Queen Bee
Crown Winner by Default ~ Don't Judge :D
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2011
- Messages
- 8,436
- Reaction score
- 32
no I can't....I'm not a Queen :blushing:
you are to me :hug: :Crown:
no I can't....I'm not a Queen :blushing:
sometimes they mute in time, but most times not! lolThe streaming I'm watching mutes the white noise - which I'm glad of! It makes me jump out of my skin!
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sometimes they mute in time, but most times not! lol
The streaming I'm watching mutes the white noise - which I'm glad of! It makes me jump out of my skin!
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
I just had a thought....maybe he is one of those visual learners.....Not an audio person....he's better with things he can see, not hear. (My daughter and I both learn that way) Maybe he is really extreme..... hates to listen to things without a visual aid????
Labs are probably really tedious.....like trying to make a perfect soufflé over the course of several weeks....one little mistake and you've lost weeks work and have to start over..too much like hard work for him
I'm still catching up and wanted to add some things about research labs from personal experience. My main lab was micro research but I also worked on a crossover lab which combined a micro/neurology research project. There is no such thing as a failed lab. Really all you do is set out to prove or disprove your theory(hypothesis) and either way it's equally valid. Now, it's not as exciting to have your hypothesis disproved, however, it sets you up to continue research with a new direction. A true scientist is able to take a negated hypothesis and the lab results to come up with a new hypothesis. For me personally, my first research progress presented me with unusual results as I had a strain of pseudomonas aureginosas which was able to exist in environments it shouldn't have(dry cleaning solvent)...so my results ended up pointing me in a different direction altogether by the time I continued with my next hypothesis. All that to say, the only way to have a bad lab is to not do the work, or try to do it hurriedly. Growth plates, especially when dealing with live tissue is particularly time consuming and you cannot skimp on the research time. When I was doing this I would typically be at school from 8am until 8/9pm, but there were times I was there MUCH later. I remember sleeping under a table a couple of times just because the effort of going home just to come back would have been a waste of time.