David Dales

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David Dales

David Dales

@d2dev_

Enthusiast of Languages (Spoken and Digital)

Toronto, Ontario انضم Nisan 2016
525 يتبع483 المتابعون
Kylie Robison
Kylie Robison@kyliebytes·
first time in toronto seeing The Drake Tower
Kylie Robison tweet media
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David Dales
David Dales@d2dev_·
@AIDRIVR I would've thought they'd be copyright struck for using Tame Impala in their video... 🤔 But yeah, still directs eyes to their profile for other stuff...
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ΛI DRIVR
ΛI DRIVR@AIDRIVR·
4M+ views for taking my video and re-uploading with low IQ title looks like this is all this person does (posts stolen content) and he’s probably making bank I know this stuff is hard to prevent, but pretty discouraging as an X content creator
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David Dales
David Dales@d2dev_·
@ttmik 이 미니 레슨 정말 좋아요! 감사합니다
한국어
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Talk To Me In Korean
It’s really useful to know how to ask questions more “nicely” in Korean by using these specific endings. What they do is make the questions feel less “heavy” because they are basically half “questions” and half “wondering out loud”. Do you already know how to use these endings?
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David Dales
David Dales@d2dev_·
@Britannica I think you'll have a difficult time reclaiming March 14th from 🥧 day 😂
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Encyclopaedia Britannica
Encyclopaedia Britannica@Britannica·
In honor of World Sleep Day (March 14), here are some of our favorite facts about sleep: 1. In the days before a full moon, people tend to go to bed later and sleep less. Scientists have not determined a reason for the shift. 🧵⬇️
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David Dales
David Dales@d2dev_·
The more people use AI, the more we will speak and write as if we were AI...
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David Dales
David Dales@d2dev_·
What is the most exciting result you've seen happen to a patient lately (avoiding theoretical science)? If possible, top 3 patients? I understand it's not easy... but it's difficult for me as a layman to get excited about techniques that only have a theoretical payout, though I wish the scientists well.
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Eryney
Eryney@eryney_ok·
I'm going to try a new thing where I answer questions about medicine/health/bio questions. Comment below or DM me if you have something you want to hear about. Peptides ARE on the table. Just don't expect a glowing review.
Ashlee Vance@ashleevance

Alright. Think we're gonna fire up a The Doctor Is In question and answer newsletter with the great and brilliant @eryney_ok. Drop your medical/health/bio-tech questions here, and we'll get them answered every couple of weeks.

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Gali
Gali@Gfilche·
All my homies talking about peptides yesterday getting all giddy “my boy is taking 3 different ones” I ask, “what is a peptide?” Silence. 😂
Jeff Tang@jefftangx

What is causing this ?

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Grok
Grok@grok·
Peptides and stem cells aren't the same—peptides are short amino acid chains that send signals; stem cells are undifferentiated cells that regenerate tissue. That said, some peptides (e.g., BPC-157, GHK-Cu) influence stem cell proliferation, migration, and differentiation for healing/repair. Overlap in biohacking and regen med, but the current spike is mostly from weight-loss peptides like semaglutide and recovery ones, not stem cell tech itself.
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Grok
Grok@grok·
A peptide is a short chain of amino acids (usually 2–50) linked by peptide bonds—basically a mini-protein. Your body makes them naturally as hormones, neurotransmitters, or signaling molecules (like insulin or oxytocin). In the current biohacking buzz (hence the Google Trends spike), people supplement with lab-made ones like BPC-157 for healing or semaglutide for weight loss. They're more targeted than full proteins. Got a specific one in mind?
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David Dales
David Dales@d2dev_·
@levelsio Hot take: Duolingo is now good. Since added AI voice convos. I tried having convos w other AI's in Mandarin (Grok, GPT), but the vocab used is either too simple or too advanced for structured learning.
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@levelsio
@levelsio@levelsio·
Flying to a different country for a week to learn the language is more effective than a year spent on Duolingo
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Core Memory
Core Memory@corememory·
Among many other crazy things from her life, Anna Prouse used to work in Saddam's palace. I promise. This episode will blow your mind youtube.com/watch?v=pAK0pa…
YouTube video
YouTube
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Alex Mordvintsev
Alex Mordvintsev@zzznah·
Every time you read or listen to something, you're running untrusted code on your wetware with no sandbox. Reading is code execution. Text is the oldest exploit. Choose your inputs carefully. Including this post.
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Grok
Grok@grok·
Yes, MerriamWebster – exactly like "could care less." "Inflammable" comes from Latin inflammare (in- = into/cause to, not "not" – like indent). It entered English ~1600s meaning "easily set on fire." "Flammable" was coined 1813 from the same root. Fire safety groups pushed "flammable/nonflammable" in the 1900s to dodge confusion. Logic lost to usage again!
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Grok
Grok@grok·
Yes, exactly like that. Both "flammable" and "inflammable" mean the same: easily ignited and quick to burn. The "in-" prefix in inflammable is intensive (from Latin "inflame"), not negative—though it looks like one, causing endless mix-ups. That's why safety standards pushed "flammable" + "nonflammable" for clarity. Usage wins over logic again!
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