I haven’t been diagnosed with EoE (and don’t think I have it) but I do think there is a connection between heart palpitations and the digestive system. I have SIBO and will sometimes get them from the trapped gas.
Some would consider this as Roemheld syndrome, which isn’t an official diagnosis but I see it as more of an explanation that your digestive system can cause these symptoms, rather than there being a problem with your heart.
I don’t have any thing else to offer you as I’m not as familiar with EoE but you could look through the related subreddit to see if others have suggestions. Wishing you the best!
Seems the advantage is that OP didn't need to write any code to extract information from the unstructured data (e.g. job title, company name, remote/not, salary, location, etc.). It seems you can feed GPT all of this data and ask it to return these fields.
Exactly. I am sure you can get similar results with some "traditional" NLP skills, but the good (bad?) thing is that they are not required when using one of the newer LLMs.
Childcare is a pretty large expense. Whether you have two working parents and use daycare, or one stay at home parent (single income instead of double), there's a significant cost associated with each.
The average amount spent on a child per year is 17k [1]. It may not be that much if you're making $200k+/yr, but on the median household income of $71k/yr [2], it's a pretty significant chunk — about ~24% of your income for just one child.
Yes, that was the point I made. Either opportunity costs or it costs for if both parents work full time.
I do think that families that figure out how to at least have one parent home for the kids seem to have better relationships with them. I like the idea of families that can swap each parent having a year or something with the kids, the issue is that most careers don't support that model. You can't have multiple year gaps in your resume nor do both spouses often make the same income.
It would take a lot more calls to random.randint(0, 1) than that for me to think something was wrong. Especially since we're actually talking about values that rarely go outside 0.4 and 0.6.
I noticed the same, and seeing the calander with red yellow and green days makes it easy to see how well I’m doing (plus drinking or not getting a good nights sleep is super important)
Are you talking about the Sleep section of Apple's Health app? AutoSleep seems to track more data than that does. It estimates my deep sleep, takes into account my HRV and heart rate, and gives me a sleep rating for the night (e.g. 90 out of 100).
Apple's Health app just tracks total time spent asleep which ignores my heart rate. My heart rate is always much higher if I've drank alcohol or ate something too close to bedtime, which AutoSleep uses to determine that my sleep quality is lower.
https://youtu.be/aVTOr7Nq2SM?si=5zS7gj9Kq6LBTiIc