Maybe we should consider replication studies to be "service to the community" when judging career accomplishments. Like, maybe you never chaired a conference but you published several replication studies instead. You could get your Masters students and/or undergrads to do the replications. We'd need journals that focus on replication studies, though.
That might work once or twice, but I suspect the rich would just launch their supplies from an island, or from a very large "Green Zone." But I'm guessing the space station would be very susceptible to sabotage or a suicide attack, or something.
It's OK dog. The thing is, you figured it out. You're better off than those that never figured it out. Now you just gotta move on from where you're at.
Choices - we make them, chances - we take them
Some are mistakes, some we celebrate them
We don't look back, cause so much we facin
I always stay proud of myself, I'm yelling, "Fuck regret!"
Imagine an email server dies forever. All of the email that it sent is still out there. If you are on another server, any emaills to/from people on that server are stil in your local email storage.
Likewise, a post that was made to kbin.social is still out there, if someone outside of that server was subscribed to that kbin.social community ("magazine") when the post was made.
To find out the "new" server... well in an ideal world the old server would at least have a notice to that effect. But this case involved a medical emergency, so that didn't happen.
Excel is the one good piece of software in MS Office.
Last time I used MS Office was 10 months ago, and it had a bunch of annoying "features" related to sharing, etc. But PowerPoint has always had some great authoring tools. Sometimes if I was writing an article in LaTeX, I'd still do the figures in PowerPoint.
FWIW I only ever used those services if they accepted a prepaid credit card. OpenAI didn't accept prepaid cards when I tried, not sure about Poe. Just something to think about.
Agreed; and Lemmy communites require not only seeding, but tending by a dedicated poster. There are plenty of dead places where someone created the community, maybe made a post or two, then never posted again.
Maybe we should consider replication studies to be "service to the community" when judging career accomplishments. Like, maybe you never chaired a conference but you published several replication studies instead. You could get your Masters students and/or undergrads to do the replications. We'd need journals that focus on replication studies, though.