A list of puns related to "Life extension"
Once I'm out of minutes, the first person who read this is up next to play the game.
So I was about submit my USC application when my dumbass realized that I hadnโt completed one of the essays.
I didnโt even know it existed, after spending weeks completing and polishing the rest of my application. Itโs one of those college specific prompts, so there was no way of recycling another essay to answer it.
I was working on it frantically when I saw the email. But if I hadnโtโฆ
Are there any differences between the two products? I'm talking about the Life Extension NAD+ Cell Regenerator 300mg (the one that is pure NIAGEN without Resveratrol).
Both seem to use the patented NIAGEN, but I am not sure if it's the exact same product marketed under different brand names or if the different brands still have to implement the manufacturing process to produce the NIAGEN and thus there may be a difference due to the implementation of the manufacturing process? Or perhaps some other difference I'm not aware of?
Basically would you feel equally confident with Life Extension NR as you would with the Tru Niagen NR?
https://archive.org/details/the-phoenix-protocol-dry-fasting-by-a-dunning
The Phoenix Protocol will explain how to heal illness and radically extend lifespan and maybe even more than that! This book reveals a logical way to restore youth and dramatically extend lifespan by at least 25 years. Recent scientific discoveries in cellular research have produced the data to support this idea. Today stem cell therapy is the buzzword in the anti-aging arena but it requires a costly investment. August Dunning, a former NASA Space Station scientist, will show you a scientifically proven alternative plan to activate and proliferate your own endogenous stem cells and itโs a lot cheaperโฆItโs free!The Phoenix Protocol is the first book of its kind to scientifically explain the cellular chemistry of dry fasting which has been lifted from the work of the two Russian doctors who perfected and patented it. August Dunning has taken the science of dry fasting in a direction that no one has ever thought possible.This book is not just about dry fasting for healing and life extension, itโs about functional immortality.Sometimes it does take a rocket scientistโฆ
https://www.amazon.com/Phoenix-Protocol-Fasting-Healing-Extension/dp/B085DRTWBW/ref=cm_cr_arp_d_product_top?ie=UTF8
Hello guys, I have a few questions regarding exam booking and extensions, and I was hoping you could provide some insight as I've seen a lot of mixed answers. Then there are covid exceptions (?) that I'm not sure still apply.
Context: I work full-time. In September I started three different courses. The contract for all of them originally ended at the end of February.
I was doing reasonably well and was on schedule until early December. Then, I went through a complicated breakup and fell behind in 2/3 courses. I didn't worry too much because I got a 1-week vacation from work for Christmas, so I thought I'd be able to get back on track...Until I got a positive Covid-19 test on Christmas Eve and spent my entire vacation week sick, with fever and coughing my soul out.
Current situation: I'm panicking because I've fallen behind even more and at the beginning of February I'm going to have a lot of work. My course standing is:
>ENGL 255: 2 assignments + exam left (20% of final grade)
>
>ENGL 211: 1 assignment + exam left (40% of final grade)
>
>ENGL 212: 1 assignment + exam left (40% of final grade)
I've requested an extension for ENGL 212 which has been granted until the end of April, it's my weakest subject and I'd rather finish the other two first and then focus 100% on getting a good grade in that one. My questions:
1 - Would it be possible to take the ENGL 211 exam around mid-late February, and ENGL 255 in March (technically a few weeks after my contract ends)? Or, do I have to finish both exams by the end of February?
2 - Which exam should I tackle first? It's my first time taking an exam with Athabasca, I don't know if I should go with my strongest subject (ENGL 211) or the one where the exam is worth a lower percentage of the final grade (ENGL 212)
3 - Since ENGL 255 is a general requirement for many, any tips when it comes to assignments 5 and 6, and the exam?
Thank you!
Who doesn't want to live long enough to see BTC at $1M. Turns out the crypto crowd is headed into the life extension biz.
The long and short of it from Protos: (https://protos.com/coinbase-billion-life-extension-brian-armstrong-tech-bro-crypto-newlimit/)
>Coinbase chief exec Brian Armstrong has earned billions with cryptocurrency. Now, heโs looking to profit by lengthening human lifespans.
>
>Armstrong recently contributed to a $105-million pot to fund NewLimit, a biotech startup seeking to prevent or even reverse the effects of time with epigenetic programming.
>
>In laymenโs terms, epigenetic programming relates to a relatively recent scientific discovery that showed cells can be recoded.
Of course there's that impending climate change disaster that will render large parts of the Earth uninhabitable.
Hey Armstrong, how about a few billion to capture carbon in addition to the live long and prosper research? We'd all be ever so thankful.
Most of the free time I had in my narcissistic family was spent distracting myself from the world as much as possible. This almost always took the form of video games, and to a lesser extent Youtube and emotional eating.
The more nfamily abused me, the more I dissociated. I became completely isolated and lived in a permanently dissociated state. I could barely feel anything (emotionally and physically), I could barely remember anything, and I was never in the present moment.
I donโt blame myself for this, and as I write this the inner critic is screaming at me in my head. It was not my fault. I was teetering on the edge of suicide for my entire lifeโmy earliest memory of it is from third grade. Iโm 24 now and I feel like Iโve walked through a tunnel and just came out at the other side.
Even though I was PHYSICALLY there as I became taller, grew facial hair, got a much deeper voice, and started getting all of the hormones, I wasnโt there mentally or emotionally. I might as well have been a zombie, and the blame for that is squarely on my nparents, nsiblings, and the bullies at school.
Mentally, Iโm still 8 years old. I donโt have a beard, my voice is still squeaky, Iโm short, and the concept of sex and everything related to it feels like something that Iโm not supposed to think about (tons of sexual repression and sexual abuse at home). Nparents infantilized me and controlled me to the point that I wasnโt a person, and the only possible escapeโschoolโwas horrifically traumatizing. If I felt everything that I would have felt then if I wasnโt dissociating, I probably would have killed myself, so Iโm grateful that I survived. But Iโm also furious at the lost opportunity to have a normal childhood.
Now Iโm an adult and have to learn this all on my own while slowly learning how to tolerate reality without having to dissociate. Itโs fucking painful. Iโve come so far despite the inner critic and everything else thatโs happened, but sometimes all I want to do is just escape reality again.
How long will it be until we, either as organic human beings or transhuman cyborgs, how will we deal with the finite mind?
Will we be forced to overwrite our eldest memories? Will we be able to extract and store memories outside our minds (and recall it with an effort, swapping it back in when needed)? Will we become more inventive, increasing the size of minds physically to store more memories or altering the way we store them to achieve higher rates of compression?
Or all of the above? What are your thoughts?
Inspired by Schlock Mercenary.
And in a few more years after that , it will become indefinite . These are VERY exciting times indeed . What do you guys think ?
Got a replacement sensor which expired in September 2021. It has a "shelf life extension" sticker with a new expiration date of 3/31/2022. So I guess that means sensors can last 6 months past their expiration date. Haven't used it yet so I don't know if there are any issues.
Blockchain communities are embracing, and funding, life extension technologies. The link stretches back to the cypherpunks' crossover with the transhumanists and biological immortality.
by Kelsie Nabben
Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin is on a mission to make humans immortal. Buterin, 27, proposes the idea that โaging is an engineering problem.โ
He is not alone in his combined interest in Bitcoin and biohacking. Famous biomedical aging researcher Aubrey de Grey, Xanadu architect and Agoric chief scientist Mark Miller, Bitcoin Cash billionaire Roger Ver and former chief technology officer of Coinbase and a16z general partner Balaji Srinivasan, are all fascinated by the pursuit of longevity.
De Grey recently helped advise a decentralized collective funding longevity research. He says:
โI have been gratified since the beginning of blockchain to see the enormous fanbase that I and the longevity movement have in there.โ
Miller, alongside his engineering hall-of-fame accomplishments, is a senior research fellow at the Foresight Institute, a not-for-profit founded in 1986 with the aim of โadvancing technology for the long-term benefit of life.โ
โIโm very much involved in this new world of crypto commerce, often referred to as the blockchain sector,โ he says. โIโm very hopeful about that as creating an ecosystem in which secure software will dominate because insecure software results in massive losses quickly, with no recourse.โ
Srinivasanโs Twitter bio describes his vision as: โImmutable money, infinite frontier, eternal life. #Bitcoin.โ Srinivasan states that โthe ultimate purpose of technology is to eliminate mortalityโ and โlife extension is the most important thing we can invent.โ
Blockchain communities are clearly excited about longevity. But what does cryptocurrency have to do with life extension, and where might this future be headed?
If we're being more open minded about accepting new weird ideas, can I suggest anti-aging research? Aging is a humanitarian disaster that kills as many people as WW2 every two years and even before killing debilitates people and burdens social systems and families. Let's end it.
Crypto people are funding longevity research
Crypto philanthropists are donating significant wealth to this area, which is typically difficult to garner mainstream support for. They may be the only people on the planet optimistic enough to fund tech that currently only exists in sci-fi novels.
Accordin
... keep reading on reddit โกI feel guilty enough to pay it but does it sound like I should?
https://www.liebertpub.com/doi/full/10.1089/rej.2021.0048
Can someone post the contents here? It's behind a paywall and it's not available through sci-hub yet.
Blockchain communities are embracing, and funding, life extension technologies. The link stretches back to the cypherpunks' crossover with the transhumanists and biological immortality.
by Kelsie Nabben
Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin is on a mission to make humans immortal. Buterin, 27, proposes the idea that โaging is an engineering problem.โ
He is not alone in his combined interest in Bitcoin and biohacking. Famous biomedical aging researcher Aubrey de Grey, Xanadu architect and Agoric chief scientist Mark Miller, Bitcoin Cash billionaire Roger Ver and former chief technology officer of Coinbase and a16z general partner Balaji Srinivasan, are all fascinated by the pursuit of longevity.
De Grey recently helped advise a decentralized collective funding longevity research. He says:
โI have been gratified since the beginning of blockchain to see the enormous fanbase that I and the longevity movement have in there.โ
Miller, alongside his engineering hall-of-fame accomplishments, is a senior research fellow at the Foresight Institute, a not-for-profit founded in 1986 with the aim of โadvancing technology for the long-term benefit of life.โ
โIโm very much involved in this new world of crypto commerce, often referred to as the blockchain sector,โ he says. โIโm very hopeful about that as creating an ecosystem in which secure software will dominate because insecure software results in massive losses quickly, with no recourse.โ
Srinivasanโs Twitter bio describes his vision as: โImmutable money, infinite frontier, eternal life. #Bitcoin.โ Srinivasan states that โthe ultimate purpose of technology is to eliminate mortalityโ and โlife extension is the most important thing we can invent.โ
Blockchain communities are clearly excited about longevity. But what does cryptocurrency have to do with life extension, and where might this future be headed?
If we're being more open minded about accepting new weird ideas, can I suggest anti-aging research? Aging is a humanitarian disaster that kills as many people as WW2 every two years and even before killing debilitates people and burdens social systems and families. Let's end it.
Crypto people are funding longevity research
Crypto philanthropists are donating significant wealth to this area, which is typically difficult to garner mainstream support for. They may be the only people on the planet optimistic enough to fund tech that currently only exists in sci-fi novel
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