Because Wikipedia. My edit got immediately auto-bot-reverted[1] by some anti-vandalism crusader. Insert bell-curve meme[1] where "just edit wikipedia" is the middle of the bell-curve.
Worth noting that the addition of the interlinear annotation characters was quite controversial, with many commenting that this simply is not plain text and as such does not belong in Unicode. I'm not clear on how it made it in anyway, but it sure seems like the Unicode Consortium now somewhat agrees, as while they haven't formally deprecated the characters, they have kind of discouraged their use.
So... where does it get its ATP? The article says it's lacking pretty much all metabolism -- does that include cellular respiration and/or fermentation? Does it just get its ATP all from its host, or does it make some itself and get some from its host, or what?
I'm pretty sure he means they did the problem by first figuring out the numbers a and b. That's the slow way. I can reveal the fast way if you want, but maybe you should think about it a bit more first! :)
I know the 'fast way'. Took me a second or two to get the answer, but it is so obvious that I cannot imagine anyone trying to solve this by calculating a and b first.
For novice students of algebra first learning to solve for values of variables, the idea of NOT solving for the values of the variables is a major step.
Location: New York City
Remote: Yes
Willing to relocate: Probably not
Technologies: JavaScript, TypeScript, C, Haskell, Solidity, C#, MUMPS
Resume: https://haltman.neocities.org/resume.pdf
Email: harry.j.altman@gmail.com
Hi, I'm Harry Altman! I was the maintainer of Truffle Debugger (https://github.com/trufflesuite/truffle/tree/develop/package...), a Solidity smart contract debugger, for 5 years. I eventually ended up writing my own decoding and encoding libraries to support it, as well as a bunch of other things.
I'm good at this sort of nitpicky work, spotting and thinking about edge cases. I like getting things exactly right, even though that obviously isn't always possible due to various constraints. I've been kind of wondering if I should get into embedded development; I find it appealing when things are low-level or similarly constrained. I've beaten Microcorruption. :) (The original levels, I haven't played the new ones.)
I'm also quite interested in unusual or obscure data formats, and working on Truffle Debugger and its associated libraries certainly involved a bunch of having to figure undocumented formats and interfaces. :) I put down above what languages I've worked substantially in but I'd say I'm a generalist and will figure out whatever you give me (I knew approximately no Javascript, Typescript, or Solidity when I started working at Consensys).
I'm a mathematician by background and in my spare time, so after the Truffle Debugger project was shut down I took some time off to focus on my mathematical projects. But now I'm looking for work again! If you need someone like me, I'm available for hire!
The record's been lowered since then, I should note. At least down into the 600s, I've seen claims of down in the 400s. But I haven't really kept up with this.
Of course, that's specifically about human anatomy. In this case we're talking about a feature that I'd bet is present in other animals too, so the factors discussed here don't all apply. In this case though there seems to be a straightforward answer -- the structures involved are very small! The post I linked is largely talking about larger structures we failed to find...
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