The thing is that many of these things just can't be measured directly. You can use the information from the simulation to get a deeper understanding of e.g. some receptors (as was done), and use that information for something else. For example to optimize a binder for the receptor, or to manipulate the tonic signalling. But that's then often a paper building onto the findings from the simulation.
hinterlufer
safety razor is the way to go imo. Same benefits of a shavette but easier to use and harder to cut yourself
Have you looked at how Obsidian handles it? I think their solution is pretty much perfect. You have the markdown, you write wysiwym, but you only ever see the source when your cursor is in that specific line/part. Also for equations.
maybe a WhatsApp backup?
To be fair, that equates to just above 3 USD per year if the numbers from the other post are correct.
As someone in an important position once said to me, having a PhD shows that you have frustration tolerance.
You don't. You could try overleaf or some wysiwyg editor for LaTeX, but both need some getting used to and at least a minute amount of effort. Overleaf probably has the lowest barrier of entry (0 set up required), but is a paid service.
yep, markdown is a great alternative to LaTeX if you don't need fancy layouts or anything special
There was this company doing something similar with CDs. They sold the physical medium and then let you download the ripped files and store the CDs at their place. In fact, you could just buy the record online and directly download a .flac from their website. And if you wanted, you could have the physical medium shipped to you.
Apparently that was legal, but they have gone bankrupt a few years ago iirc. They were called Murphies (idk about the spelling).
From what I've found on safety datasheets it should be more like 3 g/kg. The numbers on this seem a bit off in general.
How large/heavy is a regular frozen pizza where you're from? Eating less than a whole one sounds a bit odd to me as they're really not very big around here, around 350-400 g each.