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They want your email address so they can spam you with newsletters, which increase retention.


I would try to find data like "tasks over 30 days old never get completed" and tie the decision (and marketing) to something like that.


This pianist is really manipulating the tempo.


I send an email to my manager every week with two headings: “This week” and “Next week.” 3-5 concise bullet points under each heading, no sub-bullets. I avoid bullets like “Met with Sal about XYZ” or other wheel-spinning stuff that doesn’t translate to a performance review or interview. I include links liberally. Every manager has loved these emails, and they’re really handy for performance reviews, interviews, or even as a paper trail.


Same. My current job resulted from: seeing a hiring manager post about the role, applying at the link she shared in her post, and spending 2 hours crafting a DM to her. Interviewed and got the job, and knew nobody at the company.


I would be interested in trying the product if the content is as good or better than the content here. More features will not get me to switch, however.


I live in Colorado but still use the accountant in NYC I've had since 2003. It's typically around $400 -- I know it has gone up over the years, but I haven't really noticed or felt the increases.



Ahh I see they got acquired by zapier. Sometime last year ceo posted on twitter that they were shutting down due to a pulled term sheet or something


Original photography sometimes has tricky licensing — photos are good for only 5 years, then have to be renewed. That’s what photo editors at these magazines do. The text content itself is usually a one-and-done deal though.


Did you stay vegan after switching? I.e., are you getting your protein calories via a vegan diet?


No, I went off a vegan diet. Switched to eating a lot of egg whites, chicken and some fish. Occasionally red meat. Also drinking lactose free milk with my coffee and eating cheese sometimes.

It’s hard to get enough protein from a vegan diet and without enough protein, it’s harder to decrease fat %.

Also, I have a problem digesting beans so one of the main source of vegan protein is not practical for me.

I’m on a break even calorie diet right now and keeping the weight off. I’m also still breaking personal records at the gym despite maintaining the same weight which suggests my body is still getting lower in fat %.


It’s trivial to get plant protein. Extra firm tofu, tempeh, seitan, and TVP rival meat, though they tend to be novel for most people here. Certainly were for me.

I eat this tofu scramble almost daily: https://youtu.be/Vc5pZ-PY-H8


I agree that it’s possible to eat enough protein on a vegan diet.

But it’s easier to do it on a non vegan diet.

For example, chicken has higher protein per 100g than tempeh while having lower calories. In addition, I could also drink whey protein which is cheaper, and have higher protein per calorie than vegan protein powder.

My goal was to lose weight and get visible abs. It’s just easier to do it on a non vegan diet.


It's harder to do it on a vegan diet if you don't eat high protein foods, and those foods might be novel to you, sure. But you said "It’s hard to get enough protein from a vegan diet", not "I was unwilling to eat the food". So of course I'm going to step in.

Protein density isn't all that different, but seitan and tvp are even more dense per calorie.

- extra firm tofu 14g protein, 130 cal. 0.11g/cal

- tempeh 51g, 510 cal. 0.10g/cal

- chicken breast 27g, 184cal = 0.15g/cal

- chicken thigh 28g, 240cal = 0.12g/cal

- seitan 21g, 106cal -> 0.20g/cal

- tvp (soy chunks) 50g, 330cal = 0.15g/cal

TVP is cooler than it seems if you were to google it. You basically treat it like dried ground beef in a bag. It's also ultra-cheap. For example, you'd dump it into a bolognese pasta sauce instead of ground beef and it comes out the same.


Do you have any concerns about TVP being ultra-processed?

> For example, you'd dump it into a bolognese pasta sauce instead of ground beef and it comes out the same.

In my experience it comes out, kind of, edible but slight disgusting, with grassy, soy aftertaste and spongy texture.


Bioavailability of protein from vegetables is significantly less than from animals.


That statement usually comes from a misinterpretation of PDCAAS which only measures the limiting amino acid in a food. If you put any weight behind PDCAAS, then you have to grant that plant proteins have perfect PDCAAS scores if you eat more than one plant.

But there's research on strength performance outcomes on plant protein, those eating enough plant protein in total don't have any different outcomes. I don't see why this would move the needle for you.


Thanks for this list. In 2014, I switched to a vegan diet with a heavy emphasis on restricted oil consumption too, and the weight peeled off. I originally did it for dietary/health reasons, but over the years I've developed more of an ear for the ethical reasons too. I never have felt like I'm not getting enough protein, but occasionally when conversations like this come up, it's nice to know what's out there. I'd never heard of TVP.


Also curious about this. I don't eat meat (but I do eat dairy when my stomach lets me) and it's very difficult for me to get enough protein... mostly because the protein-rich meat-free options mess me up in high quantities. But there's gotta be some good option out there that I'm missing!


Maybe try Soylent & Co. My favorite is Mana. Been drinking it for a while now, seems to be really good for you. Very convient too. Should be way more popular I think.


Ooh, thanks for the rec! I'd like to try something in that vein after my gut and I are on better terms, but it's hard to choose from all the brands out there. I've never heard of Mana till now but it looks less funky than some of the alternatives (Huel... lol).


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