Lots of other good suggestions on here, but I have some commentary on this problem as well.
I experience the same issue when trying to read with greater concentration. I start out and my brain goes crazy thinking about everything in the known universe. If I stick it out and keep trying to read, in about 10 to 15 minutes I notice that my concentration is restored.
10 - 15 minutes may seem like a hefty price to pay to read with attention, but consider this: the problem described here is very similar to many people's experience with meditation. I believe that this type of mental state is a sort of un-bundling for your brain, and once complete, you can better focus on the task at hand. In my experience, the more reading I do, the less time I spend in this state. By the time I finish a book I can pick it up and immerse myself instantly. Instead of viewing this as "waiting so you can read", try thinking of it as your daily meditation, without really needing to try.
I see this less as an impairment due to your skimming habits, and more of a natural process that many people experience.
"“Once a field commits to a particular hypothesis, the research resources — funding, experimental models, and training — all get in line,” she wrote in a 2018 analysis. That brings backers of the dominant idea accolades, awards, lucrative consulting deals, and well-paid academic appointments. Admitting doubt, let alone error, would be not only be a blow to the ego but also a threat to livelihood."
Is this not extremely controversial? It was always my belief that "not creating a cure for X disease keeps the money flowing" was the calling card of tinfoil hat wearing conspiracy nuts. This statement, and the following paragraphs seem to suggest this is somewhat commonplace
I would love to see the impact of acronyms on information density. It would also be interesting to see how many bits per second the average human maximum is.
YMMV, TLAs increase s/n but leverage ROI on prefamiliarisation.
Language is symbolic, all words are pointers. Whether you collapse complexity through an Apollonian use of religious icons or through initialisations and acronyms likely matters little.
Some people you might expect to have a very high bps, like auctioneers, are actually using a sort of parlor trick to create the illusion of rapid speech (a form of intention skillful stuttering which, when done right, is perceived as very fast speech.)
I expect some people are capable of some small multiple of this average, but probably not anything seriously dramatic.
(Of course there seems to be no lower bound, as in the case of involuntary stuttering.)
I've written tens of thousands of lines of code, solved a plethora of complex problems, worked on a number of projects from requirements to production in an assortment of different languages and technologies and I can count on one hand how many times I've had to use the modulo operator.
This is first year-out-o-school, junior gate-keeping bullshit. We need better methods to evaluate intermediate and senior devs, and FizzBuzz ain't it
There are many reasons to not use auto iso, in spite of the fact that modern sensors produce much less digital noise than they used to. If you're enlarging your images, or cropping significantly, you'll want images that are as clean as possible. It also tends to vary from camera to camera.
Yeah, you're super wrong about this. Manual mode helps you control the consistency of photos during a session. I've met very few wedding photographers (who incidentally work almost exclusively out of a studio) who are willing to risk letting the camera decide on exposure. You need to know what your shutter speed is so that you don't end up with blur from the subject or camera movement. You need to control ISO to reduce noise as much as possible (grainy black and white's aside). And most of the time, the aperture is being set in a very specific way to affect the depth of field.
Once you become accustomed to manual mode, it is much more reliable and equally as fast as other modes, with the benefit of knowing that the camera isn't interpreting some specular highlight in the background and under-exposing a bunch of images.
This all applies to the professional sports, news, and event photographers I know, as well as myself personally.
Further to this, there are many photographic effects (long exposure light trails and panning, capturing fast moving subjects etc.) that are done much more easily and don't often occur in a studio setting. I think that the technique you've suggested may be valid for a certain subset of shooters, but your understanding of the photographic profession in general is very shallow.
I think this is a neat idea. I would love it if you made this into one of those scary image popping up and loud screaming audio pranks. Three and a half minutes in everyone would be pretty sold on just relaxing. The perfect targets.
Patience isn't about waiting for something to take a little bit of extra time. It's about working on something and being willing to wait for _years_ if necessary to see it happen. To know that what your waiting for is out there on the horizon, is visible to you at all times, yet there is no way of speeding up your journey toward it. Ultimately, it's about how we live in the space between the moments we anticipate.
It's been a very frustrating, but important 12 months.
There seems to be a high correlation between outages and security breaches. My guess is that at some point in the future there the consequences of these shutdowns will come to light in the media.
That, or this is all related to high profile sites being required to install some additional level of infrastructure which is being required in secret by an organization like the NSA.
Both theories require a fairly thick tin foil hat, but honestly.. I have a hard time believing that it's just random downtime.
Lots of other good suggestions on here, but I have some commentary on this problem as well.
I experience the same issue when trying to read with greater concentration. I start out and my brain goes crazy thinking about everything in the known universe. If I stick it out and keep trying to read, in about 10 to 15 minutes I notice that my concentration is restored.
10 - 15 minutes may seem like a hefty price to pay to read with attention, but consider this: the problem described here is very similar to many people's experience with meditation. I believe that this type of mental state is a sort of un-bundling for your brain, and once complete, you can better focus on the task at hand. In my experience, the more reading I do, the less time I spend in this state. By the time I finish a book I can pick it up and immerse myself instantly. Instead of viewing this as "waiting so you can read", try thinking of it as your daily meditation, without really needing to try.
I see this less as an impairment due to your skimming habits, and more of a natural process that many people experience.