Can you back off with your fancy sciency speak...
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I personally like line charts where you start at a made up point, end up at a made up point and get your crayon out to join the dots. Or maybe just color by numbers.
What's hilarious is if you say its a made up chart (which i did in that thread) he counter by saying its not made up, but is actually based on his made up formula. Science.
That killed me.
And don't forget, it wasn't in the form
y=mx+b
that would be too complicated. Instead he put it in the form:
y=b+mx
much simpler.0 -
I personally like line charts where you start at a made up point, end up at a made up point and get your crayon out to join the dots. Or maybe just color by numbers.
What's hilarious is if you say its a made up chart (which i did in that thread) he counter by saying its not made up, but is actually based on his made up formula. Science.
That killed me.
And don't forget, it wasn't in the form
y=mx+b
that would be too complicated. Instead he put it in the form:
y=b+mx
much simpler.
LOL0 -
i still can't say phenomenon....
oh wait...that's not what we are here for
How would you know if you said it? Hmmm?0 -
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That's a low blow, bynsky. I have gone like one day without getting rickrolled (Rachel Maddow did it yesterday, I think), and I never expected it to happen in ETP.
All the same, bravo.0 -
Got any charts of a homonym? :blushing:
We could "ad homonym".
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Here, let me use small words for big words...
From the super-brainy science paper from Alan Aragon and Brad Schoenfeld:
http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/872189-alan-aragon-and-brad-schoenfeld-on-nutrient-timing
The linked paper:
http://www.jissn.com/content/pdf/1550-2783-10-5.pdfTipton et al. observed that a relatively small dose of EAA (6 g) taken immediately pre-exercise was able to elevate blood and muscle amino acid levels by roughly 130%, and these levels remained elevated for 2 hours after the exercise bout. Although this finding was subsequently challenged by Fujita et al., other research by Tipton et al. showed that the ingestion of 20 g whey taken immediately pre-exercise elevated muscular uptake of amino acids to 4.4 times pre-exercise resting levels during exercise, and did not return to baseline levels until 3 hours post-exercise. These data indicate that even minimal-to moderate pre-exercise EAA or high-quality protein taken immediately before resistance training is capable of sustaining amino acid delivery into the post-exercise period. Given this scenario, immediate post-exercise protein dosing for the aim of mitigating catabolism seems redundant.
Translation:
Eat protein before you lift, not after bro. It'll make you swole.0 -
Lemon pie without the aweful meringue!! Awesome
Lemon pie with the delicious meringue!! Tragic :sad:
Damn you people! Now I really really really want some freaking pie!
Ummm I could eat some pie . . .
How YOU doin'?
:laugh:0 -
Here, let me use small words for big words...
From the super-brainy science paper from Alan Aragon and Brad Schoenfeld:
http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/872189-alan-aragon-and-brad-schoenfeld-on-nutrient-timing
The linked paper:
http://www.jissn.com/content/pdf/1550-2783-10-5.pdfTipton et al. observed that a relatively small dose of EAA (6 g) taken immediately pre-exercise was able to elevate blood and muscle amino acid levels by roughly 130%, and these levels remained elevated for 2 hours after the exercise bout. Although this finding was subsequently challenged by Fujita et al., other research by Tipton et al. showed that the ingestion of 20 g whey taken immediately pre-exercise elevated muscular uptake of amino acids to 4.4 times pre-exercise resting levels during exercise, and did not return to baseline levels until 3 hours post-exercise. These data indicate that even minimal-to moderate pre-exercise EAA or high-quality protein taken immediately before resistance training is capable of sustaining amino acid delivery into the post-exercise period. Given this scenario, immediate post-exercise protein dosing for the aim of mitigating catabolism seems redundant.
Translation:
Eat protein before you lift, not after bro. It'll make you swole.
But it says it will make your muscles acidic. I heard from my naturopath that's bad. I eat coconut oil daily to make my body alkaline.
[Ok, no, I can't really do this.]0 -
Forgot to mention the moms. Love MLP.0