I would say no. Just as it’s not legitimate for any other business to break the law even if that means they’re not going to be profitable
I would say no. Just as it’s not legitimate for any other business to break the law even if that means they’re not going to be profitable
Could it be this fella who’s hitting you up: https://claude.ai/login
It takes me to this image when I click it: https://scx2.b-cdn.net/gfx/news/hires/2024/mathematicians-prove-p.jpg
The full thing shows if you click the image
Further, most of the times, it’s simply infeasible to test the data in-depth. We’re all humans with busy schedules and it is, unfortunately, not trivial to replicate experiments. If a reviewer feels more data is needed to support a claim, they can ask for a follow-up test or experiment, but it has to be within reason
Could you expand a bit on your first statement?
Could you link some of those studies? I’d be interested to read more about that
But that study was done on people aged 65+ for 11 weeks? I mean, sure, they didn’t measure any significant changes to the brain, but that doesn’t preclude changes forever. 11 weeks is not long to practice a language
I know that in Lithuania, they drink lightly salted water: https://www.kaina24.lt/s/vytautas-mineralinis-vanduo/
So while I don’t doubt your taste buds, I think it’s a cultural thing whether a bit of salt in water tastes bad 😄
It is up to the shops whether they want to accept euro or not (or any other currency), but the official currency is kroner. I know that some supermarkets (Netto) used to gladly take euro in exchange for a horrible exchange rate
Interesting that they have such a greedy/stupid bot