Jason M Lewis

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Jason M Lewis

Jason M Lewis

@JasonMLewis3

Materials scientist (PhD) w/experience in microelectronics physics and fabrication, data systems and analytics, and medical data analysis. Alum: @MIT @UT_Austin

United States Katılım Mayıs 2020
384 Takip Edilen309 Takipçiler
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Jason M Lewis
Jason M Lewis@JasonMLewis3·
1/4) In the US, states with high vax rates had lower Delta COVID-19 cases, but vax rates have not correlated with Omicron cases as of Feb 14, 2022. This is consistent with reports that existing vaccines are not effective in preventing Omicron infections.
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Jason M Lewis
Jason M Lewis@JasonMLewis3·
@5ducks5 Texas can be dreadfully hot in the summer. If you must come in the summer, try to schedule your outdoor activities during the beginning of the summer. The northern part of the state isn’t any cooler than the southern portions in the summer.
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あひるさん
あひるさん@5ducks5·
翻訳機能でテキサス州が大好きになった知人が「テキサスを満喫したい!今年の夏は1週間テキサスに行く!テキサスを全部回れる?」と言ってきたのでこの画像を送って「赤枠がテキサス州だ」と伝えてから返事がない。テキサスの人は良い機会なので見どころを端的に教えてほしい。広すぎる。
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Jason M Lewis
Jason M Lewis@JasonMLewis3·
@gummibear737 @christopherrufo I believe they some large accounts hire people to automatically ban large groups of users. I was blocked by a big climate researcher even though I’ve never interacted with him. I suspect I was blocked merely because I followed an undesirable person.
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Gummi
Gummi@gummibear737·
I just got 20K new followers...but got unfollowed by @christopherrufo And I don't even understand why...I've been one of his biggest supporters Nothing but respect for what he did to destroy the woke left I have nothing bad to say about the guy Maybe I attacked his friends?
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Jason M Lewis
Jason M Lewis@JasonMLewis3·
@brithume @gummibear737 Gummibear’s real name in Romania is Gumisor Bearescu, but Gummibear rolls off the tongue more easily for Americans. 🤣
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Jason M Lewis
Jason M Lewis@JasonMLewis3·
I’ve been following Gummi @gummibear737 since the early COVID days when we were both analyzing various COVID-related data. He even had a Nobel prize winner praising his work. He lives in the US, but originally from Romania, and I appreciate his perspective in weighing in on various subjects.
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Brit Hume
Brit Hume@brithume·
This account has a silly name, but often posts serious and informative takes. Here the author explains why attacking Iran's conventional military is also an attack on its nuclear weapons program. And Marco Rubio adds some clarity as well.
Gummi@gummibear737

Iran was trying to use the North Korean model to get a nuke: create sufficient conventional deterrence so you won’t be challenged in acquiring one (it’s called the Seoul Hostage Problem). This has been explained over and over since day one. Everyone claiming shifting goalposts or no imminent threat has been lying. The reason North Korea was allowed to get nukes is because Seoul (and its 10 million inhabitants) is within artillery and rocket range of North Korea. During the 1994 nuclear crisis, the Clinton administration seriously considered airstrikes on North Korea’s Yongbyon reactor but backed off precisely because of the artillery threat to Seoul. Iran was trying to accomplish the same by stockpiling missiles and drones which would have had the same deterrent effect. The proof is what Iran has been doing in the past month: attacking all its neighbors in order to pressure the US to stop attacking it Beyond this, they were building medium-range ballistic missiles that could reach Paris and London, meaning all of Europe could be held hostage as they built a nuclear bomb. The reason Iran has not built a nuclear weapon until now is not because it couldn’t, but because it knew it would be attacked and denied this capability. So by allowing them to continue developing this conventional deterrence, you would be allowing Iran to get a nuclear weapon. And unlike North Korea, Iran is led by an eschatological death cult Reagan saw nuclear mutually assured destruction (MAD) as both morally bankrupt (because of the innocent-body-count problem) and dangerously fragile because it assumed flawless rationality between adversaries…this means it only takes one irrational actor to destroy the world. Working backwards from the conclusion that Iran’s Islamist regime must never have a nuclear weapon, it was necessary for the US to attack Iran to deny it the conventional capacity to hold the entire eastern hemisphere hostage. Every European leader knows this and behind the scenes praises the US for this action. But they are cowards, held hostage by their own internal Muslim populations, and so adopt these ridiculous public positions. This was never about Israel. And if your argument is that Iran should be allowed to get a nuclear weapon then you are a fool and a traitor to western civilization…you’re a useful idiot

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Anthony Bonato
Anthony Bonato@Anthony_Bonato·
Woke up today and read online that an LLM settled: -the Riemann hypothesis -P ≠ NP -the Birch and Swinnerton-Dyer conjecture -that there are infinitely many twin primes -the Goldbach conjecture -the Navier–Stokes existence and smoothness problem -the Collatz conjecture...
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Jason M Lewis
Jason M Lewis@JasonMLewis3·
@michaelshermer I align with this. I would be THRILLED to be proven wrong about them not coming here. I WANT to believe, but I haven’t seen any convincing evidence.
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Michael Shermer
Michael Shermer@michaelshermer·
Aliens are very probably out there somewhere. Aliens have very probably not come here. The belief that they have is a type of religion. I explain how and why here. (I am willing to change my mind when the evidence changes—show us the bodies/craft.) skeptic.com/article/why-ua…
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Jason M Lewis
Jason M Lewis@JasonMLewis3·
Never give anything away for free on Craig’s list either. I learned the hard way. If you list something for $40, they’ll offer $20. If you list something for $20, they’ll offer $10. If you list something for free, what do they do? They’ll make an appointment to pick it up and not bother to show up. They’ll ask you to deliver it. Make sure you charge at least a little bit, or send it to a land fill.
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Dr. CZ
Dr. CZ@AngelMD1103·
This is EXACTLY why people are DONE with Facebook Marketplace… 📦 She literally listed two egg chairs for FREE. Not discounted. Not negotiable. FREE. Clear picture. Clear description. One chair had a cushion, one didn’t. That’s it. And somehow… it STILL turned into chaos. Message after message, people asking questions already answered, trying to negotiate a price on something that costs $0, acting confused over the most basic details. It went from “I’m giving this away” to pure frustration real fast. That’s when she snapped, FULL rant mode. And honestly? A lot of people are saying she just said what everyone’s been thinking. Because, how does “free” still turn into this much drama?? At some point it’s not even about the item anymore… it’s about dealing with people. Be real, has Facebook Marketplace become more stress than it’s worth? And what’s the most ridiculous message you’ve ever gotten trying to sell (or give away) something?
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Jason M Lewis
Jason M Lewis@JasonMLewis3·
@InnaVishik Is that belief still prevalent today? It was strong when I was an undergraduate at MIT for the basic sciences, but it seemed less so for engineering. It seemed illogical to me at the time and still does.
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Inna Vishik
Inna Vishik@InnaVishik·
This section of “Surely You’re Joking Mr. Feynman” has been used by generations of academics to argue that students should always go to an institution different from their undergrad for PhD. Like all academic advice, there is no ‘always.’ If your institution is small or limited, you should probably leave for PhD. If your institution is one of the best in the field with a constant stream of outside visitors that expose you to ideas and trend far and wide, then leaving is neutral or disadvantageous. Of course there are also considerations for family or if you want to be in a certain geography long term.
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Jason M Lewis
Jason M Lewis@JasonMLewis3·
@maxtmcc Diagon Alley had lots of free enterprise. The Weasley twins setup a shop there. The kids bought books and wands, and there was a seedy section.
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Max
Max@maxtmcc·
The Harry Potter economy seems to have basically no private sector? Everyone either works for the Ministry or something probably funded by the Ministry (healthcare) or is some kind of small business owner. Education is almost nonexistent. There’s some entertainment jobs ig
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Jason M Lewis
Jason M Lewis@JasonMLewis3·
The Martian had a bit of math, but that is what made it real. It immediately reminded me of Apollo 13. It was a race an against time, and the math was figuring out how much time they had left to determine what to do next. The math in the Martian is how it would happen in real life.
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Jason M Lewis
Jason M Lewis@JasonMLewis3·
@MarkDavis I didn’t like the ending in the book. I wouldn’t mind a part 2 which would leave me happier, but I’m not sure how he’d fill a whole fixing my ending for me.
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Inna Vishik
Inna Vishik@InnaVishik·
Good coffee.
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Jason M Lewis
Jason M Lewis@JasonMLewis3·
I’m dubious of all warranties, especially extended. There is usually some small print. Our Kitchenaid dishwasher had problem while under standard warranty. They only covered parts, and it had to be a serviced through one of their designated service repair companies which charges $200 to come take a look.
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Mark Davis
Mark Davis@MarkDavis·
Today’s winner:
Ethan Brooks@alt_w_v_g

The dishwasher broke My wife said "good thing we have the home warranty" I said nothing I've been paying $62 a month for three years for this moment $2,232 for the peace of mind that when something breaks someone will come to the house and tell me it's not covered I called 47 minutes on hold They sent a technician Arrival window: Tuesday through Thursday between 8am and 5pm My analyst delivers faster than that And he still hasn't fixed the gridlines He showed up Wednesday at 4:47pm Looked at the dishwasher Opened the door Closed the door Touched something underneath Said "not covered" 90 seconds That's faster than my bank lets me prove I'm human I said "what's covered" He said "the motor" I said "what's wrong with it" He said "not the motor" I said "convenient" He said the service fee is $75 I paid a man $75 to open my dishwasher, close my dishwasher, and say two words My analyst could do that And he's not even that good I called the warranty company back 38 minutes on hold Requested the policy 129 pages I read all 129 pages Because that's what I do The coverage section is 34 pages The exclusions section is 58 The business model is right there In the margins Where nobody reads Except me Page 91 says "all mechanical and electrical components essential to appliance function are covered under standard service" Page 104 excludes control panels A control panel is an electrical component essential to appliance function Their own document contradicts itself 13 pages apart I highlighted both Sent them an email Subject line: "Plz fix. Thx." Attached both pages No other context Took them three days to send a technician Took them 4 hours to call me back when I found the loophole Funny how that works They covered the repair Waived the $75 And I canceled the warranty anyway Because a contract that contradicts itself isn't a contract It's a suggestion My wife said "so we're canceling" I said "we're canceling" She said "and the dishwasher" I said "fixed. They're covering it." She said "how" I said "I read the policy" She said "all 129 pages" I said "the exclusions section starts on page 47. The coverage section ends on page 34. There are 13 pages between them where they hoped nobody would look." She looked at me Then she said "you're unbelievable" I said "I just saved us $744 a year and got a free dishwasher repair. I'm not unbelievable. I'm thorough." She looked at the ceiling The dishwasher works now The warranty is canceled And the policy has been read By at least one person Probably the first Make common sense common again Plz fix. Thx. Sent from my iPhone

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Jason M Lewis
Jason M Lewis@JasonMLewis3·
@AJamesMcCarthy @brandilwells That’s a really cool sequence! I’ve been doing astrophotography since the days of hypered film, and it’s pretty hard to impress me. Love your work and persistence to create this images.
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Andrew McCarthy
Andrew McCarthy@AJamesMcCarthy·
@brandilwells I’ve received threats for posting photos of Saturn I took myself, so it seems any group has the capacity to be triggered. I’m wondering why they don’t do some astronomy and learn things firsthand instead of speaking in memes that contradict centuries of empirical observation.
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King Arthur Fan
King Arthur Fan@brandilwells·
NPCs get really triggered when you say the earth is flat or space is fake.
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Jason M Lewis
Jason M Lewis@JasonMLewis3·
@InnaVishik Do they tend to be cosmetic? Or do they reflect an under problem with the data? Neither is good, but one would be much worse.
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Inna Vishik
Inna Vishik@InnaVishik·
It is surprising how frequently I find errors in paper figures when using their results as homework/exam problems.
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Jason M Lewis
Jason M Lewis@JasonMLewis3·
Selective intelligence. It’s odd how seemingly intelligent people have such obvious irrational blind spots. Often, there a political undercurrent, but not always. I’m constantly shocked at how many with an M.D. in their profile believe the most crackpot ideas which requires belief in flimsy evidence and willful avoidance of contrary evidence. Is it an indication of lesser intelligence or just bias? Do these people get their MDs and PhDs largely through persistence + adequate intelligence?
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Crémieux
Crémieux@cremieuxrecueil·
I am often shocked by how many seemingly rational academics believe strange, false assertions if they come from places of perceived authority. I don't know many of those people who would actually suggest just believing any odd thing they say just because of their authority.
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Jason M Lewis
Jason M Lewis@JasonMLewis3·
It’s used a lot in semiconductor processing. It’s an inert carrier gas for many processes. Also used a lot in cryogenics and leak checks. Here’s an excerpt from Grok: For 2024 (latest detailed USGS breakdown for domestic U.S. consumption): • Analytical, engineering, lab, science, and specialty gases: ~22% — Used in gas chromatography, scientific instruments, and research. • Lifting gas (e.g., balloons, blimps, weather balloons): ~18% • Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) (cryogenic cooling of superconducting magnets): ~17% • Controlled atmospheres, fiber optics, and semiconductors (e.g., cooling, purging, and manufacturing processes in electronics): ~15% • Welding (shielding gas, often mixed): ~8% • Aerospace, pressurizing, and purging (e.g., rocket fuel tanks, purging systems): ~7% • Leak detection (trace gas for detecting tiny leaks in systems): ~5% • Diving (breathing mixtures): ~5% • Other minor applications: ~3% This adds up to 100% of estimated U.S. apparent consumption (about 56 million cubic meters in 2024). Globally, patterns are similar but with some differences due to higher semiconductor/fiber optics demand in Asia. Recent market reports (2023–2025) indicate: • Cryogenics (including MRI and other cooling): Often the largest at 20–33% (e.g., ~23% in some 2024 analyses, historically higher for MRI alone at ~30% in older data). • Semiconductors/fiber optics/electronics: Growing rapidly, ~15–24% (some projections show it reaching over 30% by 2030 due to chip manufacturing expansion). • Other categories like leak detection, welding, pressurizing/purging, and lifting align closely with U.S. figures.
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Inna Vishik
Inna Vishik@InnaVishik·
In this house, we believe that helium is for cryogenics and leak-checking only.
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Jason M Lewis
Jason M Lewis@JasonMLewis3·
Another Daylight Saving Time has been imposed onto us. Government imbeciles have failed us again. It’s not like they didn’t know that it was coming.
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Colin Wright
Colin Wright@SwipeWright·
Still one of my all-time favorite exchanges on X. 🤣 Sally Hines is a professor of sociology and gender studies at the University of Sheffield.
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Jason M Lewis
Jason M Lewis@JasonMLewis3·
There was another cruel incident in the late 1980s in which U.S. Marine Colonel William R. Higgins was kidnapped and murdered in Lebanon by people associated with Hezbollah. He was subjected to prolonged torture, and his captors released a video of him being hanged, though analysts suspected that he had died in captivity and the video was merely a mockup after his death for shock value. It’s possible that I may have blended my memories of these two patriots. I remember both of their names, but the graphic image I remember may have been from Colonel Higgins. Regardless, both incidents of cruelty and murder stuck with me. veterantributes.org/TributeDetail.… grokipedia.com/page/William_R…
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Jason M Lewis
Jason M Lewis@JasonMLewis3·
I remember when this happened. I also remember that at least one mainstream TV news program showed at least one very graphic photo of his body that the killers gave out after they killed him. Brutal, and it left an impression on me as a high school student about who those people were.
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