Bme oain olympics final round

U.S Mens National Team

2010.10.20 04:15 holycrapitsdan U.S Mens National Team

A subreddit for fans of the U.S. Men's National Soccer Team.
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2024.05.14 19:24 NHL_Hockey_Pulse Boston Bruins vs Florida Panthers: Game Preview, Predictions, and Odds for 2024 NHL Playoffs Round 2 Game 5 May 14, 2024

The Boston Bruins visit the Florida Panthers for Game 5 of the NHL Playoffs East Second Round at the Amerant Bank Arena in Sunrise, Florida. The game, which starts at 7 p.m. ET, will be broadcast on CBC, TVAS, ESPN and SN. The Panthers are leading the series 3-1 and are on the cusp of securing a spot in the Eastern Conference Final. The Bruins started strong with a win but have found themselves on the back foot and facing elimination.
In Game 4, the Bruins took an early 2-0 lead in the period with goals from David Pastrnak and Brandon Carlo. However, Anton Lundell's goal in the second period put the Panthers on the scoreboard. Sam Bennett's power play goal tied the game at two early in the third period. Less than four minutes later, Aleksander Barkov scored to give Florida the lead and the Bruins, despite their efforts couldn't find another goal to tie the game.
It's a must win situation for the Bruins and a potential series clincher for the Panthers, and both teams have a lot at stake in what is expected to be an electrifying Game 5.
Read More: Boston Bruins vs Florida Panthers: Game Preview, Predictions, and Odds for 2024 NHL Playoffs Round 2 Game 5 May 14, 2024
submitted by NHL_Hockey_Pulse to FloridaPanthers [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 19:24 lepidu My Experience: Job Search in Berlin [Detailed Post]

My Experience: Job Search in Berlin [Detailed Post]
https://preview.redd.it/r7jfwloeff0d1.png?width=1200&format=png&auto=webp&s=9f595df7fdb7a6048505ec2ddcb29cee0b64bc47
Hi, I hope this is considered relevant to the sub. I wanted to post this on the berlin sub but my diagram keeps on getting removed. Reddit's been such a great resource for my job hunt and I'd like to give something back.

My background:

MSc in Social Science from a non-German university, 29 years old and 3 years of work experience, not counting work experience gained during uni and not counting internships. I'm an EU citizen, but not German. My German is pretty much fluent - I didn't grow up here, but my dad is a native German speaker. Basically, I speak it without an accent and understand everything with no issue at all but am not very eloquent and can't express myself as well as I can in English. I make minor grammatical errors here and there.

Duration:

The whole process took 2 months; I started looking for a job around mid March and signed my contract yesterday.

Job searching process:

I went through LinkedIn, Xing, Indeed and Stepstone every day. I applied for English as well as German-speaking jobs, based in either Berlin or the EU (remote). I applied both for jobs in industry as well as ÖD, although ÖD was not my preference. I only applied for permanent and full-time positions. I didn't focus on a specific type of job or field, but more on my own skills, experience and interest. Broadly speaking most jobs I applied for were in analytics (but not data analyst jobs).

Applications:

I think I had a good rate of interest taken in my applications. For 1 in 3 jobs I applied for, I was invited to a first interview. The jobs that I was rejected for outright were mostly those that I was underqualified/not experienced enough for and was not expecting to get anyway. I tailored my CV to each specific job, highlighting previous experiences and responsibilities that seemed the most relevant and removing things that didn't seem important at all. I also wrote a cover letter for almost every job, provided they did not explicitly specify that they didn't want one, and even if the cover letter was only an optional part of the application. I didn't get ghosted too much, so that was nice, only about 1 in 4 times.

1st Round:

The first round interviews were a breeze, there isn't much to say here. I received a rejection for 2 out of 13 first interviews. One was because I didn't have experience working with a certain program (was listed as optional on the ad though), the other was a really difficult first round that was more a second round interview than anything else in the sense that it was really technical and I was interviewed by a panel instead of just a person from HR. Still a positive experience, though. The withdrawals were due to: coincided with received offer, salary too low, or just not into the job after all.

2nd Round:

4 out of 6 rejected me after the second round, tbh these rejections kind of stung a bit. One of the unexplained rejections I got was actually after an interview that went extremely well - I really left thinking that I was their unicorn and that the job was mine lol. I still wonder who ended up getting that job.
But generally speaking, the main issue I encountered was how hard it was to interview in German (I already described my language skills above). The first rounds were always easy, but the second rounds were tougher. Coming up with good answers to situation-based questions spontaneously or just BS'ing in German was quite hard. There was still no interview that I completely bombed, luckily enough.
2 out of the 4 companies that rejected me offered feedback calls which was really nice. Just 10 minute phone calls, no video, where they explained to me why they made their decision. The overall feedback I got was pretty vague but boiled down to some of the responses I gave not being detailed enough. I appreciate companies that take the time to do this.

3rd Round:

I only had 2 of these, but my impression is that if you get to the final round (I didn't encounter a company or job that required more than 3 rounds of interviews) your chances are already pretty good.

Final offer and Salary €:

I'm not in love with the job I ended up accepting, my main issue being that the work sounds boring, very bureaucratic and also meaningless. At the same time, everyone I met throughout the process was very nice, they have an office here but they're cool about WFH and additionally I'll be able to work remotely from abroad for 6 weeks a year. So I'm excited to start and overall happy with the opportunity. The salary they offered me is 60k, which I think is good but is probably not according to Reddit's standards. But honestly, as helpful as reading through job-related posts here was, it was also helpful to touch grass, speak with real people that I know and understand that not everyone can be earning 70k+ in their mid twenties, even people in tech. The jobs I was able to get interviews for were all mid-level and had allocated budgets in the range of high 40's to low 60's, which I thought was really broad, but maybe this info could still be helpful to other people with a similar background. I didn't negotiate because the offered salary was already higher than what I was expecting, and also because I needed a job, and also because I genuinely think it's a good salary and is definitely more than enough for me. I've put it into various brutto-netto calculators and expect that I'll easily be able to save almost ~1.5k a month.

Conclusions:

I think I underestimated how how hard it was going to be. My main problem was that there were just not that many jobs to apply for in the first place. I browsed through a lot of job-related subs and noticed how many applications other people are able to churn out, but that was simply not my experience. It was the worst feeling ever to wake up, spend hours browsing various job platforms but have to end the day without sending off an application. My previous job here in Berlin was a freelancing gig that ended unexpectedly, so I didn't qualify for any assistance from the government and was living purely off of my savings, which was very stressful. On the upside, being unemployed meant that I was at least really flexible when it came to making appointments for interviews.
I have a lot of friends who live in more rural areas (Germany and EU countries generally), and I have the impression that they have an easier time getting hired. None of them have had a job hunt that lasted more than a month. I was always under the impression that people move to bigger cities because finding a job is supposed to be easier there, but I guess it really depends on your line of work.
Anyway, I ultimately I think I got lucky! Finding a job really is a numbers game.
submitted by lepidu to berlinsocialclub [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 19:19 Dubmoney3355 Shout out to the Pacers front office

Next year Paul George, Domantas Sabonis, and Tyrese Haliburton will make a combined 126.1 million. Over the 14 year stretch when they played for Indiana, the Pacers payed them a combined 104.1 million or roughly 7.4 million a year.
Paul George was the 10th overall pick in 2010 and until 2022 the Pacers never had another pick inside the top 10. When Paul announced he wouldn’t resign with the Pacers, most of us assumed the Pacers would have to let him walk for free, or trade him for a used washing machine or something equivalent in value. But the Pacers traded him for Sabonis(and Oladipo) and basically the moment they payed Sabonis they traded him for Haliburton.
Each trade the Pacers made ended up in roughly the same production for a fraction of the cost. In their Pacer careers Paul averaged 18pts/6reb, Domantas averaged 16pts/11reb, and Tyrese has averaged 20pts/11 ast. In Pauls last year with the Pacers he made 18.3 million while Domas made 2.6 million the next year. In his final year Domas made 19.8 million and the next year Hali made 3.8 million. These are the type of moves you have to make to stay relevant as a small market team that never fully bottoms out and will never be able to sign top tier FAs unless they drastically overpay. They took one mid first round pick and turned it into 4 all stars with 10 all star appearances for the Pacers(4 for PG and 2 each for Domas, Oladipo, and Hali).
submitted by Dubmoney3355 to pacers [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 19:19 Radiant_Dragonfly261 Job Rejections

I recently graduated college and have been applying for jobs/internships in Human Resources for a few months now. I know other folks have been applying for longer, but I just need to rant. I have applied to somewhere around 150 entry level positions at this point with experience from internships. I have had 4 phone screens and four interviews and one where I made it to the final round just to be met with a rejection. It’s honestly so frustrating because I feel like I did all the right things in college leadership experience, part time job, internships and etc. and I feel like none of it matter. I will most likely take a job in retail while I figure things out, but it genuinely makes me wonder what the point of my degree was. Just wanted to rant and see if anyone else feels the same way.
submitted by Radiant_Dragonfly261 to recruitinghell [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 19:18 MinimalistMonkeyBaat Interview Rejection, Weird Feedback from Hiring Managers (HMs) and my rebuttal - AITAH

So I applied for a PM position at a technology firm. I had 2 rounds followed by a case-study and final round with the Head of Product & Engineering Manager. The HR was really supportive and highly responsive. I did my level best in cracking the case study, getting to know about the company via their website, interview/podcast of senior management.
I was rejected and HR shared the following feedback with me.
Notes from HM:
- English: adequate, but not great
- Extremely thorough analysis of the case study (overdid it)
- A bit mechanical
- Seemed to have some trouble understanding questions, repeated questions back to answer
To which I replied,
I appreciate the feedback. At the same time few points are contradictory in nature hence unfathomable at my end, which I am enunciating below.
1) Rejecting because English is not great. Not selecting because Analysis is great. These are contradictory logics. Purportedly punishing someone for excellence in a department is not warranted. This is my strength. This is what a PM does - Thorough Analysis of the core problem. Isn't?
2) The English which did not work for them is what got me to this round after 2 rounds of interview and the case study.
3) I confirmed 2 questions for clarity before moving to the solution. The volume of HMs voice fluctuated in the interview, which could be due to multiple reasons. I believe reconfirming before proceeding to the solution is the right thing to do.
I am majorly disappointed because of the passionate and genuine effort I had put in the preparation which has been blatantly overlooked by the HMs.
Well, we can't do much about it. This is my feedback.
Once again, I really appreciate your professionalism and responsiveness.
AITAH for my rebuttal to the HR regarding HM's feedback? And should I really care about this feedback, say stop putting effort in future case studies because someone says solving it thoroughly means overdoing it?
Reddit folks, please share your opinion.
submitted by MinimalistMonkeyBaat to AITAH [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 19:12 Mundane_Detective_41 JTBC Girls On Fire - Episode 5 (Post-Episode Discussion + Preliminary Ranking + 72-Hour Survival Game Performances Part 3 + Second Elimination + Rival Death Match Performances Part 1) (240514)

The top 5 members of the show will debut as a group, receive 200 million won, release an album, hold a national tour and a global showcase.
The episode is currently available for international fans on Viki.
Voting for the top 5 is ongoing. In Korea you can vote for your top 5 picks once a day on Naver or JTBC's website, international fans will have to vote through MAKESTAR app (available in 239 countries).
Preliminary Audience Vote Ranking:
  1. Lee Sooyoung
  2. Lee Nayoung
  3. Kim Yebin
  4. Cho Yein
  5. Kim Chaewon
  6. Hwang Seyoung
  7. Yang Irae
  8. Khan Amina
  9. Yoon Minseo
  10. Cho Aim
Round Two - 72-hour Survival Game
The surviving 32 contestants have to team up, choose songs, distribute the parts themselves, arrange the songs, conceptualize their stage costumes and prepare their performances in 72 hours/3 days.
They are divided in 11 teams based on the seats they took during the bus trip: 4 teams of two, 5 teams of three, 1 team of four and 1 team of five.
The producers will vote for one contestant of each team, the contestant with most votes will directly advance to round 3 and the rest of team members will be candidates for elimination. If there is a tie, there will be no winner and the entire team will be candidates for elimination.
Team Performance Result
Yang Irae, Kim Kyuri & Kim Chaewon After Like (orig. IVE) Yang Irae 4 vs Kim Kyuri 2 vs Kim Chaewon 0
Sohn Yujin, Lee Songhwa & Jeong Jiwoo In the Rain (orig. Lee Moonse) Sohn Yujin 3 vs Jeong Jiwoo 2 vs Lee Songhwa 1
Contestants eliminated by the producers:
Contestants who advance to round 3:
Round Three - Rival Death Match
The surviving 24 contestants will go on a 1 vs 1 death match, 12 matches in total for this round. After the rivals perform, the producers will score each contestant out of 100 to determine the match's winner.
This will be the last individual round, the next round will be 'playoffs' which will consist of group missions to determine who goes to the final.
The 9 winners of round 2 Khan Amina, Yoon Minseo, nov, Kang Yunjeong, Hwang Seyoung, Lee Arumsoul, Choi Aim, Yang Irae and Sohn Yujin chose their rivals first.
The producers chose the 3 MVPs of round 2 who will choose first among the 9 winners: Lee Arumsoul, Kang Yunjeong and Khan Amina.
Match Performance Result
Kim Yebin vs Lee Sooyoung Villain (orig. Stella Jang) Lee Sooyoung 563 vs Kim Yebin 552
Kang Yunjeong vs Hwang Seyoung GODS (orig. NewJeans) Hwang Seyoung 580 vs Kang Yunjeong 577
Choi Aim vs Park Seojeong Butterfly Effect (orig. Shin Seunghoon) Choi Aim 556 vs Park Seojeong 552
Lee Arumsoul vs Lee Nayoung To be released in episode 6 To be released in episode 6
submitted by Mundane_Detective_41 to kpop [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 19:12 Appropriate_Door_547 How common are “back door” reference checks?

How common is it for recruiters and HMs to stalk LinkedIn, etc, and try to find “back door” references that the candidate did not necessarily offer as a reference? I know former Netflix CEO Reed Hastings publicly admitted to doing this, and kind of made this “en vogue” to do, but how common is this in actuality?
As I’m constantly making it to final rounds just for companies to go with another candidate, I feel like a bad manager from my past may be haunting me. The IT community where I live is fairly small, and I feel like one glance at my resume and it wouldn’t be too difficult for anyone seasoned enough in the area to figure out I worked for this dude.
submitted by Appropriate_Door_547 to ITCareerQuestions [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 19:11 No-Web-372 2024 Draft Prospect Profile: Stian Solberg

Michael Brandsegg-Nygard might be getting all the hype for Norway this draft season, but DMan Stian Solberg is someone that rightfully so is finally getting the attention he deserves.
The 6’2 & 200 pound defender is anchoring the first pair for Norway at the World Championships and his play so far has definitely improved his draft stock both with public scouts and I’m sure NHL teams looking for defenders in the late first-early second, so good in fact that Solberg was mocked to go in the middle first by the Athletics Corey Pronman who believes his blend of mobility and physicality alongside an improved offensive toolkit makes him one of the sneakier more NHL built players in the class.
Much the same way as the often mocked to the Sharks Adam Jiricek, Solberg hits like a semi barreling over grown men in Norways top league. A league that sees him already playing top pair minutes in both 5 on 5 and special times on the penalty kill. The left shot defender was averaging just over 25 minutes a night at the World Juniors where his stock first started to rise, and he was a crucial part of both special teams units.
His skating is solid especially for a defensive defensemen, he has fluid hips and uses his long strides to pick up quick straight line speed. The way he is able to read a play and then use his quick feet to get into position to punish opposing skaters keeps those playing against the Norwegian with their head on a swivel.
His hockey IQ is his strongest asset as he knows when to successfully close gaps, and has become stronger at timing when to throw the body and when to attack with the stick. He almost camouflages his reach drawing forwards in closer than they should prior to attacking with the stick, analyzing his spacing and then laying them down with a thunderous hit. He is a mean presence in front of his net and isn’t afraid to take a shot at forwards posting up in the crease for high danger chances.
The offensive game will take a while to develop but you’re not grabbing Solberg for that first, instead you’re taking him for the physicality and strong defensive abilities and just hope that the raw tool kit of offensive skills grows alongside his game as they appear to be doing.
He’s set to head to Sweden to play with Farjestad in 24/25 which will allow whatever team grabs him to see him against far tougher competition than the Norway league. Though the Regina Pats reportedly are also interested in bringing the rugged defender to the club after selecting him in the 2nd round of the Import draft in 2023
submitted by No-Web-372 to SanJoseSharks [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 19:07 ChordStrike Just achieved something after 4 years of tatting

Just achieved something nobody cares about irl but I wanted someone to know: I finally opened a closed ring!! I've been tatting since 2020 and this is the very first time I've been able to open a ring. Normally I have to just cut off and re-tie the thread. I was ending a round but realized that I did a picot instead of a join, and managed to open the ring and undo stitches enough to do the final join. Now the round is done and I can move on 😊
Anyway I hope you all are having a lovely day/night! My day has improved significantly lol
submitted by ChordStrike to tatting [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 19:06 Wraith31 [QCrit] Adult Sci-Fi with Romance elements - 2211- 84k (4th Attempt)

Alright, so after some really great feedback during the last round, I made some pretty sweeping changes here, and I honestly feel like I am getting pretty close on this.
Dear ,
The Fermi Paradox asks where all the other intelligent species in the universe are; we finally have an answer...
In the 23rd century, John William Anno, a first mate turned Martian Privateer Captain, is reluctantly thrust into a role requiring him, with the help of a newly developed AI, to prevent an artificial super intelligence from destroying all sentient biological life in the galaxy.
During the course of a diplomatic mission to Earth, John thwarts a plot to infect him with a strange virus, crafted by the super intelligence, causing a planet wide quarantine. John and an intelligence officer, Inkar Tursyn, have kindled embers into flames by the time her mission to uncover the origin of the virus goes off the rails; John's timely rescue mission saves her from viral infection, but not without consequences.
As John follows the tangled threads of the unfolding conspiracy, he is tested when an unexpected encounter with a race of sentient machines, subservient to the super intelligence, threatens humanity as we know it. In a race against the clock to stop the virus on Earth, John volunteers to be the diplomat on behalf of a divided humanity. While attempting to broker peace with the sentient machines, and make first contact with a potentially hostile advanced alien race on their homeworld, John forges new connections that create a stir at home.
All these meticulously crafted, yet tenuous, alliances are strained as John deals with a crisis of confidence, while convincing them to unite, in the face of a confrontation with the super intelligence.
Complete at 84000 words, 2211 is an adult science fiction with romance elements set in year 2211. It will appeal to readers of Children of Time by Adrian Tchaikovsky and Vagabonds by Hao Jingfang. 2211 is a standalone with series potential.
[BIO]
submitted by Wraith31 to PubTips [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 19:01 arsh_here Review my conlang’s phonology and sound changes

Proto-language Phonology;
Vowels; /a/ /e/ /i/ /o/ (vowel length distinction and diphthongs present as well)
Consonants; /p/ /t/ k/ /s/ /m/ /n/ /l/ / /h/ /j/ /w/ /θ/ /q/ /x/
Sound changes;
  1. Short /o/ and became /ɔ/
  2. Short /e/ and /i/ became /ɛ/
  3. /h/ merged with /x/ word-medially
  4. Vowel length distinction lost
  5. /au/ merged with /ɔ/
  6. /oi/ and /ai/ merged into /e/
  7. When bordering another vowel, /i/ and /e/ became /j/ word-initially, and were lost elsewhere
  8. /s/ was palatalized to /ʃ/ preceding diphthongs which began with /i/ or /e/
  9. /t/ was palatalized to /tʃ/ preceding diphthongs which began with /i/ or /e/
  10. When bordering another vowel, and /o/ became /w/ word-initially, and were lost elsewhere
  11. Due to affection, /a/ became fronted to /æ/, where the following syllable contained /i/
  12. / merged with /l/
  13. Unstressed vowels were lost word-initially and word-finally
  14. Gemination triggered due to vowel deletion
  15. The nasal consonant clusters /nt/ and /mp/, became geminated /nn/ and /mm/
  16. became a schwa before nasals
  17. /θ/ became /f/
  18. /s/ became voiced to /z/ word-medially
  19. /f/ became voiced to /v/ word-medially
  20. /w/ merged with /v/
  21. Word-initial schwa is deleted
  22. Word-medial schwa became /ɐ/
  23. Rounded vowels in stressed syllables caused the following unrounded vowels to become rounded
  24. Likewise, Unrounded vowels in stressed positions caused the following rounded vowels to become unrounded
  25. Penultimate syllables became stressed
  26. /ɐ/ merged with /e/
Modern-language Phonology;
Vowels; /a/ /e/ /i/ /o/ /æ/ /ɔ/ /ɛ/
Consonants; /p/ /t/ /k/ /s/ /z/ m/ /n/ /l/ /h/ /j/ /q/ /ʃ/ /tʃ/ /x/ /f/ /v/
submitted by arsh_here to conlangs [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 19:00 Formal-Cartoonist208 Can we just stop saying Naruto hold back?

Can we just stop saying Naruto hold back?
Just stop... It was annoying a long time ago and didn't stop it to be, nowadays.
I do think both fights between Naruto and Sasuke are painting a pretty clear picture of the events and the relations of power between them. I don't want to enter another long rounds of Powerscaling feats and to argue in l Sasuke's or Naruto's favour, so let's just confirm the facts. "Holding back" in the Naruto Verse has a different meaning than perhaps in something like Dragonball, One Piece or Bleach. Naruto has a Power-System which is mainly dependent on the use of various abilities and not on the raw power of your physical abilities. To hold back in Naruto, means to not use certain abilities with which you could have either killed or at least taken a certain advantage in the fight. In the same way Deidara hold back against Gaara by not using C4, or how Sasuke hold back against Deidara by not using Kirin.
In the first VOTE Fight both Naruto and Sasuke are constantly powering up in the fight and the dynamic changes multiple times. First it was Sasuke overwhelming Naruto, then Naruto powering up with his Kyubi chakra to get the advantage, then Sasuke awakening his third tomoe to change the dynamic of the fight once again. Finally Naruto reached his first tailed cloak state and Sasuke proceeds to use the 2nd Stage of his Curse Mark in a final clash remembered for eternity.
The argument used to say Naruto hold back are essentially of two sorts. The one stating that Naruto beared not killing intent hence he hold back and the other stating that Naruto only scratched Sasuke's headband on purpose to lose the fight and not kill Sasuke.
-1a. As Naruto doesn't have an ability to straight up kill Sasuke, it means the only way he could have "hold back" was by not punching or kicking as strong as he could have, but if it were so then it would have been very well in his abilities to just capture Sasuke by punching or kicking Sasuke hard enough he can't move or faint all together. He could have just broken every bone in Sasuke's body, like he said he would do. -1b. Naruto didn't "hold back" against Gaara, Neji or Kiba, but he certainly didn't want to kill them. Which only means that Naruto doesn't need something as a killing intent, to use the max. of his abilities. -2. The second argument is strangely enough more a feat for Sasuke than anything else. What many ppl didn't seem to perceive in that scene is that Sasuke purposefully retracted his spear hand to a fist to not rip Naruto's heart out. Meaning Naruto wouldn't even be able to scratch Sasuke's headband, if Sasuke didn't purposefully hold back a killing blow.
Sasuke just won the first fight Faire and Square and that's it.
In the second VOTE Fight the saying that Naruto hold back has it's merits, because he effectively really hold back. When both Naruto and Sasuke engaged in their Susanoo and bijuu Form, Naruto only focused himself on his defense and didn't launch any major attacks towards Sasuke, which is also precisely why Sasuke had the clear advantage until then. But that was only before they had the Rasengan/Chidori clash and before Sasuke attained his Indra Form. Afterwards both were going all out and were in every aspect each other's equal, until they blowed each other's arms out.
-1. While I said Naruto hold back, in the sense he didn't launch any major attack on Sasuke until they had that Rasengan/Chidori clash which canceled each other out, it doesn't mean he could have ended the fight whenever he wanted. If there were such a significant gap in their abilities, it would have been very much in Naruto's abilities to just beat him without killing him. He would have just needed to adjust the strength of his attacks correspondly. That he couldn't do so and seeing the result of their Rasengan/Chidori clash, means that Naruto was simply reluctant on engaging this death battle and he simply stalled by being defensive, which is literally what Sasuke said himself. What I want to say? If Naruto was in a disadvantage because he hold back, then if he doesn't hold back doesn't it just make him equal to Sasuke? Or what statement could have been interfered to mean that Naruto could be stronger than Sasuke if he didn't hold back?
-2. In this fight Sasuke and Naruto were pretty much equal, because Sasuke had the Nine Bijuu under his control and took their strength to generate his Indra Form. But Naruto already has a certain amount of the Nine Bijuu's strength in him and doesn't need their presence to activate his Ashura form. So under "normal" circumstances Sasuke would have been under a severe disadvantage in any other time as Naruto always had the support of Kurama and the other tailed beats with him and hence never really fought alone.
That's pretty much what I wanted to say. Thank you for reading 'till now.
submitted by Formal-Cartoonist208 to Naruto [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 19:00 michaelfw Interviewed 5 times over the span of 2 months with a company and they went with the other person

Made it to the final round and went into the office… so much time, energy and money put into the process and nothing to show for it. Brutal.
submitted by michaelfw to recruitinghell [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 18:59 Luth0r When is the best time to try low health?

I'm level 100 as Commando with finally a decent perk setup but still just in Heavy Combat armor. Have a Fixer, Rail Rifle and Tesla. Got the serums I want but not sure I'm ready to jump in with no Unyielding. And no Bloodied either.
Also, once I do use the serums and use the perk to not cure my rads, when would I need to use another round of serums? If I die do I need to? I'm afraid I'm just going to go down quite fast at that low health level. Or are the mutations permanent until I choose to use RadAway?
submitted by Luth0r to fo76 [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 18:59 n1c39uy Blockchain like system for LLM inference?

I was thinking about some kind of blockchain like system that does actual useful calculations instead of just guessing random hashes. After talking with chatgpt about it this is the report it spat out about this idea after making a few suggestions. Apart from scalability and privacy issues do you guys think the core concept of this could still be applicable in lets say 5 years? Or will something like this probably become hopelessly outdated? Also I have to note that however the system is designed it will always be (a lot) slower than a direct API call but for processing/filtering/labeling large amounts of data this could be useful I think.
Comprehensive Report on Proposed Blockchain System for LLM Validation
Overview
This report outlines a proposed blockchain system designed to manage and validate responses from large language models (LLMs) in a semi-decentralized environment. The system integrates a blockchain architecture with advanced validation mechanisms to ensure the accuracy, reliability, and integrity of data handled by LLMs.
System Goals
Components of the System
  1. Blockchain Infrastructure
  1. Validator Nodes
  1. Validation Process
  1. Economic Model
  1. Security Measures
  1. Governance
  1. Implementation Stages
Challenges and Mitigations
Conclusion
This blockchain system aims to provide a robust, scalable, and transparent framework for validating LLM responses. By balancing decentralization with efficient oversight, the system ensures the integrity and reliability of data crucial for various applications. The adoption of this system could pioneer new standards for blockchain-based validation mechanisms in AI-driven environments.
submitted by n1c39uy to LocalLLaMA [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 18:58 PhilsTriangle [NJ] [H] N64, Nintendo (NES), SNES (Earthbound), Gamecube, GBA, Nintendo DS/3Ds, Wii, Playstation, PS2, PS3, Sega Genesis, Xbox - Games, Accessories, Consoles [W] Venmo, PayPal

N64 Pictures: https://imgur.com/a/n64-games-n64-console-sCri6E3
Let me know if you need pictures of any of the items listed below. Shipping is $5 flat for anything under one pound. I've got 400+ transactions on this board and accept payment via PayPal (F&F) or Venmo (F&F) only.
Consoles
GBA Indigo - $80 shipped
GBA SP (Silver CIB) - $120 shipped
Nintendo 2DS w/ charger - $85 shipped
Nintendo 3DS XL Pokemon X & Y Edition Console - $225 shipped
Nintendo 64 Console w/ hookups + OEM Controller - $90 shipped
Nintendo Wii Console (gamecube compatible) w/ hookups + Wii remote & numb chuck - $75 shipped
PS2 w/ hookups, OEM controller, OEM memory card - $100 shipped
Retron 5 Hyperkin (GBA/GBC/SNES/NES/Genesis) unused CIB - $120 shipped
Super Nintendo w/ hookups & OEM controller - $95 shipped
Xbox OG Console w/ hookups & OEM controller + Project Gotham Racing (CIB) - $100 Shipped
Controllers/Accessories
Gameboy OEM Clam Shells (lot of 32) - $75 shipped
Gamecube OEM Controller (Indigo) - $30 shipped
Gamecube OEM Wavebird Controller w/ receiver- $95 shipped
NES OEM 10-Cart Storage Case (3x avail) - $20 + shipping each
N64 OEM Expansion Pak - $50 shipped
N64 OEM Green Controller - $30 shipped
N64 Memory Card - $14 shipped
PS2 Logitech Wireless Controller (w/ dongle) - $35 shipped
PS2 OEM Memory Card- $14 shipped
Sega GameGear Super Wide Gear - $20 shipped
Wii U Wireless Controller (WUP-005) & charging cable - $35 shipped (2x avail)
N64 Games
007 GoldenEye - $25
007 World is Not Enough - $14
Army Men Sarge's Heroes - $15
Automobil Lamborghini - $8
Backstage Assault - $12
Banjo Kazooie - $25
Bass Hunter 64 - $8
Beetle Adventure Racing - $17
Charlies Blasts - $40
Diddy Kong Racing - $25
Doom 64 - $30
Extreme G Racing - $10
Forsaken 64 - $10
Gex 64 - $16
Iggy's Reckin' Balls - $20
Killer Instinct Gold - $30
Knockout Kings 2000 - $6
Magical Tetris Challenge - $20
Mario Kart - $40
Monster Truck Madness - $15
MRC Multi Championship Racing - $10
Namco Museum 64 - $12
Nascar 99 - $7
Nascar 2000 - $7
NBA In the Zone 98 - $5
NBA Live 99 (CIB) - $20
NBA Showtime - $12
Polaris Sno-Cross -$30
Pokemon Snap - $20
Quest 64 - $25
Ready 2 Rumble Boxing - $12
Ridge Racer 64 - $15
San Francisco Rush - $15
Starfox 64 - $25
Star Wars Episode 1 Racer - $10
South Park Chef's Luv Shack - $25
Supercross 2000 - $7
Super Mario 64 - $35
Super Smash Bros. - $40
Tetrisphere - $12
Top Gear Rally - $10
Turok Dinosaur Hunter - $12
Turok 2 Seeds of Evil - $12
Vigilante 8 - $21
Virtual Pool - $13
Waialae Country Club - $6
War Gods - $10
Wave Race (Player's Choice) - $15
WCW Backstage Assault - $11
WCW NWO Revenge - $11
Wheel of Fortune - $11
Zelda Ocarina of Time (label wear) - $30
N64 Manuals
1080 Snowboarding - $7
Duke Nukem Manual - $10
Flying Dragon Manual - $40
Rush Extreme Racing - $8
Silicon Valley Space Station Manual - $40
Supercross 2000 - $6
Tony Hawk Pro Skater - $6
Nintendo Gamecube Games (CIB unless noted)
ATV Quad Power Racing 2 - $10
The Hobbit - $24
Enter the Matrix - $13
Eternal Darkness - $90
Fifa 2003 - $6
Fifa Street 2 - $25
Finding Nemo - $8
F-Zero GX - $90
Gun (missing manual) - $10
Harry Potter Chambers of Secret - $12
Killer 7 - $65
Luigi's Mansion - $60
Madden 2003 - $5
Madden 2007 - $8
Mario Golf Toadstool Tour - $27
Mario Kart Double Dash - $75
Monopoly Party - $10
Monsters, Inc. Scream Arena - $7
Nascar Thunder 2003 - $7
Pikmin - $50
Power Rangers Dino Thunder - $8
Resident Evil - $25
Resident Evil 2 - $100
Resident Evil 4 - $30
Resident Evil Zero - $18
The Sims Bustin Out - $12
Smuggler's Run (missing manual) - $12
Sonic Adventure Battle 2 (missing manual) - $45
Spiderman 2 - $15
Spyro A Hero's Tail (missing manual) - $15
SSX Tricky - $28
Starfox Assault - $45 (CIB; some wear to cover art)
Super Mario Sunshine (missing manual) -$35
Super Smash Brothers Melee - $60
Ty the Tasmanian Tiger (missing manual) - $12
WWE Crush Hour - $27
WWE Day of Reckoning 2 (missing manual) - $25
Nintendo DS Games (cart only unless CIB noted)
Avatar The Game - $6
Bionicle Matoran Adventures - $6
Build-A-Bear Workshop (CIB) - $6
Carnival (CIB) - $6
Deal or No Deal - $5
Guitar Hero On Tour Bundle (CIB) - $25
Happy Feet - $4
Horsez (CIB) - $6
Hot Wheels Beat That - $6
Kung Fu Panda (CIB) - $6
Mario Party DS - $13
Mario Kart DS (loose) - $15
Mario Kart DS (CIB) - $18
Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games (CIB) - $10
Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Winter Games (CIB) - $10
Megaman Starforce Dragon - $85 shipped
Metroid Hunters First Hunt - $6
Nacho Libre - $15
Namco Museum DS - $8
Naruto Ninja Council 3 - $6
New Super Mario Bros. (CIB) -$22
Nickelodeon Team Umizoomi - $6
Phoenix Wright Ace Attorney - $20
Picross 3D - $9
Ping Pals - $3
Planet Puzzle League - $10
Pokemon Mystery Dungeon: Explorers of Sky (case & manual only, no game) - $55
Pokemon Ranger Shadows of Almia (cart only) - $30
Ratatouille - $5
Rayman DS - $10
Ridge Racer DS - $8
Shrek Superslam - $5
Spiderman 3 - $8
Star Wars II The Original Trilogy (LEGO) - $6
Super Money Ball Touch & Roll - $6
Transformers Animated - $11
Tron Evolution - $4
Zhu Zhu Pets - $3
Nintendo 3DS (cart only unless noted)
Animal Crossing: New Leaf (CIB) - $20
Lego Marvel Superheroes: Universe in Peril - $5
Mario Kart 7 - $12
Minecraft New Nintendo 3DS Edition - $18
Pilotwings Resort - $10
Pokemon X (CIB) - $30
Skylander Giants - $6
Skylander Swap Force - $16
Skylander Trap Team - $12
Super Mario Maker - $10
Super Smash Bros (CIB) - $15
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles - $9
Wipeout: Create & Cash - $5
Wreck-it Ralph - $6
Yo-Kai Watch - $15
NES Games (cart only; unless noted)
8 Eyes - $11
A Boy and His Blob (cart, box, manual) - $40
Blades of Steel - $8
Bubble Bobble - $16
Burgertime - $15
Castlevania II Simon's Quest - $15
Castlevania III Dracula's Curse - $45
Chip & Dale Rescue Rangers (CIB) - $125
Contra - $40
Dick Tracy - $7
Double Dragon - $13
Donkey Kong 3 - $20
Dr. Mario - $10
Duck Tales - (cart & box) - $100
Excite Bike - $11
Faxanadu - $11
GI Joe: A Real American Hero - $75
Golf - $3
Legend of Zelda - $30
Mickey Mousecapade - $7
Mike Tyson's Punch-out - $40
Paperboy - $16
Punch-Out - $20
Rad Racer - $6
RBI Baseball 3 (cart & box) - $25
Robocop - $10
Rollerball - $8
Skate or Die 2 (cart & box) - $65
Spy Hunter - $5
Street Fighter 2010 - $15
Super Glove Ball - $7
Super Mario Bros. 2 - $20
Super Off-Road - $12
Super Team Games - $7
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II - The Arcade Game (cart & box) - $80
Tiger Heli - $8
Wall Street Kid (cart, box, registration card, poster) - $45
WWF Wrestlemania - $6
SNES Games (cart only)
Aladdin - $15
Castlevania IV - $45
Clue - $5
Earthbound - $350
F-Zero (Player's Choice) - $20
Jungle Strike - $9
Ken Griffey Jr Major League Baseball - $11
Kirby's Avalanche - $15
Lion King - $11
Mario Paint - $6
Mega Man X - $32
Mickey Mania - $13
Mortal Kombat - $13
Ms. Pacman - $9
NBA All-Star Challenge - $5
Pilot Wings - $10
Scooby Doo Mystery - $11
Starfox - $15
Super Adventure Island - $16
Super Baseball 2020 - $13
Super Ghouls N Ghosts - $23
Super Mario All-Stars - $25
Super Mario Kart - $40
Super Mario World - $20
Super Punch Out - $28
Top Player Tennis - $8
WWF Raw - $13
Zombies Ate My Neighbors - $30
GBA (cart only unless noted)
Aggravation/Sorry/Scrabble - $5
Barnyard - $8
Bratz - $4
Care Bears Care Quest (CIB) - $28
Cars - $5
Cars (CIB) - $16
Castlevania Double Pack - $85
Cho Makaimura R Super Ghouls N Ghost ( Japanese Import) - $95 Shipped
Crash Bandicoot 2 N-tranced - $10
Crash Huge Adventure - $11
Curious George (CIB) - $28
Dave Mirra Freestyle BMX 2 - $4
Disney Party - $10
Disney Princess (CIB) - $12
Donkey Kong Country (GBC/CIB) - $56
Dora Explorer's Pirate Pig's Treasure - $4
Dragon Ball Z Supersonic Warriors - $20
Elf - $10
ESPN Great Outdoor Games Bass 2002 - $5
F-14 Tomcat - $7
Finding Nemo - $5
Green Eggs & Ham (CIB) - $20
Incredibles (CIB) - $14
Kong 8th Wonder of the World - $5
Lost Vikings - $25
Madden 2005 - $5
Mario Kart Super Circuit (torn label) - $20
Metroid Zero Mission - $60
Monsters Inc - $4
Monster Jam Maximum Destruction - $6
Namco Museum - $6
Oddworld Munch's Oddysee - $12
Pirates of the Caribbean - The Curse of the Black Pearl - $5
Pong Asterios Yar's Revenge - $4
Sonic Advance 3 - $25
Quad Desert Furty - $3
Shaun Palmers Pro Snowboarding (GBC/CIB) - $10
Shrek Swamp Kart Speedway - $5
Spirit Stallion of the Cimarron - $5
SpongeBob Battle for Bikini Bottom - $7
Spongebob Squarepants Super Sponge - $6
SSX 3 - $7
The Incredibles - $3
Thunder Alley - $5
Top Gear GT Championship - $10
Sony PSP (all CIB)
Crisis Core: Final Fantasy VII - $15
Gurumin A Monstrous Adventure - $42
LocoRoco - $10
Mega Man Powered Up - $38
Parappa the Rapper - $27
Sega Genesis Collection - $17
PS1 Games (CIB unless noted)
007 Tomorrow Never Dies - $7
Action Bass - $6
Andretti Racing (GH) - $5
Ball Breakers (sealed) - $10
Bass Championship - $7
Battle Arena Toshinden (GH) - $14
Bust A-Move 4 - $17
Driver 2 (GH) - $10
Fighting Force - $20
IHRA Drag Racing - $5
Missile Command - $6
MLB 2001 - $9
MLB 2003 - $9
Nascar Heat (CIB) - $7
NBA Live 2000 - $8
NBA Shootout 98 - $9
NHL 98 - $8
NHL Faceoff 97 (GH) - $5
PlayStation Underground Jampack Fall 2001 - $9
Resident Evil 2 (DualShock Edition) - $65
Rocket Power Team Rocket Rescue - $7
Rugrats in Paris: The Movie - $12
Spongebob SquarePants Super Pants - $7
Syphon Filter 2 (GH) - $10
Tecmo Super Bowl - $20
Tiger Woods 99 - $8
Tony Hawk Pro Skater 3 - $12
Twisted Metal 2 (Greatest Hits) - $32
Toy Story 2 - $22
Walt Disney World Quest: Magical Racing Tour - $20
World Cup 98 - $12
PS2 Games (CIB unless noted)
All-Star Baseball 2005 - $5
Ape Escape 2 - $48
Ape Escape 3 - $43
ATV Offroad Fury 2 - $6
Avatar the Last Airbender - $8
Batman Begins - $13
Batman Vengeance - $19
Buffy the Vampire Slayer Chaos Bleeds - $28
Burnout Revenge - $11
Burnout 3 Takedown - $13
Buzz the Mega Quiz - $12
Capcom Classics Collection Volume 2 - $13
Castlevania Lament of Innocence -$25
Corvette - $5
Crash Bandicoot The Wrath of the Cortex - $12
Crash Nitro Kart (GH) - $9
Crazy Taxi - $10
Dance Dance Revolution Extreme 2 - $7
Dead to Rights - $6
Devil May Cry (GH) - $7
Enter the Matrix - $10
Eragon - $6
Family Feud - $5
Finding Nemo - $6
Fire Pro Wrestling Returns - $10
Ford Racing 3 - $5
Frogger the Great Quest - $7
Golden Compass - $5
GTA 3- $10
Gran Turismo 3 - $5
Godfather the Game - $14
Guitar Hero - $10
Guitar Hero Aerosmith - $7
Guitar Hero II - $7
Guitar Hero III Legends of Rock - $9
High Heat Major League Baseball 2004 - $5
Hot Wheels Velocity - $10
Hot Wheels World Race (missing manual) - $12
Hobbit - $10
Ice Age 2 The Meltdown - $7
Ironman - $6
Karaoke Revolution Party - $8
Karaoke Revolution Presents: American Idol - $5
Legends of Wrestling II - $12
Lego Star Wars The Original Trilogy - $6
Lego Star Wars The Video Game - $7
Lord of the Rings Fellowship of the Ring - $10
Madden 2003 - $5
Madden 2004 - $5
Madden 2005 -$5
Madden 2007 - $5
Matt Hoffman's Pro BMX 2 - $10
Max Payne - $10
Metal Arms Glitch in the System - $16
Midway Arcade Treasures (1) - $12
Midway Arcade Treasures (2) - $12
MLB 07 the Show - $5
MLB Slugfest 2003 - $10
MLB Slugfest 2004 - $13
Namco Museum (GH) - $8
Nascar 2001 - $5
Nascar Thunder 2003 - $7
NBA Street - $12
Need for Speed Underground 2 (missing manual) - $20
NFL Blitz Pro - $10
NFL Street - $17
NFL Street 3 (missing manual) - $20
Onimusha 3 Demon Siege - $21
Pinball Hall of Fame - $5
Pirates - The Legend of Black Kat - $12
Power Rangers: Dino Thunder - $8
Reel Fishing III - $7
Resident Evil Code Veronica X - $13
Rise of Kasai - $8
Rocky - $11
Scarface the World is Yours - $45
Scooby Doo First Frights - $13
Sega Superstars - $10
Sega Superstar Tennis - $10
Shrek Superslam - $8
Simpson's Hit & Run (Greatest Hits) -$50
Spiderman - $10
Sprint Cars Road to Knoxville - $6
Spy Hunter - $7
Spy Hunter 2 (missing manual) - $7
Starsky & Hutch - $7
SSX - $7
SSX 3 - $9
SSX On Tour - $8
Superman Shadow of Apokolips - $14
Super Monkey Ball Adventure - $10
Summoner - $10
Taito Legends - $15
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 2: Battlenexus (missing manual) - $17
Teen Titans - $22
Theme Park Roller Coaster - $8
Tiger Woods PGA Tour 2004 - $6
Thrillville - $6
Thrillville Off the Rails - $10
Time Crisis 3 - $23
Ty the Tasmanian Tiger - $11
Wheel of Fortune - $6
Virtua Fighter 4 (missing manual) - $6
Warriors of Might & Magic - $10
WWE Smackdown vs Raw - $11
WWE Smackdown vs Raw 2007 (Sealed) - $45
WWE Smackdown vs Raw 2007 - $17
WWE Smackdown vs Raw 2009 - $10
WWE Smackdown Shut Your Mouth - $15
PS3
Band Hero - $6
Batman Arkham Asylum - $7
Battlefield 3 - $6
Call of Duty Advanced Warfare - $6
Call of Duty Ghosts - $6
Call of Duty Mordern Warfare 3 - $6
Call of Duty 4 Modern Warfare - $7
Call of Juarez Bound in Blood - $9
Crysis 2 - $7
Dirt 2 - $12
Dirt 3 - $10
Driver San Francisco - $25
Enemy Territory Quake Wars - $9
Fifa Soccer 11 - $5
Fight Night Champion - $13
GTA IV Complete Edition - $25
Gran Turismo 5 Prologue - $8
Gran Turismo XL Edition - $11
Gran Turismo 6 - $19
Heavy Fire: Afghanistan - $10
Infamous - $6
Infamous 2 - $8
Killzone 2- $7
Killzone 3 - $7
Lego 3: Beyond Batman - $8
Lego Harry Potter Years 5-7 - $7
Lego The Hobbit - $9
LittleBigPlanet - $9
Madden 2011 - $5
Metro: Last Night - $8
Mortal Kombat Komplete Edition - $12
MLB the Show 10 - $4
MLB the Show 11 - $4
Monster Jam Path of Destruction - $20
NCAA Football 11 - $9
Sports Champions - $5
Tiger Woods PGA Tour 14 [Masters Historic Edition] - $23
Transformers Fall of Cybertron - $35
Transformers Rise of the Dark Spark - $13
Virtua Tennis 3 - $6
WWE 2K16 - $12
PS Vita
Lumines Electronic Symphony - $16
Need for Speed Most Wanted - $20
Sly Cooper Collection - $50
Sega 32X (all cart only)
Primal Rage - $50
Virtua Fighter - $24
Virtua Racing - $20
Sega Dreamcast Games (disc & manual only***; do not have original cases unless noted CIB)
Centipede - $7
Plasma Sword Night of Bilstein - $50
Psychic Force 2012 - $25
Ready 2 Rumble Boxing - $12
Resident Evil Code Veronica (CIB) - $40
Rippin Riders - $5
Sega Bass Fishing - $8
Sega Rally 2 Championship - $12
Speed Devils - $15
Sword of Berserk: Gut's Rage (game only) - $65
Trick Style - $7
Zombie Revenge - $30
Sega Genesis (**CIB unless noted)
Aladdin (cart + manual) - $10
Double Dragon (cart & box) - $45
Game Genie (loose + booklet) - $20
Hard Drivin' (Missing Manual) - $15
John Madden Football (cart + manual) - $20
Lemmings (CIB) - $30
MERCS (cart & box) - $35
NBA Jam T.E. (CIB) - $20
Prime Time NFL Football starring Deon Sanders (cart +manual) - $9
Ren & Stimpy Show: Stimpy's Intervention (CIB) - $20
Road Rash II (CIB) - $22
Robocop 3 (CIB) - $40
Streets of Rage (cart only) - $22
Super Off-Road (CIB) - $30
WWF Super Wrestlemania (CIB) - $20
X-Men (cart + manual) - $15
Zero Tolerance (CIB) - $35
Sega Master System (CIB unless noted)
Alex Kidd: The Lost Stars - $28
California Games (missing manual) - $20
Choplifter - $18
Ghostbusters - $25
Great Baseball - $10
Monopoly - $10
Parlour Games - $10
Pro Wrestling - $14
Rocky - $17
Space Harrier (missing manual) - $18
Shinobi (includes map; missing manual) - $30
Xbox (all CIB)
MechAssault 2 Lone Wolf (Limited Edition) - $8
Project Gotham Racing - $6
Xbox 360 (CIB)
Assassin's Creed - $6
Assasin's Creed II - $6
Asssasin's Creed III - $6
Battlefield Hardline Deluxe Edition - $10
Battlefield 3 Limited Edition - $6
Bioshock - $7
Bioshock Infinite - $5
Call of Duty World at War - $9
Call of Juarez: Blood Bound - $10
Civilization Revolution - $6
CSI Hard Evidence - $9
Fifa Soccer 10 - $5
Fifa Work Cup South Africa 2010 - $5
Game of Thrones - $11
Gears of War - $9
Halo 4 - $5
Injustice Gods Among Us - $5
L.A. Noire - $7
Mass Effect - $5
Mass Effect 2 - $5
N3 Ninety-Nine Nights - $20
NBA 2K12 - $5
NHL 10 - $3
NHL 14 - $6
Saints Row 2 - $10
Saints Row The Third - $5
Skate 3 - $6
Star Trek Legacy - $18
Star Wars Kinect - $7
Tiger Woods PGA Tour 2007 - $5
Tiger Woods PGA Tour 2008 - $5
Top Spin 3 - $6
Walking Dead Survival Instinct - $8
Wheel of Fortune - $14
Who Wants to Be a Millionaire -$5
Nintendo Wii (all CIB unless noted)
Animal Crossing City Folk - $20 (includes inserts but missing manual)
Celebrity Sports Showdown - $6
Guitar Hero World Tour - $18
Little League World Series Baseball 2008 - $10
Madden 2013 - $14
Mario Kart Wii - $35
Mario Super Sluggers (disc only) - $25
Mario Strikers Charged (disc only) - $10
NBA Live 09 All-Play - $5
New Super Mario Bros - $25
Super Monkey Ball Banana Blitz - $6
Super Smash Bros. Brawl - $20
Tony Hawk Downhill Jam - $5
Tony Hawk Shred Big Air - $5
Warioware Smooth Moves - $22
Wii Sports - $22
Wii Sports Resort - $30
Wheel of Fortune - $6
WWE Smackdown vs Raw 2009 - $7
submitted by PhilsTriangle to GameSale [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 18:50 Head-Independence937 First time for everything. .

The patient presented with what appeared to be normal H but insisted she had a severe HL... OK, fine. Got her into the booth, hooked her up, and presented at 40 DB. Red... dropped to 30 Red, dropped to 20 Red, dropped to 5 red... at that point, decided just to do the main 4 and turn it into a screening. Got the patient out and said, "You're great! No issues, congrats!" She then said, "Oh no, no, I thought you said to push when I didn't hear anything??"
I said, "What? No, you did it correctly. You pushed it at every tone. You're fine. "
She then continues, "No! I didn't hear anything, I swear. Can you retest me?"
At this point, I'm just thinking ... OK crazy..
Get her back in, present at 40. Nothing. Move to 50 nothing, 60, 70 (at this point she's contortions her face, 80 red.) Responding, not responding when Ivalidate and she's all over the place. Yes, no, yes, no
Classic malingering. At 3K, I stop the test and tell her she's done. She's getting out of the booth, and I begin to counsel her on what appears to be going on. I ask, "What's the deal here? You clearly would not benefit from any treatment, so tell me why you insist on needing a hearing loss?"
Finally, after round 6 of the discussion- she admits (long story short) that her grandmother raised her, she's going to college in a few months, and grandma can not hear. She's worried about this, and because she is on state insurance but grandma only has Medicare. She was hoping to give her these. I counseled her on individual loss, why her RX would not fit Grandma's, and law and ethics.
She was devastated. I invited her back WITH Grandma, and I plan on gifting her the new top of line series. But never have I seen something like this. If anything, it's the opposite. Spoilt adult children whining that their small should be there inheritance is being wasted on preserving cognitive abilities in Mom or Dad.
submitted by Head-Independence937 to audiology [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 18:43 NoDuck6067 TTC Limbo/Hell

I’m 35 with ‘lean’ PCOS. I ovulated once since April 2023 with the help of Letrozole 5mg - obviously didn’t work haha!
My RE put me on 2.5 - nothing. Then 5 and it worked but no conception. Restarted 5 next round and initially I had a follicle that was 14 but then it shrunk. I had severe depression/anxiety with my last Letrozole round. Like couldn’t get out of bed and wanted to jump out of a window (obviously wouldn’t but it was awful). My RE switched me to Clomid 50mg for 5 days and first scan showed two 12.6mm follicles and an estrogen of 212 (I was never over 60 with letrozole) will be following up tomorrow.
My body seems to respond initially and then backs off once the medication is stopped.
I’m so frustrated. I feel like my time is not my own. I’m too afraid to plan any trips or commit to anything because what if it’s during a cycle? What if I need a scan? What if I’m pregnant and can’t be near a lab for bloodwork or a scan?!
I feel like I’m absolutely insane.
My husband was finally like - we need to book something. Let’s book it refundable and let’s just book it. In the back of my head I really wanted to go to Europe this Summer as a consolation prize if TTC wasn’t working.
Well last night we booked refundable tickets and I am a nervous wreck. My husband is like you’ve been talking about this for a year aren’t you excited?! And I can’t even think about actually going with all of the ‘what if’s’
I feel like I’m going bananas. I keep thinking about okay what if you are pregnant - there is no reason to not go and I’m like oh I’m sure I’ll be sick and nauseas and wouldn’t enjoy it. Or I’ll miscarry because of the plane (I know it’s outdated info)
I feel like I’m missing out on life during this fertility journey and I just want to crawl into bed and cry.
Does anyone have any tips? Suggestions? Anything? I feel like I’m losing my mind.
submitted by NoDuck6067 to tryingtoconceive [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 18:33 HeyYo2021 Lilly Direct Process - Hit refresh?

So I am on my second round of 7.5 and prescription was sent to Lilly Direct almost 30 days ago. The prescription shows up as Prescribed on 4-22-24 with an empty Order Date. Discount card applied and a red text still saying Medication Out of Stock. Check Back. This is my 6th box through Lilly and each time has gotten slower.
Lilly's phone tree forces you to True Pill "fufillment" for support. They do not have an option to get a live person. They basically say. We are out of stock and working to fill orders.
I finally went around the system and got back to the "intake" group which is Lilly Direct. They and I paraphrase said, yeah that sucks. You have to start refreshing your order page at 9:00am each morning, all day and maybe they will drop a few in and if you refresh at the exact right time you might get one. So I said, you mean to tell me it is not a back order que or line in order of orders placed? They said no. It is not first in first out. WTF?
So now we are just down to pure "luck" in getting these meds while I am $3000 out of pocket into the process. I think a class action is warranted.
submitted by HeyYo2021 to Zepbound [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 18:24 diveintothefuture I haven’t heard back from the hiring manager yet… am I over stressing?

Last week I had my final interview for my dream job. The interviewer did not have questions for me actually but only wanted to know me in person and discuss my start date, but of course I had many questions to ask about the role, advices in the role and much more. I asked to hear what was their salary offer as in the first interview they were not able to make the offer but asked my preference (which I assume was good since they invited me for the second round). Unfortunately he explained me that they rely on a external HR which hasn’t provided any official proposal for the role as here at the moment there are many middle week holidays… he ended up telling I would have received the final offer by Wednesday or Friday latest. In the afternoon, I emailed a the hiring manager thanking him for his time and the interview. Well 8 days past, I have not heard from the hiring manager yet (and yes, last week there were some middle week public holidays as well). Am I overstressing myself or very simply I haven’t got the job? Should I ask for a follow up or just wait another couple of days?
Thank you for your help
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2024.05.14 18:19 CarBallAlex In the past 20 years, only 7/40 teams that made the finals played more than 11 games in the first 2 rounds

Every team that has made the finals since 2004 has played in 8-11 games in the first 2 series except for the following:
Of the remaining playoff teams, the only teams that can make it to the Conference Finals in less than 12 games are:
Oklahoma City Thunder, Denver Nuggets, Minnesota Timberwolves, Boston Celtics
Mavericks, Knicks, Pacers and Cavs are guaranteed to play at least 12 games through the first 2 rounds
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2024.05.14 18:08 Mophandel Archaeotherium, the King of the White River Badlands

Archaeotherium, the King of the White River Badlands
Art by Bob Nicholls
Nowadays, when we envision the words “prey,” among modern mammalian fauna, few taxa come to mind as quickly as the hoofed mammals, better known as the ungulates. Indeed, for the better part of their entire evolutionary history, the ungulates have become entirely indistinguishable from the term “prey.” Across their two major modern branches, the artiodactyls (the “even-toed ungulates,” such as bovids, pigs, deer, hippos and giraffes) and the perissodactyls (the “odd-toed ungulates,” including horses, rhinos and tapir), the ungulates too have created an empire spanning nearly every continent, establishing themselves as the the dominant herbivores throughout their entire range. However, as a price for such success, their lot as herbivores have forced them into an unenviable position: being the food for the predators. Indeed, throughout the diets of most modern predators, ungulates make up the majority, if not the entirety, of their diet, becoming their counterparts in this evolutionary dance of theirs. They have become the lamb to their wolf, the zebra to their lion, the stag to their tiger. If there is a predator in need of lunch, chances are that there is an ungulate there to provide it. Of course, such a dynamic is not necessarily a recent innovation. For the last 15-20 million years, across much of the world, both new and old, the ungulates have served as prey for these predators through it all. Over the course of whole epochs, these two groups have played into these roles for millions of years, coevolving with each other in an eons-long game of cat-and-mouse. The shoes they fill are not new, but have existed for ages, and within their niches they have cultivated their roles to perfection. Indeed, with such a tenured history, it seems hardly surprising the ungulates are wholly inseparable from the terms “prey,” itself.
However, while this is the case now, as it has been for the last 15-20 million years, go back far enough, and we see that this dynamic is not as set in stone as we would think. Indeed, back during the Eocene and Oligocene, during the very earliest days of age of mammals, things were very different for the ungulates. While today they are considered little more than food for modern predators, during these olden days, the ungulates weren’t quite so benign. In fact, far from being fodder for top predators, the ungulates had turned the tables, instead becoming top predators themselves. Indeed, though nearly unheard of today, throughout much of the Eocene and Oligocene, carnivorous ungulates thrived in abundance, developing specializations for catching large prey and establishing themselves as top predators that competed alongside the more traditional carnivores, and even dominating them in some instances. Given such success, it’s no wonder that multiple such clades had arisen during this time. Such predators included the arctocyonids, a lineage of (ironically) hoof-less ungulates with large jaws and sharp teeth for capturing large prey. There were also the mesonychians, a lineage of dog-like ungulates with massive skulls and jaws that allowed them to reign as the top predator across much of the Eocene.
However, among these various lineages, one stands stands out among the rest, by far. Arising during the Eocene, this lineage, though superficially resembling modern pigs, hailed from one an ancient lineage of artiodactyls far removed from swine or most other ungulates in general, with few close relatives alive today. Through perhaps not the most predatory of the bunch, it was among the most formidable, as their superficially pig-like appearance came with giant predatory jaws and teeth unlike anything from the modern era. And of course, as if all of that wasn’t enough, this lineage also went on to earn arguably one of the most badass nicknames of any lineage of mammals, period. These predators, of course, were the entelodonts, a.k.a the “hell-pigs.” More so than any other predatory ungulate lineage, these formidable ungulates were the ones to turn the current paradigm upside down, becoming some of the largest and most dominant carnivores in their landscape, even with (and often in spite of) the presence of more traditional predators. Through impressive size, fearsome teeth and sheer tenacity, these animals became the top dogs of their time, ruling as behemoth-kings of their Paleogene kingdoms, domineering all comers, and throughout the ranks, one entelodont in particular demonstrated such dominance the best. Though not the largest or most powerful of their kind, it is one of the most iconic, being among the most well-known members of its lineage to date. Moreover, this enteledont also has some of the most complete life histories ever seen out of this clade, with its brutality and predatory prowess being displayed in the fossil record in a way seen in no other member of its kind. More than anything else, however, it was this predator that best turned the notion of “ungulates being prey” on its head, living in an environment that bore some of the largest carnivoran hypercarnivores to date and still reigning as the undisputed top predator of its domain. This fearsome beast was none other than Archaeotherium, icon of the entelodonts, terror of the Oligocene American west and undisputed king of the White River badlands.
The rise of Archaeotherium (and of entelodonts in general) is closely tied to the ascendancy of carnivorous ungulates as a whole, one of the earliest evolutionary success stories of the entire Cenozoic. Having become their own derived clade since the late Cretaceous, the ungulates were remarkably successful during the early Paleogene, as they were among the first mammalian clades to reach large sizes during those early days after the non-avian dinosaurs had gone extinct. As such, it was with incredible swiftness that, as the Paleogene progressed, the ungulates swooped upon the various niches left empty by the K-Pg mass extinction that killed the dinosaurs. This of course included the herbivorous niches we would know them for today, but this also included other, much more carnivore roles. Indeed, early on during the Paleogene, it was the ungulates that first seized the roles of large mammalian predators, becoming some the earliest large mammalian carnivores to ever live, well before even the carnivorans. Such predators included the arctocyonids, a lineage of vaguely dog-like, hoof-less ungulates with robust jaws and sharpened teeth that acted as some of earliest large carnivores of the Paleocene, with genera such as Arctocyon mumak getting up to the size of big cats. Even more prolific were the mesonychids. More so than what pretty much any other lineage of predator, it was the mesonychids that would stand out as the earliest dominant predators of the early Cenozoic. Growing up to the size of bears and with enormous, bone-crushing jaws, the mesonychids were among the most powerful and successful predators on the market at that time, with a near-global range and being capable of subjugating just about any other predator in their environments. Indeed, they, along with other carnivorous ungulates (as well as ungulates in general), were experiencing a golden age during this time, easily being the most prolific predators of the age. Given such prevalence, it should be no surprise that there would be yet another lineage of predatory ungulates would throw their hat into the ring, and by early Eocene, that contender would none other than the entelodonts.
The very first entelodonts had arisen from artiodactyl ancestors during the Eocene epoch, at a time when artiodactyls were far more diverse and bizarre than they are now. Through today known from their modern herbivorous representatives such as bovines, deer, and antelope, during the Paleocene and Eocene, the artiodacyls, as with most ungulates of that time, were stronger and far more predaceous, particularly when it came to one such clade of artiodactyls, the cetacodontamorphs. Only known today from hippos and another group of artiodactyls (one which will become relevant later), the cetacodantomorphs emerged out of Asia around 55 million years ago, at around the same time that artiodactyls themselves had made their debut. These animals included the first truly predatory artiodactyls, with many of them possessing large skulls with powerful jaws and sharp, predatory teeth. Among their ranks included animals as puny as Indohyus, a piscivorous artiodactyl the size of a cat, to as formidable as Andrewsarchus, a giant, bison-sized predator often touted as one of the largest predatory mammals to ever live. Given such a predatory disposition, it wouldn’t be long until this clade produced a lineage of truly diverse, truly successful predators, and by around 40 million years ago, that is exactly what they did, as it was at that time that the entelodonts themselves first emerged. From their Asian homeland, the entelodonts spread across the world, spreading through not only most of Eurasia but also colonizing North America as well, with genera such as Brachyhyops being found across both continents. Here, in this North American frontier, the entelodonts began to diversify further, turning into their most successful and formidable forms yet, and it was around the late Eocene and early Oligocene that Archaeotherium itself had entered the scene.
Just from a passing glance at Archaeotherium, it is clear how exactly it (as well as the other entelodonts) earned the nickname of “hell-pigs.” It was a bruiser for starters; its body bore a robust, pig-like physique, with prominent neural spines and their associated musculature forming a hump around the shoulder region, similar to the hump of a bison. With such a bulky physique came with it impressive size; the average A. mortoni had a head-body length of roughly 1.6-2.0 m (5.3-6.6 ft), a shoulder height of 1.2 m (4 ft) and a body mass of around 180 kg (396 lb) in weight (Boardman & Secord, 2013; Joeckel, 1990). At such sizes, an adult Archaeotherium the size of a large male black bear. However, they had the potential to get even bigger. While most Archaeotherium specimens were around the size described above, a select few specimens, labeled under the synonymous genus “Megachoerus,” are found to be much larger, with skulls getting up to 66% longer than average A. mortoni specimens (Foss, 2001; Joeckel, 1990). At such sizes and using isometric scaling, such massive Archaeotherium specimens would attained body lengths over 2.5 m (8.2 ft) and would have reached weighs well over 500 kg (1100 lb), or as big as a mature male polar bear. Indeed, at such sizes, it is already abundantly evident that Archaeotherium is a force to be recorded with.
However, there was more to these formidable animals than sheer size alone. Behind all that bulk was an astoundingly swift and graceful predator, especially in terms of locomotion. Indeed, the hoofed feet of Archaeotherium, along with other entelodonts, sported several adaptations that gave it incredible locomotive efficiency, essentially turning it into a speed demon of the badlands. Such adaptations include longer distal leg elements (e.g. the radius and tibia) than their proximal counterparts (e.g. the humerus and femur), fusion of the radius and ulna for increased running efficiency, the loss of the clavicle (collar-bone) to allow for greater leg length, the loss of the acromion to enhance leg movement along the fore-and-aft plane, the loss of digits to reduce the mass of the forelimb, the fusion of the ectocuneiform and the mesocuneiform wrist-bones, among many other such traits (Theodore, 1996) . Perhaps most significant of these adaptations is the evolution of the “double-pulley astragalus (ankle-bone),” a specialized modification of the ankle that, while restricting rotation and side-to-side movement at the ankle-joint, allows for greater rotation in the fore-and-aft direction, thus allowing for more more powerful propulsion from the limbs, faster extension and retraction of the limbs and overall greater locomotive efficiency (Foss, 2001). Of course, such a trait was not only found in entelodonts but in artiodactyls as a whole, likely being a response to predatory pressures from incumbent predatory clades arising at the same time as the artiodactyls (Foss, 2001). However, in the case of the entelodonts, such adaptations were not used for merely escaping predators. Rather, they were used to for another, much more lethal effect…
Such notions are further reinforced by the entelodonts most formidable aspect, none either than their fearsome jaws, and in this respect, Archaeotherium excelled. Both for its size and in general, the head of Archaeotherium was massive, measuring 40-50 cm (1.3-1.6 ft) in length among average A. mortoni specimens, to up to 78 cm (~2.6 ft) in the larger “Megachoerus” specimens (Joeckel, 1990). Such massive skulls were supported and supplemented by equally massive neck muscles and ligaments, which attached to massive neural spines on the anterior thoracic vertebrae akin to a bisons hump as well as to the sternum, allowing Archaeotherium to keep its head aloft despite the skulls massive size (Effinger, 1998). Of course, with such a massive skull, it should come as no surprise that such skulls housed exceptionally formidable jaws as well, and indeed, the bite of Archaeotherium was an especially deadly one. Its zygomatic arches (cheek-bones) and its temporal fossa were enlarged and expanded, indicative of massive temporalis muscles that afforded Archaeotherium astoundingly powerful bites (Joeckel, 1990). This is further augmented by Archaeotherium’s massive jugal flanges (bony projections of the cheek), which supported powerful masseter muscles which enhanced chewing and mastication, as well as an enlarged postorbital bar that reinforced the skull against torsional stresses (Foss, 2001). Last but not least, powerful jaws are supplemented by an enlarged gape, facilitated by a low coronoid process and enlarged posterior mandibular tubercles (bony projections originating from the lower jaw), which provided an insertion site for sternum-to-mandible jaw abduction muscles, allowing for a more forceful opening of the jaw (Foss, 2001). All together, such traits suggest a massive and incredibly fearsome bite, perhaps the most formidable of any animal in its environment.
Of course, none of such traits are especially indicative of a predatory lifestyle. Indeed, many modern non-predatory ungulates, like hippos, pigs and peccaries, also possess large, formidable skulls and jaws. However, in peeling back the layers, it is found there was more to the skull of Archaeotherium that lies in store. Indeed, when inspecting the animal closely, a unique mosaic of features is revealed; traits that make it out to be much more lethal than the average artiodactyl. On one hand, Archaeotherium possessed many traits similar to those of herbivores animals, as is expected of ungulates. For instance, its jaw musculature that allowed the lower jaw of Archaeotherium a full side-to-side chewing motion as in herbivores (whereas most carnivores can only move their lower jaw up and down)(Effinger, 1998). On the other hand, Archaeotherium wielded many other traits far more lethal in their morphology, less akin to a herbivore and far more akin to a bonafide predator. For instance, the aforementioned enlarged gape of Archaeotherium is a bizarre trait on a supposed herbivore, as such animals do not need large gapes to eat vegetation and thus have smaller, more restricted gapes. Conversely, many predatory lineages have comparatively large gapes, as larger gapes allow for the the jaws to grab on to more effectively larger objects, namely large prey animals (Joeckel, 1990).
Such a juxtaposition, however, is most evident when discussing the real killing instruments of Archaeotherium — the teeth. More so than any facet of this animal, the teeth of Archaeotherium are the real stars of the show, showing both how alike it was compared to its herbivores counterparts and more importantly, how it couldn’t be more different. For instance, the molars of Archaeotherium were quite similar to modern herbivores ungulates, in that they were robust, bunodont, and were designed for crushing and grinding, similar in form and function to modern ungulates like peccaries (Joeckel, 1990). However, while the molars give the impression that Archaeotherium was a herbivore, the other teeth tell a very different story. The incisors, for example, were enlarged, sharpened, and fully interlocked (as opposed to the flat-topped incisors seen in herbivores ungulates), creating an incisor array that was seemingly ill-suited for cropping vegetation and much more adept at for gripping, puncturing and cutting (Joeckel, 1990). Even more formidable were the canines. Like the modern pigs from which entelodonts derived their nicknames, the canines of Archaeotherium were sharp and enlarged to form prominent tusk-like teeth, but unlike pigs, they were rounded in cross-section (similar to modern carnivores like big cats, indicating more durable canines that can absorb and resist torsional forces, such as those from struggling prey) and were serrated to form a distinct cutting edge (Effinger, 1998; Joeckel, 1990; Ruff & Van Valkenburgh, 1987). These canines, along with the incisors, interlock to stabilize the jaws while biting and dismantling in a carnivore-like fashion. More strikingly, the canines also seem to act as “occlusal guides,” wherein the canines help align the movement and position of the rear teeth as they come together, allowing for a more efficient shearing action by the rear teeth. This function is seen most prevalently modern carnivorous mammals, and is evidenced by the canine tooth-wear, which is also analogous to modern predators like bears and canids (Joeckel, 1990). Indeed, going off such teeth alone, it is clear that Archaeotherium is far more predatory than expected of an ungulate. However, the real stars of the show, the teeth that truly betray the predatory nature of these ungulates, are the premolars. Perhaps the most carnivore-like teeth in the entelodont’s entire tooth row, the premolars of Archaeotherium, particularly the anterior premolars, are laterally compressed, somewhat conical in shape, and are weakly serrated to bear a cutting edge, giving them a somewhat carnivorous form and function of shearing and slicing (Effinger, 1998). Most strikingly of all, the premolars of Archaeotherium bear unique features similar not to modern herbivores, but to durophagous carnivores like hyenas, particularly apical wear patterns, highly thickened enamel, “zigzag-shaped” enamel prism layers (Hunter-Schraeger bands) on the premolars which is also seen in osteophagous animals like hyenas, and an interlocking premolar interface wherein linear objects (such as bones) inserted into jaws from the side would be pinned between the premolars and crushed (Foss, 2001). Taken together, these features do not suggest a diet of grass or vegetation like other ungulates. Rather, they suggest a far more violent diet, one including flesh as well as hard, durable foods, particularly bone. All in all, the evidence is clear. Archaeotherium and other entelodonts, unlike the rest of their artiodactyl kin, were not the passive herbivores as we envision ungulates today. Rather, they were willing, unrepentant meat-eaters that had a taste for flesh as well as foliage.
Of course, even with such lines of evidence, its hard to conclude that Archaeotherium was a true predator. After all, its wide gape and durophagous teeth could have just as easily been used for scavenging or even to eat tough plant matter such as seeds or nuts, as in peccaries and pigs, which themselves share many of the same adaptations as Archaeotherium, include the more carnivorous ones (e.g. the wide gape, using the canines as an occlusal guide, etc.). How exactly do we know that these things were veritable predators and not pretenders to the title. To this end, there is yet one last piece of evidence, one that puts on full display the predatory prowess of Archaeotheriumevidence of a kill itself. Found within oligocene-aged sediment in what is now Wyoming, a collection of various fossil remains was found, each belonging to the ancient sheep-sized camel Poebrotherium, with many of the skeletal remains being disarticulated and even missing whole hindlimbs or even entire rear halves of their body. Tellingly, many of the remains bear extensive bite marks and puncture wounds across their surface. Upon close examination, the spacing and size of the punctures leave only one culprit: Archaeotherium. Of course, such an event could still have been scavenging; the entelodonts were consuming the remains of already dead, decomposed camels, explaining the bite marks. What was far more telling, however, was where the bite marks were found. In addition bite marks being found on the torso and lumbar regions of the camels, various puncture wounds were found on the skull and neck, which were otherwise uneaten. Scavengers rarely feast on the head to begin with; there is very little worthwhile meat on it besides the brain, cheek-muscles and eyes, and even if they did feed on the skull and neck, they would still eat it wholesale, not merely bite it and then leave it otherwise untouched. Indeed, it was clear that this was no mere scavenging event. Rather than merely consuming these camels, Archaeotherium was actively preying upon and killing them, dispatching them via a crushing bite to the skull or neck before dismembering and even bisecting the hapless camels with their powerful jaws to preferentially feast on their hindquarters (likely by swallowing the hindquarters whole, as the pelvis of Poebrotherium was coincidentally the perfect width for Archaeotherium to devour whole), eventually discarding the leftovers in meat caches for later consumption (Sundell, 1999). With this finding, such a feat of brutality leaves no doubt in ones mind as to what the true nature of Archaeotherium was. This was no herbivore, nor was it a simple scavenger. This was an active, rapacious predator, the most powerful in its entire ecosystem.
Indeed, with such brutal evidence of predation frozen in time, combined with various dental, cranial, and post cranial adaptations of this formidable animal, it’s possible to paint a picture of how this formidable creature lived. Though an omnivore by trade, willing and able to feast on plant matter such as grass, roots and tubers, Archaeotherium was also a wanton predator that took just about any prey it wanted. Upon detecting its prey, it approached its vicim from ambush before launching itself at blazing speed. From there, its cursorial, hoofed legs, used by other ungulates for escape predation, were here employed to capture prey, carrying it at great speeds as it caught up to its quarry. Having closed the distance with its target, it was then that the entelodont brought its jaws to bear, grabbing hold of the victim with powerful jaws and gripping teeth to bring it to a screeching halt. If the victim is lucky, Archaeotherium will then kill it quickly with a crushing bite to the skull or neck, puncturing the brain or spinal cord and killing its target instantly. If not, the victim is eaten alive, torn apart while it’s still kicking, as modern boars will do today. In any case, incapacitated prey are subsequently dismantled, with the entelodont using its entire head and heavily-muscled necks to bite into and pull apart its victim in devastating “puncture-and pull’ bites (Foss, 2001). Prey would then finally be consumed starting at the hindquarters, with not even the bones of its prey being spared. Such brutality, though far from clean, drove home a singular truth: that during this time, ungulates were not just prey, that they were not the mere “predator-fodder” we know them as today. rather, they themselves were the predators themselves, dominating as superb hunters within their domain and even suppressing clades we know as predators today, least of all the carnivorans. Indeed, during this point in time, the age of the carnivorous ungulates had hit their stride, and more specifically, the age of entelodonts had begun.
Of course, more so than any other entelodont, Archaeotherium took to this new age with gusto. Archaeotherium lived from 35-28 million years ago during the late Eocene and early Oligocene in a locality known today as the White River Badlands, a fossil locality nestled along the Great Plains and Rocky Mountains. Though a chalky, barren landscape today, during the time of Archaeotherium, the White River Badlands was a swamp-like floodplain crisscrossed with rivers and interspersed with by a mosaic of forests concentrated around waterways, open woodlands and open plains. As with most ecosystems with such a lush disposition, this locale teemed with life, with ancient hornless rhinos, small horse-like hyracodonts and early camels roaming the open habitats while giant brontotheres, small early horses and strange, sheep-like ungulates called merycoidodonts (also known as “oreodonts”) dwelled within the dense forests. Within this locale, Archaeotherium stalked the open woodlands and riparian forests of its domain. Here, it acted as a dominant predator and scavenger across is territory, filling a niche similar to modern grizzly bears but far more predatory. Among its preferred food items would be plant matter such as roots, foliage and nuts, but also meat in the form of carrion or freshly caught prey. In this respect, smaller ungulates such as the fleet-footed camel Poebrotherium, a known prey item of Archaeotherium, would have made a for choice prey, as its small size would make it easy for Archaeotherium to dispatch with its powerful jaws, while the entelodonts swift legs gave it the speed necessary to keep pace with its agile prey.
However, the entelodont didn’t have such a feast all to itself. Just as the badlands teemed with herbivores, so too did it teem with rival predators. Among their ranks included fearsome predators such as Hyaenodon, a powerful, vaguely dog-like predator up to the size of wolves (as in H. horridus) or even lions (as in the Eocene-aged H. megaloides, which was replaced by H. horridus during the Oligocene). Armed with a massive head, fierce jaws and a set of knife-like teeth that could cut down even large prey in seconds, these were some of the most formidable predators on the landscape. There were also the nimravids, cat-like carnivorans that bore saber-teeth to kill large prey in seconds, and included the likes of the lynx-sized Dinictis, the leopard-sized Hoplophoneus and even the jaguar-sized Eusmilus. Furthermore, there were amphicyonids, better known as the bear-dogs. Though known from much larger forms later on in their existence, during the late Eocene and Oligocene, they were much smaller and acted as the “canid-analogues” of the ecosystem, filling a role similar to wolves or coyotes. Last but not least, there were the bathornithid birds, huge cariamiform birds related to modern seriemas but much larger, which filled a niche similar to modern seriemas or secretary birds, albeit on a much larger scale. Given such competition, it would seem that Archaeotherium would have its hands full. However, things are not as they appear. For starters, habitat differences would mitigate high amounts of competition, as both Hyaenodon and the various nimravids occupy more specialized ecological roles (being a plains-specialist and forest-specialist, respectively) than did Archaeotherium, providing a buffer to stave off competition: More importantly, however, none of the aforementioned predators were simply big enough to take Archaeotherium on. During the roughly 7 million years existence of Archaeotherium, the only carnivore that matched it in size was H. megaloides, and even that would have an only applied to average A. mortoni individuals, not to the much larger, bison-sized “Megachoerus” individuals. The next largest predator at that point would be the jaguars-sized Eusmilus (specifically E. adelos) which would have only been a bit more than half the size of even an average A. mortoni. Besides that, virtually every other predator on the landscape was simply outclassed by the much larger entelodont in terms of size and brute strength. As such, within its domain, Archaeotherium had total, unquestioned authority, dominating the other predators in the landscape and likely stealing their kills as well. In fact, just about the only threat Archaeotherium had was other Archaeotherium, as fossil bite marks suggest that this animal regularly and fraglantly engaged in intraspecific combat, usually through face-biting and possibly even jaw-wrestling (Effinger, 1998; Tanke & Currie, 1998). Nevertheless, it was clear that Archaeotherium was the undisputed king of the badlands; in a landscape of hyaenodonts and carnivorans galore, it was a hoofed ungulate that reigned supreme.
However, such a reign would not last. As the Eocene transitioned into the Eocene, the planet underwent an abrupt cooling and drying phase known as Eocene-Oligocene Transition or more simply the Grande Coupure. This change in climate would eliminate the sprawling wetlands and river systems that Archaeotherium had been depending on, gradually replacing it with drier and more open habitats. To its credit, Archaeotherium did manage to hang on, persisting well after the Grand-Coupure had taken place, but in the end the damage had been done; Archaeotherium was a dead-man-walking. Eventually, by around 28 million years ago, Archaeotherium would go extinct, perishing due to this change in global climate (Gillham, 2019). Entelodonts as a whole would persist into the Miocene, producing some of their largest forms ever known in the form of the bison-sized Daeodon (which was itself even more carnivorous than Archaeotherium), however they too would meet the same fate as their earlier cousins. By around 15-20 million years ago, entelodonts as a whole would go extinct. However, while the entelodonts may have perished, this was not the end of carnivorous ungulates as a whole. Recall that the cetacodontamorphs, the lineage of artiodactyls that produced the entelodonts, left behind two living descendants. The first among them were the hippos, themselves fairly frequent herbivores. The second of such lineage, however, was a different story. Emerging out of South Asia, this lineage of piscivorous cetacodontamorphs, in a an attempt to further specialize for the fish-hunting lifestyle, began to delve further and further into the water, becoming more and more aquatic and the millennia passed by. At a certain point, these carnivorous artiodactlys had become something completely unrecognizable from their original hoofed forms. Their skin became hairless and their bodies became streamlined for life in water. Their hoofed limbs grew into giant flippers for steering in the water and their previously tiny tails became massive and sported giant tail flukes for aquatic propulsion. Their noses even moved to the tip of their head, becoming a blowhole that would be signature to this clade as a whole. Indeed, this clade was none other than the modern whales, themselves derived, carnivorous ungulates that had specialized for a life in the water, and in doing so, became the some of the most dominant aquatic predators across the globe for millions of years. Indeed, though long gone, the legacy of the entelodonts and of predatory ungulates as a whole, a legacy Archaeotherium itself had helped foster, lives on in these paragons of predatory prowess, showing that the ungulates are more than just the mere “prey” that they are often made out to be. Moreover, given the success that carnivorous ungulates had enjoyed in the past and given how modern omnivorous ungulates like boar dabble in predation themselves, perhaps, in the distant future, this planet may see the rise of carnivorous ungulates once again, following in the footsteps left behind by Archaeotherium and the other predatory ungulates all those millions of years ago.
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