Behind the paywall is his picture. Anyway, in the article he interestingly didn't attend the award ceremony and they didn't even put his "thank you" comment in quotations, but did quote all these other people saying how simple the technique was/is. He also only hung out in academic chemistry for about 4 years then went on to work for a food company for the rest of his life despite having 300k citation count at least, enough to retire as a grand ole man of science for the rest of his years. Altogether odd story.
I just read fast. This one can't be read fast. Got to go through again. Picked up plenty but because I needed time more than usual I felt dumb. I don't often feel dumb.
Great breakdown on "proteins". What I keep wondering is what logic (Ai produced presumably) ends up delivering a template that is then used to identify proteins, viruses, and everything in between...and the interactions between all of these that end up being written into the stories, which creates this even larger template??? The quotes below, just to illustrate the complexity and the stories evolution over time, are from the David Baltimore wiki writeup, touching on just a couple of his famous moments....another nobel prize boy.
"He and Alice together carried out key experiments on defective interfering particles and viral pseudo types. During this work, he made a key discovery that polio produced its viral proteins as a single large polyprotein that was subsequently processed into individual functional peptides."
"He went on to discover reverse transcriptase (RTase or RT) – the enzyme that polymerizes DNA from an RNA template. In doing so, he discovered a distinct class of viruses, later called retroviruses, that use an RNA template to catalyze synthesis of viral DNA.[23] This overturned the simplified version of the central dogma of molecular biology that stated that genetic information flows unidirectionally from DNA to RNA to proteins."
That charge is the bottom line makes sense, and that some forms of Ai have been in operation for a long time to help create these templates also makes sense to me. I'd love to see more penetration into this matrix.
Before I came to the US I had barely heard of proteins and carbs. We in Europe would talk about meat, vegetables and fruit, pasta and rice. I had to ask a friend what proteins were.
I have copied your article so I can re-read it, not being very into chemistry and biology I will need to study it a bit, but I had a good laugh about the non-existing proteins! The funny thing is, this friend said first, that proteins are meat, and when I told her my dog loves peas, she said, they can smell the proteins. I rather smelled a bad fish!
They want everything We know to be wrong. Thanks for setting a few things right!
took some digging but found a photo https://www.onlineathens.com/story/news/education/campus/2019/10/27/uga-researcher-honored-with-distinction-award/2434565007/
Great find. strange they made it so hard to find and only on the State Uni Website when he died.
Behind the paywall is his picture. Anyway, in the article he interestingly didn't attend the award ceremony and they didn't even put his "thank you" comment in quotations, but did quote all these other people saying how simple the technique was/is. He also only hung out in academic chemistry for about 4 years then went on to work for a food company for the rest of his life despite having 300k citation count at least, enough to retire as a grand ole man of science for the rest of his years. Altogether odd story.
yeah there are a lot of things about this story that don't add up at all.
Here's another with laconic quotes from him. https://news.uga.edu/marion-bradford-georgia-groundbreaker/
Here's the same one used by his funeral directors...
https://jacksonfuneralservice.com/obituaries/05-03-21-marion-mckinley-bradford/
That article made me feel dumb.
Sorry, didn’t set out for that.. can explain more if need be.
I just read fast. This one can't be read fast. Got to go through again. Picked up plenty but because I needed time more than usual I felt dumb. I don't often feel dumb.
Love your work bro
Nice mate.. It will pay to understand the “Bio”chemical hoax… once it clicks it can be applied to alot of stuff
Excellent. Thanks very much.
Great breakdown on "proteins". What I keep wondering is what logic (Ai produced presumably) ends up delivering a template that is then used to identify proteins, viruses, and everything in between...and the interactions between all of these that end up being written into the stories, which creates this even larger template??? The quotes below, just to illustrate the complexity and the stories evolution over time, are from the David Baltimore wiki writeup, touching on just a couple of his famous moments....another nobel prize boy.
"He and Alice together carried out key experiments on defective interfering particles and viral pseudo types. During this work, he made a key discovery that polio produced its viral proteins as a single large polyprotein that was subsequently processed into individual functional peptides."
"He went on to discover reverse transcriptase (RTase or RT) – the enzyme that polymerizes DNA from an RNA template. In doing so, he discovered a distinct class of viruses, later called retroviruses, that use an RNA template to catalyze synthesis of viral DNA.[23] This overturned the simplified version of the central dogma of molecular biology that stated that genetic information flows unidirectionally from DNA to RNA to proteins."
That charge is the bottom line makes sense, and that some forms of Ai have been in operation for a long time to help create these templates also makes sense to me. I'd love to see more penetration into this matrix.
Before I came to the US I had barely heard of proteins and carbs. We in Europe would talk about meat, vegetables and fruit, pasta and rice. I had to ask a friend what proteins were.
I have copied your article so I can re-read it, not being very into chemistry and biology I will need to study it a bit, but I had a good laugh about the non-existing proteins! The funny thing is, this friend said first, that proteins are meat, and when I told her my dog loves peas, she said, they can smell the proteins. I rather smelled a bad fish!