Does this mean you can catch pig kidney diseases (they specifically mention turning of a few retroviruses)? I'm assuming pig kidneys are immune to certain human diseases and vice versa. Kind of wild that you have a single organ running an entirely different mammalian OS distro but it is similar enough that it Just Works.
I use SQlAlchemy and just generate a pydantic model that specifies which fields are allowed and what kind of filtering or sorting is allowed on them. Bonus is the resulting generated typescript client and use of the same pydantic model on the endpoint basically make this a validation issue instead of a query building issue.
I recently used SQLAlchemy for the first time and was delighted it has something I’ve always wanted in Laravel’s Eloquent: columns are referenced by identifiers on the models rather than plain strings.
Seeing `.where(Foo.id == Bar.foo_id)` was a little jarring coming from a language where `==` cannot be anything but a plain Boolean comparison, but it’s nice to know that if I make a typo or rename a field, it can be picked up statically before runtime.
I live in a small city/large town that has a large number of craft breweries. I always marveled at how these small operations were able to churn out so many different varieties. Turns out they are actually trying to make their few core recipes but the yield is so low they market the less consistent results as...all that variety I was so impressed with.
I thought this was known about older GLP-1 antagonists like semaglutide, which is why there's some excitement around the newer dual-action types like tirzepatide? My understanding is the newer drugs cause substantially less muscle mass loss.
I think we are already witnessing interesting mental contortions or public relations in various comments here. Either from Anthrophic or from general AI hawks.
I'd humbly suggest the slogan: Military applications are PhilAnthrophic!