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I would like to get a reasonably good intuition in regards to the total amount of compound DNA from human bodies at different biochemical states, in different locations around the world (different climates). By "compound DNA" I mean, including DNA of bacterium, fungi and viruses living within one's body. For instance, gut bacteria acquired and maintained based on food intake and environmental influence.

In other words, how much the perception of DNA data in gigabytes grow by in different circumstances? Would it grow by a few more gigabytes ?

Hahaha Amazing!


Achtung Poolizei!


In East Germany, nudism is a big thing. Of course, I checked this out after moving there and I must say I was not at all surprised to see the Ordnungsamt (public oder office?) at the nudist beach enforcing nudity.


Enforced nudity?

How very German.

Here deregulated beaches (outside of council zoning) are clothing-optional :

https://www.worldbeachguide.com/australia/swanbourne-beach.h...

which are often signposted as such near urban areas, with no signage or policing elsewhere:

https://www.australiasnorthwest.com/explore/broome/broome-be...

... just don't disturb nesting turtles, okay?


Problem about non nude people is that they can make the nude feel uncomfortable.

In Austria a semi mixed bath recently closed their nudist area because it's surrounded by forest which was filled with perverts that made a lot of trash in the forest and would fap behind trees to nude people.

Same for any semi reachable other public nudist place I've ever been to, you have to expect perverts wandering around.

That's why I prefer places where non nude is not welcome, even thought I never have seen it enforced and nobody minds a clothed friend that doesn't feel it yet either.


Swanbourne north beach (the nudist part) is Federal land carved out from state title and exempt from local council rules - the inland area is SASR barracks and occasional training grounds .. you don't get a lot of perverts in the back dunes patrolled by squads with dispensation to black bag and interrogate anyone crossing an invisible line.

As for the nudist beach itself, it's mainly nudists who go there to be nude .. it's a tough search to find footage from that part of the beach as most people respect privacy.

The nudist beach is to the left, to the north, up the beach from the lifeguard building seen here in this drone footage:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hwKmSy2d3Yo

it's a lot of empty space directly north of the clothed people with some dots of people in the far distance.

If you make it to the southern hemisphere you might like it .. people aren't prudish about nudity and mainly wear UV blocking clothes to avoid skin cancer .. people frequently strip and change in car parks when going out surfing | swimming | for a paddle.


Same thing in Saunas, staff will tell you to take your clothes off.


Yes, this is how it is.

But surprised by the post above:

"can expect to hear the heavy breathing of amorous couples from about 20-30m away as"

You are naked. But any kind of inappropriate activity is a big no no. Even staring at another person or something. Buddies of mine went to a sauna and there was even a famous actress in it. It is considered normal and egalitarian.

This being said, try Budapest. The scale of this bath will blow your mind: https://bathsbudapest.com/szechenyi-bath

I was blown away already before I realized there is even an outdoor area. It is BIG.


I spent my birthday with a bunch of mates in the Szechenyi Bath as we were travelling around Europe about 15-20 years ago - December with snow falling, playing chess in the outdoor pool with the old fellas. Just a standout memory and a great day


Well that’s how (non-mix) saunas work in Finland.


Biggest difference to Germany is that German saunas are usually mixed. Including mixed showers and changing rooms (in saunas, not in public swimming pools).


The showers are rarely mixed. On the other hand mixed changingrooms for public pools (and saunas) is the norm everywhere around europe. Its for capacity reasons and you have private booths for the changing part.


In Berlin showers in saunas are usually mixed. Talking specifically about saunas only, different in public pools etc.


You're probably talking about different showers.

Showers within the sauna area are usually mixed. Showers within the dressing areas are not.


I think we are talking about different things. Typical saunas are the neighbourhood saunas, Kietz-Saunas. They do not have any separation. Not in dressing rooms, showers, nor in sauna areas. It's all mixed, except usually a women only day once a week.

Saunas in public pools etc may have different arrangements.


I saw people wearing their bathing suits/trunks into a sauna - and quite frankly it’s disgusting.


Well, it is a cultural things. Many Americans have body issues.

https://www.wanderingermany.com/how-to-confidently-visit-a-n...

Tried to bring a US buddy of mine (non-mixed) into a Spa/hot bath/Sauna in Beijing. He got terribly scared of having to be naked and rejected. But it is a good place. And they have a good all you can eat buffet. Sweat. Eat a little. Rest. Repeat. You basically spent there the whole day.


But also American culture has this oddity that nudity somehow equates to sex.


I think it's called Christianity


Is it though? Europe is broadly Christian (though likely less so than the US). The puritan strain seems to be a key thing.


Isn't German a Christian county?


For someone who doesn't know spa culture, why is it disgusting to have clothes on? Like a bikini or swimming shorts.


The reason is hygiene. You sweat into your sheet leaving very little behind on benches. Then you shower and bath and do it again.

With swimming clothes you soak everything then bring it back to the chilling pool and back to sauna.

Also imho nudity in sauna seems wierd first time but you quickly realize you can be covered all the time (with sheet) and that its not sexual at all because you are focusing on your body as does everybody else (heat stress).

Imho after few saunas everybody seems to shed this fear and even gain confidence and casuality about the nakedness part.

I think nudist pools are a lot wierder.


Because the sauna police will look down on you and give you some nonsense about how textiles are gathering sweat or something, all while they sit their sweaty asses on cotton towels which they carry around with them all the time.


Because it's not the same thing like the beach, sweating on plastic fabric can cause injuries to the skin and it's disgusting (even at the beach imo).


The problem with German nudist is that if you take a group of Germans and group them by who you would like to see naked, and those who you absolutely would not to, it's every time the latter group who gets naked.


The signs are quite clear, though: FKK = everybody is nude.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freik%C3%B6rperkultur


"Sir, you'll have to take your junk out or I'll have to ask you to leave"


You don't get to enter if you're wearing clothes. Cannot peep without being peeped on.


// In [25]: chr(16) // Out[25]: '\x10'


What does this comment mean? You demonstrated the python function 'chr', but what does this have to do with the post?


I have not laughed to genuinely hard in a LONG LONG time, everything about this programming language rocks! (yes I did it)


Also check Andy Matuschak's "Evergreen Notes" project https://notes.andymatuschak.org/Evergreen_notes

It's not a software per se, but the way he organizes his notes is the holy grail IMHO.


TLS issues accessing this page


I disagree that it's mostly pointless because if you're practicing Test-driven development OO provides a great way to abstract agents and their actions.

I've seen a lot of python code that looks like the example from the blog but that's simply just a narrow example and does not reflect all the potential of OO, not only in Python but in any programming language.

The thing I see in common in such poorly designed OO code is that it is usually not covered with unit tests that are actually useful and informative. Sometimes it's just not even tested at all.


At the end it comes down to how the developer designs their software, as Fred Brooks argued in "No Silver Bullet" (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/No_Silver_Bullet)

Brooks goes on to argue that there is a difference between "good" designers and "great" designers. He postulates that as programming is a creative process, some designers are inherently better than others. He suggests that there is as much as a tenfold difference between an ordinary designer and a great one. He then advocates treating star designers equally well as star managers, providing them not just with equal remuneration, but also all the perks of higher status: large office, staff, travel funds, etc.


Section from "No Silver Bullet"

Object-oriented programming.

Many students of the art hold out more hope for object-oriented programming than for any of the other technical fads of the day.

I am among them.

Mark Sherman of Dartmouth notes that we must be careful to distin- guish two separate ideas that go under that name: abstract data types and hierarchical types, also called classes.

The concept of the abstract data type is that an object's type should be defined by a name, a set of proper values, and a set of proper operations, rather than its storage structure, which should be hidden.

Examples are Ada packages (with private types) or Modula's modules.

Hierarchical types, such as Simula-67's classes, allow the definition of general interfaces that can be further refined by providing subordinate types.

The two concepts are orthogonal — there may be hierarchies without hiding and hiding without hierarchies.

Both concepts represent real advances in the art of building software.

Each removes one more accidental difficulty from the process, allowing the designer to express the essence of his design without having to express large amounts of syntactic material that add no new information content.

For both abstract types and hierarchical types, the result is to remove a higher-order sort of accidental difficulty and allow a higher-order expression of design.

Nevertheless, such advances can do no more than to remove all the accidental difficulties from the expression of the design.

The complexity of the design itself is essential; and such attacks make no change whatever in that.

An order-of-magnitude gain can be made by object-oriented programming only if the unnecessary underbrush of type specification remaining today in our programming language is itself responsible for nine- tenths of the work involved in designing a program product.

I doubt it.


Tekken 3 <3


Tekken 3 nostalgia


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