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On November 25 2015 12:40 Cascade wrote: How long does a boiled egg last in the fridge?
It takes some time before it wanders away on its own, you shouldn't eat if it was boiled more than 4-5 days ago (up to a week). Fresh eggs last longer (30/40 days).
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Oh?
I use them the other way around: Fresh eggs has to be quite fresh (the less you plan to cook them, the fresher, eg scramble eggs requires fresher eggs than a cake), I would say after a couple weeks, you may prefer cakes :p And when I don't plan to do much cooking, I would just make the older eggs hard-boiled to keep them a bit longer.
In any way, don't wash them, that's the best way to rot them in a few days (even in a fridge).
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Did you know: Eggs don't profit from being in the fridge but they shouldn't be stored much warmer than they were stored in the shop/farm/wherever you have them from.
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On November 22 2015 04:27 SoSexy wrote:Show nested quote +On November 22 2015 04:24 SoSexy wrote:On November 21 2015 23:54 -Celestial- wrote:On November 21 2015 21:23 SoSexy wrote:What's a further education college? A girl I know went to London after high school and enrolled there...looks kinda fishy to me, do you get a degree? Is this the same as going to university? I don't think we have something similar in Italy so I'm confused https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brooklands_College No. Its basically an "instead of university". You get other, different qualifications there; often vocational subjects, apprenticeships and the like. Edit: As a random example: some of the courses offered at Brooklands (having checked their website) include Childcare, Photography and Construction. Do universities look down on those kind of institutions?
Is there anything universities don't look down on? I mean, they even look down on each other...
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On November 25 2015 22:48 Velr wrote:Show nested quote +On November 22 2015 04:27 SoSexy wrote:On November 22 2015 04:24 SoSexy wrote:On November 21 2015 23:54 -Celestial- wrote:On November 21 2015 21:23 SoSexy wrote:What's a further education college? A girl I know went to London after high school and enrolled there...looks kinda fishy to me, do you get a degree? Is this the same as going to university? I don't think we have something similar in Italy so I'm confused https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brooklands_College No. Its basically an "instead of university". You get other, different qualifications there; often vocational subjects, apprenticeships and the like. Edit: As a random example: some of the courses offered at Brooklands (having checked their website) include Childcare, Photography and Construction. Do universities look down on those kind of institutions? Is there anything universities don't look down on? I mean, they even look down on each other...
In France they are looked down by almost every other post-high school institution.
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On November 26 2015 00:15 AbouSV wrote:Show nested quote +On November 25 2015 22:48 Velr wrote:On November 22 2015 04:27 SoSexy wrote:On November 22 2015 04:24 SoSexy wrote:On November 21 2015 23:54 -Celestial- wrote:On November 21 2015 21:23 SoSexy wrote:What's a further education college? A girl I know went to London after high school and enrolled there...looks kinda fishy to me, do you get a degree? Is this the same as going to university? I don't think we have something similar in Italy so I'm confused https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brooklands_College No. Its basically an "instead of university". You get other, different qualifications there; often vocational subjects, apprenticeships and the like. Edit: As a random example: some of the courses offered at Brooklands (having checked their website) include Childcare, Photography and Construction. Do universities look down on those kind of institutions? Is there anything universities don't look down on? I mean, they even look down on each other... In France they are looked down by almost every other post-high school institution. Which doesn't mean they don't look down on said every other post-high school institution^^
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On November 26 2015 01:21 OtherWorld wrote:Show nested quote +On November 26 2015 00:15 AbouSV wrote:On November 25 2015 22:48 Velr wrote:On November 22 2015 04:27 SoSexy wrote:On November 22 2015 04:24 SoSexy wrote:On November 21 2015 23:54 -Celestial- wrote:On November 21 2015 21:23 SoSexy wrote:What's a further education college? A girl I know went to London after high school and enrolled there...looks kinda fishy to me, do you get a degree? Is this the same as going to university? I don't think we have something similar in Italy so I'm confused https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brooklands_College No. Its basically an "instead of university". You get other, different qualifications there; often vocational subjects, apprenticeships and the like. Edit: As a random example: some of the courses offered at Brooklands (having checked their website) include Childcare, Photography and Construction. Do universities look down on those kind of institutions? Is there anything universities don't look down on? I mean, they even look down on each other... In France they are looked down by almost every other post-high school institution. Which doesn't mean they don't look down on said every other post-high school institution^^ Depends on the department^^ Social science probably, but when every teacher comes from an engineering school or normal sup'...
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Guilty. I am mostly biased from Science domains (Mainly Math and Physics) :p
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On November 26 2015 00:15 AbouSV wrote:Show nested quote +On November 25 2015 22:48 Velr wrote:On November 22 2015 04:27 SoSexy wrote:On November 22 2015 04:24 SoSexy wrote:On November 21 2015 23:54 -Celestial- wrote:On November 21 2015 21:23 SoSexy wrote:What's a further education college? A girl I know went to London after high school and enrolled there...looks kinda fishy to me, do you get a degree? Is this the same as going to university? I don't think we have something similar in Italy so I'm confused https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brooklands_College No. Its basically an "instead of university". You get other, different qualifications there; often vocational subjects, apprenticeships and the like. Edit: As a random example: some of the courses offered at Brooklands (having checked their website) include Childcare, Photography and Construction. Do universities look down on those kind of institutions? Is there anything universities don't look down on? I mean, they even look down on each other... In France they are looked down by almost every other post-high school institution. French unis are a bit particularly full of themselves also, or that is my experience at least, so they'll be a bit extra condescending towards everything else. I'd say only US unis are more unbearably arrogant, and UK comes in third a bit behind french unis. Those would be the top 3 full-of-themselves countries when it comes to unis, according to my personal power-ranking. Surprisingly, German unis aren't that bad in my experience, at least not compared to other countries. But I've mainly been in contact with western-world unis, so can't really say how they rank compared to rest of the world (middle east, chine, etc).
That said, they all try to advertise themselves as the best place imaginable (of course), to attract skilled staff/students.
On November 25 2015 17:54 Oshuy wrote:Show nested quote +On November 25 2015 12:40 Cascade wrote: How long does a boiled egg last in the fridge? It takes some time before it wanders away on its own, you shouldn't eat if it was boiled more than 4-5 days ago (up to a week). Fresh eggs last longer (30/40 days). Thanks. This sounds about right. I'll let you know if I die of food poisoning after having eaten dodgy old eggs.
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On November 25 2015 17:54 Oshuy wrote: It takes some time before it wanders away on its own If the egg hatches and the chick wanders away on its own, the egg farm in your area is doing something wrong.
On November 25 2015 12:40 Cascade wrote: Thanks. This sounds about right. I'll let you know if I die of food poisoning after having eaten dodgy old eggs. You probably won't die of food poisoning, but you just might get the diarrhea of the century.
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It's a figure of speech, at least in german and apparently also in dutch.
It is supposed to imply not that the egg has hatched, but something "starts to walk away on it's own" when it is so rotten that the mold itself has grown and evolved to such proportions that it has the capability of moving on its own.
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Ooooooooooooooohhhh.
Well, thanks for clarifying.
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German is such a beautifully evocative language
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United States40776 Posts
On November 27 2015 18:21 Simberto wrote: It's a figure of speech, at least in german and apparently also in dutch.
It is supposed to imply not that the egg has hatched, but something "starts to walk away on it's own" when it is so rotten that the mold itself has grown and evolved to such proportions that it has the capability of moving on its own. We have that in English too. Not a specific phrase but it's common to refer to mold being left long enough to become sentient or mobile.
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same here, something like - it will grow feet/legs + it will start moving
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Man, I have no idea what you guys are doing to your food that will make it grow and start attacking people. Guess I never really let it get to that point nor will I ever, sounds scary!
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I guess this would be a decisive reason for the meat eating debate!
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How big does a giant have to be for me to be able to ride his sperm like a horse?
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On November 30 2015 12:48 Epishade wrote: How big does a giant have to be for me to be able to ride his sperm like a horse? Problem is that cell size doesn't really scale with the size of the organism in general. This reference is for plants of different sizes, so it may not go for sperms of fictional giants: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21600391, but it is all I have to go on for now. So you would need not only a big giant, but also a special kind of giant that is big due to cell size.
A human sperm is about 5um. To ride it, you'd need it to be about a meter I'd think, which means you need to scale it up a factor 1/(5e-6) = 2e5 = 200k. So a normal human being about 2m, you need this special cellsize-giant, being scaled up only through cell size (which isn't realistic) of about 400km height. Maybe closer to 1000km if you want a horse rather than a pony.
Then there's a range of reasons why such a giant wouldn't be viable, but that is a different story.
Anyway, don't hold your breath.
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I go to nz; they pay me each month (phd scholarship). When I return home for summer, can I move those money on an italian bank account/withdraw them in italy?
Second question: if expected phd completion time is 3 years and you finish in 2, will they pay you the spare year even if you return home?
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