idea whether it will), the dish you want is called congee, and searching for that should yield many delicious recipes.
kalium
Example 2: A backup cell phone can cost $20, and at least one provider offers service for $10 for the SIM chip and $20 per year if no calls are made. Requires limiting trips to areas within range of cell towers.
Which provider is this?
I’ve lost around 60 points in the past couple months despite hardly commenting at all (haven’t spent much time here recently). I did get a smaller swarm of downvotes in September for this comment, in which I was grumpy at Azathoth123 on the subject of gender.
It happens but again it’s not at all universal. Scott Alexander seems to think emotional blunting is a legitimate effect of SSRIs, not just a correlation–causation confusion. He also notes that
There is a subgroup of depressed patients whose depression takes the form of not being able to feel anything at all, and I worry this effect would exacerbate their problem, but I have never heard this from anyone and SSRIs do not seem less effective in that subgroup, so these might be two different things that only sound alike.
It depends on the type of local optimum. I am reasonably sure that becoming too depressed to do enough work to stay in was the only was I could have gotten out of graduate school given my moral system at the time. (I hated being there but believed I had an obligation to try to contribute to human knowledge.)
Also flat affect isn’t at all a universal effect of antidepressant usage, but it does happen for some people.
Homeopathy would actually predict good results. According to their rule that “like cures like”, this would be expected to help people who are currently suffering from bad memories.
I’m definitely underpaid now, and I’d definitely be screwing myself over by telling them my current pay, but it’s likely that when I finally get off my ass and start a job search I’ll be so sick of things that screwing myself over to get out more quickly will feel worth it. Even though it’s probably not. Sigh.
I think our culture genuinely does not care about misleading/inaccurate product descriptions, but I do, and I would feel bad about working at a company where there was nobody at all doing my old job.
I’ll begin a job search July 1 if old job is not filled by then (I’m pretty confident it won’t be, despite various promises—this company has never yet followed through on anything anywhere near the promised time) but job-searching sucks and I want to avoid it if I can.
I was promoted at work but my old position is not going to be filled until July and I’m supposed to continue doing the old work (mainly proofreading) until then. I’ve been encouraged to free up time by lowering standards for the old half of my work, but I’m finding this very difficult due to some combination of conscientiousness and perfectionism. Any advice on how to feel better about doing low-quality work?
I was introduced to LaTeX via LyX as a freshman and found the interface very off-putting and confusing and forgot about the whole thing for years. When I found out I could just type a text file instead, run a few commands, and get the same gorgeous result, it was a revelation and I never went back to OpenOffice.
Probably not news to anyone here, but learning to use a good text editor like vim or emacs is hugely useful and I wish I hadn’t waited so long to do it. Git for version control is pretty great too.
It should be possible to get a decent used bicycle for under $200.
Pointed out to my boss that my new job responsibilities will mean I’ve dramatically underpaid compared to industry average. He went from “we see this as a role where you’ll be learning a lot, so that’s the extra compensation and there’s no need to change the pay” to giving me a 20% raise. (Actually did this late December.)
I’m having good results from using HabitRPG for this sort of thing. Your character gets experience points as you accomplish various daily, weekly, or one-off tasks, and it also records how many times in a row you’ve successfully done each recurring task. It’s kind of silly, but I really feel good about my 37-day streak of actually eating breakfast.
As a woman, I find skirts super comfortable but with some major problems that don’t come up if you’re just hanging around the house.
The lack of pockets is extremely inconvenient. I’d be afraid of losing a purse with a wallet in it, so I basically can’t go out in a skirt unless it’s cool enough out that it’s reasonable to wear a jacket (since those have pockets). There do exist skirts with acceptable pockets, but the selection is very small and if you’re as cheap as I am there just aren’t any options.
Some skirts (not all!) restrict leg motion enough to make it inconvenient to bike or run.
They’re plausibly pretty legit for some joint-related issues. However there’s also a whole set of claims that they can treat totally unrelated issues, for example curing the flu by adjusting the spine. Not all chiropractors make this sort of claim, but enough do to make it background knowledge.
Twill is pretty good for pants and dries faster than denim.
Denim is just a specific type of twill that’s made from cotton. Fiber type is generally more relevant than how it’s woven.
Layering is good, but it’s much easier to apply to the torso and arms than the legs. So a coat that goes at least down to your knees is very handy. I also recommend wool socks and mittens, since unlike many fibers wool is just as insulating when wet. Source: used to live in Boston.
I used to work as a proofreader for MIRI, and was sometimes given documents with volunteers’ comments to help me out. In most cases, the quality of the comments was poor enough that in the time it took me to review the comments, decide which ones were valid, and apply the changes, I could have just read the whole thing and caught the same errors (or at least an equivalent number thereof) myself.
There’s also the fact that many errors are only such because they’re inconsistent with the overall style. It’s presumably not practical to get all your volunteers to read the Chicago Manual of Style and agree on what gets a hyphen and such before doing anything.
I can see how freezing might help with smell, but what confuses me is sweat. If I wear pants more than about 4 times in a row, they start to itch, and I don’t see how freezing would help with that. I don’t think I sweat unusually much.
Water loss through boiling shouldn’t make a difference, as the vitamins are not volatile and will not boil off with it.