Dear Hank & John - 276: An Onomatopoetic Wifi Explainer

Episode Date: February 1, 2021

How does science work? Is it rude to turn off the lights while my dog eats? How does wifi work? Do I always dream and just can't remember sometimes? What do I do as an adult? Why do cans explode in th...e cold but not bottles? Is it okay to get into something good for the wrong reasons? How do I work from home without burning out?  Hank Green and John Green have answers!If you're in need of dubious advice, email us at hankandjohn@gmail.com.Join us for monthly livestreams and an exclusive weekly podcast at patreon.com/dearhankandjohn.Follow us on Twitter! twitter.com/dearhankandjohn

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Starting point is 00:00:00 I think we're doing a cold open today. We only do cold opens on important occasions. This time around, there's a couple things. I mean, I do have a new book coming out. It's called the Ethnic Procene Review. It's available for pre-order everywhere, but that's not really the cause of the cold open. We wanted to come here before the intro and just let, I know what this is going to be. Just let everybody know that I made a TikTok. Oh my God. I make so many, I make way too many TikToks. But John Green, my brother, John Green, makes one TikTok every month, every couple of months, every couple of months. But you know what they all have in common, Hank, they have a variety of topics. But you know what each of them has in common.
Starting point is 00:00:42 I'm not solid gold platinum, banger, tiktok. It's true. John, all my tiktoks go platinum, Hank. The only one that didn't is the one where you promoted my book. You have 750,000 followers on tiktok after five tiktoks. Yeah. So the whole reason I made this tikt TikTok was because I was getting really close to 666,000 followers, which is a number that, as you know, like, I find extremely stressful. Sure.
Starting point is 00:01:13 And so I was like, I think I'll make a TikTok because then either a lot of people will follow me or a lot of people will unfollow me, but it doesn't, either way, it's the same result, which is that we are no longer near that number. And a lot of people followed me because of my really nuanced hot take about how Joe Biden is the 45th President of the United States, because we can't keep counting Grover Cleveland twice. I want it on my tombstone that Grover Cleveland can't be two presidents. Good to talk. John, if I can make one contribution to this broken country, let it be that Grover Cleveland cannot be the
Starting point is 00:01:45 22nd and the 24th president of the United States. John Green, 1977 to 2007, Grover Cleveland is only one man. You know, Hank, now that you've said it that way, I'd like to amend my previous statement. John Green, 1977 to 2009, I'm giving myself a couple extra years, then you gave me you miserly jerk. He did not win it on his tombstone that Grover Cleveland was only one person.
Starting point is 00:02:18 That's the way. Ha ha ha ha ha. Ha ha ha ha ha. Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh Hello and welcome to Dear Hankenjo. Of course, I prefer to think of it dear John and Hank. It's a podcast where two brothers answer your questions, give you the advice and bring you all the weeks news from both Mars and AFC Wimbledon. John, the people from Punxitani gave me a call because they were thinking about sort of spicing up this year's Groundhog Day.
Starting point is 00:02:43 They were like, what are we going to do to make this a little more interesting? We really want to mix it up this year. And I said, I told him, go for it. And they decided to instead stick with the Groundhog. I have to tell you, they pay me so much for my advice, but they didn't take it. I love the idea of Puxitani, like reaching out to America's influencers to be like, how can we rebrand Groundhog Day to make it hip and youthful? And of course, the first person they would reach out to would be you.
Starting point is 00:03:14 Of course, me. Oh, I know everything. Yeah. I mean, I don't know that Puxitani Phil could make great TikToks, but I know I could make a great TikTok with Puxitani Phil if he asked. Right. I was recently, this reminds me of a thing I needed to tell you about that I haven't told you about.
Starting point is 00:03:27 I was reached out to buy a influencer marketing person. And it was a very weird email. She asked me to sign an NDA before she'd tell me anything about the campaign. And I was like, no, I'm not going to sign an on disclosure agreement. Until I got about a brand deal, that's too weird. That's just very strange. So we had a little discussion about that. And I was looking at her job title and her job
Starting point is 00:03:48 title is lead campaign manager influencer execution. That's a great. And now I'm like way scared off. I'm like, I do not want to work with this person. What's in the NDA? What are you making me agree to? I do not, I don't love the word influencer, but I do not want to execute influencers. The great thing about that job title is you wouldn't even have to change it like after the
Starting point is 00:04:14 dystopian revolution comes. You'll just still be in the business of influencer execution just with a slightly different spin. Yeah, you just emphasize the different syllable. And suddenly it's a whole new job. It looks right. I can count the number of NDAs I've signed in my life on one hand and I can count the number of NDAs I've regretted signing on the same hand. I mean, that's what I said. That I have encountered in situations
Starting point is 00:04:42 where this has turned out to be a problem in the long term. And so it seems a silly thing to do. Anyway, there's just some corporations out there that you can't say anything bad about, you know, contractually. John, do you want to do some? We went all over. I slept four hours last night. In fact, I don't think I've opened the questions yet.
Starting point is 00:05:03 Do you want to ask me one? I mean, I also have an open them to be honest with you. I'm on deadline right now. The Anthropocene Reviewed book is due in like a hundred hours, and I'm going to have to spend most of those hours working on it. So let's just, you know what, let's go random this time. Let's pick a number. Wow. And then go from there and see if that question is good. And if it's not good, we'll shame the person who asked it. This first question comes from Grace because the first number I thought of was three. Okay.
Starting point is 00:05:30 Dear John and Hank, I just read an Hank's second book that science doesn't actually work in breakthroughs the way we are all taught. How does science work? Do scientists look through specific patterns and collect data or mess around until something cool happens? I've never been in a science lab, and I think that whatever goes on in one must be really rad. It's too late at night for me to think of a pun, grace. Oh, grace, I've been there. I'm there right now. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:05:55 Though I did come up with that Punx the Tani Phil joke, which I am proud of. Good joke. John, science, so a great example of this is a breakthrough that we are living in the middle of right now, which is an mRNA vaccine. Yes. So we now have two mRNA vaccines that are powerful.
Starting point is 00:06:13 The thing to know about these is that the hard thing was not making them. Usually the hardest part of making a vaccine is making the vaccine. For these mRNA vaccines, the hard part was testing them. So to get them in and like, you know, to do all of the normal stuff that we do to test safety and efficacy of any medicine,
Starting point is 00:06:30 we had to do that and that stuff takes time. And that's what took time. Making it literally happened like within a month of the genome of the virus being published by Chinese laboratories. So like that is the easy, easy thing, and then the testing was the hard part. But it was only easy because we've been trying to figure out how to make mRNA vaccines for literally 40 years.
Starting point is 00:06:56 So more than that, maybe 50. And it has been a slow process with lots of fits and starts. Basically, we knew that if we could get mRNA into the cell, maybe the cell would make that antigen. So the protein that our immune system would wake up to and see as a potential invader. And then our immune systems would look at it and say, ah, this thing is bad and we will prime the immune system to attack anything that has this antigen on it.
Starting point is 00:07:23 And so we knew that that was possible, but there's all kinds of complexities in terms of how do you get that actually into the cell because our bodies are always looking out for invaders like our immune system would break it down before it could get into a cell. So we had to do all these things to figure out how to actually make an mRNA vaccine work. We did that for 50 years. And along the way, there were thousands and thousands of people who participated in these research. And there were also hundreds or even thousands of breakthroughs that led to the larger breakthrough.
Starting point is 00:07:54 And that, I think, is the essential thing to understand about science. Like when Newton famously said, if I have seen further than others, it is because I stood on the shoulder of giants. That's true. It's just that like the giants are everyone. Right. Right. There was no individual giant. Yeah. And even Newton himself, it's no coincidence that Newton was working at the same time as Robert Hook and Edmund Hayley and lots of other people
Starting point is 00:08:20 and it's no coincidence that the body of scientific literature was getting stronger thanks to institutions like the Royal Society and the sharing of published results and stuff like that. We tend to, because we see history, including the history of science, so much as a story of individuals and their great individual actions, we lose track often of the fact that almost everything that's really important that happens is a process, not an event. we lose track often of the fact that almost everything that's really important that happens
Starting point is 00:08:47 is a process, not an event, and almost all of those processes involve the work and collaboration of thousands or millions or billions of people. Yeah. All right, Hank, it's time to answer another question. Pick a number. All right, 50, we don't, how hard do we go?
Starting point is 00:09:04 There's not that many questions. Like 35 or something. 27. Pick a number under 35. 27. 27. We got, from Andrea who asks, dear Hank and John,
Starting point is 00:09:14 is it rude to turn off the lights and leave while my dog is eating dinner? Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha Andrea. You missed the solid gold name specific side of kind of rhymes with panjia. Andrea. Andrea. Andrea. It's okay. Gotcha. Sorry.
Starting point is 00:09:37 Thank you. Oh my God. What a, I do this all the time. What a pandemic specific question. It is, it is undoubtedly to do this to a person. Yes. And we, so rude. What is very clear to a person? I think the dog's probably thinking, what the heck, man? I think the dog would prefer that you either stay in the room or leave the lights on, right? Like, I don't think you have to do both, but I don't know exactly what it's like to be a dog,
Starting point is 00:10:06 but I do know that when I am in a room and the lights get turned out unexpectedly, I do not enjoy it. It's not a good feeling. Yeah, but we actually have a button in our house that you can push, it's called all off. And you can push this button and it turns off all the lights in the house.
Starting point is 00:10:24 Wow. And occasionally, there's a phrase actually in our family called all-offing someone Push this button and it turns off all the lights in the house. Wow. And occasionally, there's a phrase actually in our family called all-offing someone, which is when you hit the all-off button when someone is like reading in the bathroom or watching television. And suddenly, you're in a dark room
Starting point is 00:10:40 and the TV is off and your first thought is inevitably like, they're here. The people who will bring about my doom have arrived. Yeah, they cut off and your first thought is inevitably like, oh, they're here. The people who will bring about my doom have arrived. Yeah, they cut off the power first. That's what they do. Yeah. Everybody knows that. That's what your dog is thinking.
Starting point is 00:10:53 So I think the question is, do you want to give your dog that anxiety? And the answer is like, probably not. That said, I don't think your dog notices if you get up and leave the room necessarily because dogs love eating so much. They do. Well, this is the thing I'm thinking. It's like, if I had my face down in a bowl of food, and somebody turned the light off,
Starting point is 00:11:12 I'd be like, this is very disorienting, but also like, just the circumstance is weird. So I don't know what it's like to be a dog. If your dog continues to chomp away, like it's probably not bothering your dog. Right. But there's nothing wrong with extending niceties, even if the dog doesn't care about them.
Starting point is 00:11:26 Yes. All of this reminds me of one of my all-time favorite quotes that I've never been able to find a source for. Some anthropologists, somewhere at some point, at least according to one of my college professors, said the following. Uh-huh. The difference between dogs and humans
Starting point is 00:11:41 is that dogs know how to be dogs, which makes me think that Andrea's question is actually a really, really good one because what Andrea's really asking is like, how do I be a person to a dog? Which is still a question of like, how do I be a person? And the truth is, Andrea, we don't know.
Starting point is 00:11:57 We don't know how to be people. We're just making this crap up as we go along. Oh, God, it's so true. And every time I'm like, here's how to be a people. I'm talking out loud, but I'm mostly talking to myself. Almost exclusively to myself, a little bit to Hank, and then like tertiary to anyone else who's listening. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:12:16 John, do you want me to pick a number for you? Pick a number for me. 17. I was worried you were going to pick a number I didn't like, but I love 17. It's one of my five favorite numbers. This question comes from Ellie who writes, dear John and Hank, can you please explain for me
Starting point is 00:12:26 how wireless internet happens? I can. Can you? I mean, because to some extent, you're gonna tell me that you could explain how wireless internet happens while just so the listeners at this podcast know we've had to stop and start five separate times because you can't get your phone
Starting point is 00:12:44 to work, but you know how the air conducts internet. I know it conceptually. Great. That does not mean that I can fix a problem that happened. Clearly. So there's two main things that are happening. One is we have figured out ways for things to communicate with each other.
Starting point is 00:13:01 And two, we have figured out ways to speed that process up magnificently. So there is very little difference on a conceptual level between what you and I are doing right now. Yeah. And how wireless internet works. And I don't mean talking over the phone. I mean, talking. Oh, yeah. Okay. That's like that. That's like saying there's very little on a conceptual difference that separates the earth spinning around the sun and you sticking to the surface of the earth. It's true in the largest sense, but yeah, there's actually a lot of difference.
Starting point is 00:13:35 Let me explain what I mean. Right now, there are two radio transmitters in my office. One, there's more than that, but the two that are important are in my computer and in my Wi-Fi router. And they are going, boop, boop, boop to each other. And when there's a boop happening, that's a one, and when there's no boop happening, that's a zero. And they are doing that to each other over radio waves. So they're just radios talking to each other. But instead of going boop, boop, boop, they're going,
Starting point is 00:14:05 so that we, like scientists and engineers have figured out how to make the boops go so fast that they can transmit a tremendous amount of data. Now this, this is basically the same as sending Morse code, right? Like boop, boop, boop, boop, boop, boop, boop, boop, boop, boop, boop, boop, boop, except that in that case, I would be the person, like a human being would have to do the tapping and the listening. And we are just not very good at that. And one thing the computers are very good at is understanding the difference between a
Starting point is 00:14:29 boop and a not boop, which is like, we're okay at that, but not computers are quadrillions of times better at that. And that's the complicated part of how Wi-Fi works, how to compress it, and have it be, have the signal loss be very minimal. But conceptually, it's just two radios going boop to each other. This reminds me a little bit. Do you remember when there was a hearing on the internet in Congress, and I believe it was a senator from Alaska,
Starting point is 00:14:55 yeah, said the internet is a series of tubes. And the whole the whole internet was like, this is amazing. I feel like you're the internet is a series of tubes in me right now. Well, it was a little weird for him to say because it was clear to him that someone had said this, it was clear to me that someone had told him to say that. Right. But it's a good simplification.
Starting point is 00:15:16 The internet is a series of tubes in that only a certain amount can fit through it. Yes, it's true. It's like a sewer pipe in that it can only hold so much water. It is also different from a sewer pipe in critical ways. I think that's the problem. Whenever we're creating analogies and metaphors around complicated, especially technical topics, the risk is always over reading the metaphor. Yeah. Because when all you have to ground you in knowledge is the metaphor.
Starting point is 00:15:50 Mm-hmm. You're like, okay, if the expanding universe is like a balloon filling with air, then is it also like a balloon in this way? No. And then you're like, oh, well, I still don't understand then because it's not really like a balloon filling with air. Yeah. But in this case, it is really like two radios going boop to each other. Yeah. And then lots of scientists and engineers working really hard so they can go boop really fast.
Starting point is 00:16:12 Anyway, while Hank and I were trying to answer your question, our internet break again, we don't know who's internet is the problem because we don't actually know how the internet travels through the air. It's just boobs. It's just boobs. It's just real fast boobs.
Starting point is 00:16:29 All right, Hank, I'm just gonna give you a number and then you're gonna read the question. The number is four. Oh, okay. Another one of my top five favorite numbers. Oh, all the way back up here. It's from Claire who asks, dear Hank and John,
Starting point is 00:16:39 sometimes I can remember my dreams, other times I can't. When I am sleeping, am I always dreaming and just can't remember them from Claire? We don't 100% know the answer to this question. I think. I feel like there are definitely times while I'm sleeping that I'm not dreaming. Right. It may come down, but that is what I would tell myself.
Starting point is 00:17:00 It may come down to what you consider to be a dream. Right. And so sleep scientists know for sure that during REM sleep, like dreams are different than during other parts of sleep. But there are still like dream-ish things that happen. Like oftentimes you'll fall asleep and wake up immediately, and you will have had a, like you will remember something of what was happening in that moment. And it may not be like a cohesive dream thing. It may just be sort of like images or shapes
Starting point is 00:17:27 or you know, speaking specifically about last night when I was trying to fall asleep at 3.30 in the morning and not being able to do it for some reason. I'm very rarely having some of you, but I did last night. And there would be, I would like get janked out of sleep by this sensation of, oh, I'm falling asleep. Yay! Right, yeah.
Starting point is 00:17:49 It's the worst. And then I'd be like, oh, and there was that weird like fish mouth. I just saw a fish mouth. And I'd be like, try and concentrate on the fish mouth. It'll take you back and it wouldn't. But, yeah. Just think about that.
Starting point is 00:18:03 I'm familiar with all of these tricks. I've actually found it helpful, and this may just be a construction of mine, but I've found it helpful because I do have quite a bit of insomnia to think of sleep as a continuum rather than like, an event I enter into and then like emerge from some hours later.
Starting point is 00:18:22 Yeah. Because then even if I can't like sleep, which I often can't, I can't tell myself, well, I'm relaxing, we're trying to, and I'm lying down, I'm doing my best. John, what is another number that you really like? If we're just gonna go through my five favorite numbers under the number 35, which would be,
Starting point is 00:18:40 oh, just a thrill for me, and I thank you in advance if that really is an opportunity. My next one would be five. Okay. It's from Mallory who asks, dear Hank and John, so I'm gonna be an adult the rest of my life. What do I do with this?
Starting point is 00:18:53 I'm so tired, Mallory. Wow, this question is the whole rest of the podcast. Well, here's the thing, Mallory. I remember being an adult, like a young adult out of school dealing with real life for the first time, the utter exhaustion of like having to pay bills and doing taxes and living with the bureaucracy of adult life and all that stuff and the stress, the constant stress of like, you know, keeping your job and getting your paychecks. And that's not all of adulthood. Like, I feel like when I was 25, I really wish someone had said to me,
Starting point is 00:19:37 being an adult isn't one thing. Like you're going to be lots of different kinds of adult in the same way you were lots of different kinds of kid. And there are gonna be different things that are stressful and different things that are fun, different things that are hard, different things that are easy. A lot of the things that are really, were really, really hard about being 25 are fairly easy now. And a lot of the things that were really, really fun about being 25, there weren't that many of them,
Starting point is 00:19:58 but the ones that they were for me are not part of my life today, right? Like the things I enjoyed most when I was 25, I have not done in many years. And like that's, I think that's normal. Yeah. And I don't mean like, that makes it sound like I mean like hard drugs or something. No, I don't mean like that. Or like obsessive gambling. No, I mean like, I mean like going out, you know, late at night with friends. I haven't like been out at one in the morning in a while. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:20:30 Not since VidCon. That's really the only time I do that anymore. Yeah. And it's been a while since there was a VidCon. It has. So, so like there's a lot of, I think, important advice that you can internalize and that you can listen to and decide whether or not it's right for you.
Starting point is 00:20:47 But the one piece of advice that I will give you that I think everybody, now it's gonna be hard to follow, but everybody can do this and everybody should do this. In your early adulthood, you need to floss. Yes. It is just gonna prevent a whole lot of problems for future you. Please do it.
Starting point is 00:21:06 And the reason that we're giving you this advice is because we look back and people are like, do you have any regrets? Whatever you're in a grown adult answer the question, do you have any regrets with? No, I don't regret anything. I always want to be like, are you kidding? Yeah. You don't. Yeah, that was a, you don't regret like all the times when you were 24 years old and you didn't floss
Starting point is 00:21:26 before going to bed, like you don't have any regrets. Oh, man, you don't regret like the money you spent on healies. John, I bought healies. People asked me if I have regrets, yeah, I got regrets. Hey, I would love it if you were like profiled in a major magazine and they asked you what your biggest regret was and you paused for a second
Starting point is 00:21:53 and you were like, well, I guess it was the time I bought healies. I can't wait. I really do have to have a stock answer to that question because people are gonna ask, I mean, the funny thing is I've been asked that question so many times and I don't have a stock answer to that question because people are gonna ask, I mean, the funny thing is, I've been asked that question so many times and I don't have a stock answer for it. And I need to invent one.
Starting point is 00:22:09 Loss. Because I hem in a haw, not because I'm struggling to find a regret but because I'm struggling to pick among the millions of them. Look, floss. All right, Hank, we're gonna move on to another number. Another one of my favorite numbers. Seven.
Starting point is 00:22:22 Oh, okay. Oh, God, what a great number. Seven is. Yeah, this is Oh God, what a great number. Seven is. Yeah, this is, it's barely even behind 17 in terms of it's almost perfection. This question comes from Kate who writes, dear John and Hank. Okay, my name is Kate.
Starting point is 00:22:35 All right, Kate, stop trying to be Ryan. I'm from Maine and I almost left some unopened canned of soda in my car overnight, which would have been catastrophic because it's winter here and it can get down into the single digits at night, causing my soda to freeze and explode. As I was filled with relief after remembering to bring them inside, I thought to myself, why is this?
Starting point is 00:22:52 I know that water expands when it freezes, but when I leave my water bottle in the car overnight, it just turns to ice. No message to worry about. Can you explain this to me? Why do carbonated beverages explode when they freeze, but my water bottle doesn't? Oh, there's a bunch of different things going on here. There are two different questions in this question. One, why does the bottle not break? And two, why in the case of soda, does it explode with force rather than just the bottle breaks and there is now like ice? Right. Because
Starting point is 00:23:23 having a chunk of ice in your car isn't a big deal, but when a soda explodes in your car, it isn't ice, it is wet and it is sticky. So first, why doesn't the bottle break? Now, I'm not entirely sure that there's definitely one piece of it which is that a plastic bottle is just stretchier. And so can a handle that? If you had a glass bottle, it probably would break because they have very little stretch.
Starting point is 00:23:47 And then there's another piece which is maybe that when a soda freezes, it kind of forces some of the dissolved carbon dioxide out of solution, which then creates even more pressure on the inside. I'm not 100% sure about that. But what I am sure about is when a soda does explode, a lot of it is still liquid because the water will freeze, but the corn syrup and a lot of the water that is in solution with the corn syrup will not freeze. What you end up with is basically ice crystals and then sugar. So you can actually freeze soda and then suck the sugar out of it, which is something I used to do because that's the kind of youth I was.
Starting point is 00:24:27 I love, I just like sweet stuff. And so that, that stuff will not freeze. And so when it explodes, it will be still wet, which is a big problem. It will freeze. It just freezes at a much lower temperature. Correct. Yes. Freezes at a different temperature than the water. Okay, Hank, let's keep it going with my favorite numbers. Okay. Are you ready?
Starting point is 00:24:44 Yeah. How about 20? Okay. For my son's birth date. This one is from Newton who asked Dear Hank and John, I am in need of dubious advice. I've realized that my passion for science was born entirely out of spite. For context, I'm trans and I've always heard the falsehood that trans people don't understand biology. And that led me to make it my mission to learn as much as I can when it comes to the field of biology. And this led to a genuine passion in the subject. I'm a high school junior, meaning that I'll have to be thinking about college and what to major in soon. Well, I want to do something with biology and science. I'm worried about picking a subject where my interests started
Starting point is 00:25:21 out in spite. Should I try and pick something that's slightly less spiteful or go with where my interests are? DFTBA, Newton. Oh man, Newton, there are so many things I got into for the wrong reasons that I love for the right reasons now. Go, go, go! Yeah, go. I completely agree with you, Hank,
Starting point is 00:25:36 how you get started in an interest. They're relevant. If I hadn't gotten rejected from the advanced creative writing class in my college, I may not have been so driven by resentment to try to write fiction. And eventually, I had to develop a better fuel than resentment. But Newton, it sounds like you've already done that. It sounds like you're already to a place where you're interested in the subject
Starting point is 00:26:05 because you're interested in it. How it got started not as important as where it's going to me. So I think study biology. I mean, you're a junior, so don't put too much pressure on yourself to study only one thing yet. But if you want a study biology, do.
Starting point is 00:26:20 Yeah. And another thing I will say is when you're looking at colleges if you're thinking about this kind of work, one thing that I didn't do in undergrad that I wish I had done is to look at schools and particularly professors who are doing research that interests you. Instead of thinking like, okay, what is the best school for biology? Like look at the actual professors who are learning about actual things, study their research
Starting point is 00:26:46 a little bit, and then you can actually like talk about that and applications and be like, I'm really interested in the research that some of the professors are doing, like these specific things, shows that like, you know, you are interested in not just like being at a school, but in doing specific things and that you understand what they're doing well enough to talk about it. Now, that is a thing that I made a mistake of once in my career where I kind of didn't but in doing specific things and that you understand what they're doing well enough to talk about it. Now, that is a thing that I made a mistake of once in my career where I kind of didn't understand it
Starting point is 00:27:10 and I fudged it and I should have taken some more time to understand it better because I did not get it to that program and I think probably because I fudged it. But my experience Newton is actually very similar. I got into science because it made me feel superior to other people and I had been made to feel inferior for a variety of other things, and also including just being a human, something that happens to all of us.
Starting point is 00:27:31 And that was not a good reason to be into science. And I am really glad that I moved away from it, and now love it for its own sake, and from the sake of my curiosity, and helping people understand the world, and understanding the world myself. So I am in the same boat. On the other hand, Newton, I got really into rush
Starting point is 00:27:49 because there was a girl that I liked who was really into rush. And then once we were no longer in a relationship together, I stopped listening to rush, because I didn't like it. So I can go both ways. Which reminds me that today's podcast is brought to you by Rush.
Starting point is 00:28:02 Rush, Hank doesn't like them. I'm sorry. There's not, I just don't. This podcast is also brought to you by Messenger RNA. Messenger RNA is that RNA that like shuttles genes to your protein factories so that your body can exist. And we've been able to use it to make our bodies better at being healthy.
Starting point is 00:28:23 And today's podcast is of course brought to you by Go For Day. Go For Day, a rebranding from your friends in Poxytani. And also this podcast has brought to you by just being people. We don't know how. We don't know how to do this. Cool. But we're doing it anyway. People trying our best for 250,000 years
Starting point is 00:28:42 and then asterisk, we know we could do better. I think we all know. All right, Hank, give me a number. Are we out of your favorites? Ah, yeah, I mean, there's a couple others that are secret favorites. I'm not willing to share with them. This is the podcast, the numbers that are too important.
Starting point is 00:28:59 So any I should avoid. No, no, no, yeah, of course, you should avoid 13. Okay. Yeah, anything, no, yeah, of course you should avoid 13. Okay. Yeah, anything, anything in that category, you get the vibe from a number like 13. Ah, how do you feel about 28? Ah, fine, I have no opinions. It doesn't do anything to me one way or another.
Starting point is 00:29:16 This question comes from Maxine, who writes, dear John and Hank, any tips for working from home? This past fall, my office closed down permanently and I've been struggling ever since. At first I thought it was the work itself, but now I'm realizing how much of my burnout is from a total lifestyle change. PTO and per my last email, Maxi.
Starting point is 00:29:33 Yeah. God. I gotta search my email for per my last email to see how many times I've made a big enough mistake to get one of those. Or just following up here. I get a lot of just following up here, emails. John, you and I have both worked at home for a long time.
Starting point is 00:29:52 Now, we have a mixed situation sometimes, too, or we do both. Yeah, but I've worked from home most of the time since 2007. Yeah. At first, it was really, really difficult for me. I was coming from an office environment where I worked nine to five, five days a week. And suddenly, I had deadlines, like I had work. I was working for a mental floss at the time and also writing my second novel and doing a few freelance things here and there. But I didn't have the structure that I had depended on to help me get work done and also to create a sense of separation between work and not work. Like my friend Shannon, she's working from home
Starting point is 00:30:32 which she's not used to doing and I love what she does. She wakes up in the morning, gets up, gets dressed, walks around the block, goes back to the apartment and starts working. And then at five o'clock, she goes back outside, walks around the block again, comes back upstairs and stops working. That's great. That's great. Just give yourself a little commute. I think structure is the most important thing to me.
Starting point is 00:30:58 And so I think scheduling, and especially, I don't know if there's people in your life who like might need to know what you're up to at an e-gave moment, because if there's nothing on my schedule, then Catherine might say, hey, you want to go out for lunch. But if there is, then, and in that moment, I'm like, yes, I do badly, deeply want to go out for lunch, but it may be that actually I couldn't. And so I will have set myself up for a problem in the long term.
Starting point is 00:31:22 And so I schedule things that don't need to be scheduled. And this was a huge breakthrough for me, especially when I started to schedule things, it was just meetings. Right. So meetings were scheduled, but all of my non-meeting activities, which are important, were unscheduled. Yes. And so they would get not, they would not get done.
Starting point is 00:31:39 Right. Because they weren't on the calendar. Yes. So now I schedule the things that I know I'm going to have to do. So like, journey to the microcosmos recording is scheduled, even though it's just me in this chair. But also, I find it helpful to also schedule the things that I don't need to do that I do need to do,
Starting point is 00:31:57 like exercise, for instance, or watching AFC Wimbledon. I put on my calendar when every AFC Wimbledon game starts. So I'll be like, okay, well, I can't watch that game today, but I know it's happening. Or I can be like, oh, great, I can look forward on Saturday morning to watching AFC Wimbledon inevitably lose another football game. Yeah, sorry about that. That's okay. I'm, I'm accustomed to it. Also having a to-do list, I find that very helpful as well. That said, there are a million tasks I am currently behind on, so I am probably not the person to be answering this question. All the people to whom I own emails currently are like, what is he talking about?
Starting point is 00:32:41 I am in no way like a brilliant measure of my time, especially when I'm on deadline like this, because really the only thing I'm thinking about is the book. If I have a spare five minutes, I'm not thinking about anything other than the book and what stands between where the book is now and where I want it to be and how do I get there? That ability to like obsessively focus around one thing is very useful to me. But it's also, it can be a problem. Like anything, if properly harnessed, it's good and when improperly used, it's bad.
Starting point is 00:33:18 So yeah, in fact, even while I was saying this sentence, Hank, because I mentioned the book, I am now there. I am now trying to figure out this problem that I have in this whispering essay. It's like how when I answered that question about sodas, I heard you in the background open up a can of diet, Dr. Pepper. Yeah, it was funny. I actually went upstairs.
Starting point is 00:33:42 Thankfully, you were doing a fairly long monologue. I felt pretty confident in my ability to get upstairs and get a diadctropepper. But when somebody mentioned soda, it's like I used, I a long time ago, I smoked cigarettes. And I'm nervous about even saying this because I don't want to drink or someone's desire
Starting point is 00:34:00 to smoke cigarettes, don't smoke. It's really hard to quit. When I used to smoke cigarettes, and I would see someone smoking a cigarette on TV, like the animal I am, you know, like the the mid-level ape that I truly am on the inside, I would be like, I want to cigarette, like that silverback gorilla smoking a cigarette. And I want to be like him when I grow up, I want to be more like James Dean. I guess I'll go smoke a cigarette. Yeah. I mean, when we're, when I'm in a meeting and like somebody brings up TikTok or Twitter,
Starting point is 00:34:29 either, it's very hard for me not to like open up the app. It is like, I am not in control of my mind. This is a thing I know, but it is, it's not a thing that I know, you know? Yeah, it's weird. Humans are weird. That said this night, Dr. Pepper is delicious. I know, I wanna cook so bad right now. I thought you were talking about it. Yeah. Sorry, I wasn't really listening to what you're saying. I was on TikTok.
Starting point is 00:34:53 Ha ha ha ha. Hank, so many people wrote in to the podcast to on the subject of whether Grover Cleveland, Canner cannot be both the 22nd and the 24th president of the United States. Yes. All of your responses that disagreed with me were wrong, and all of the responses that agreed with me were right except for the ones where they agreed with me, but tried to
Starting point is 00:35:15 have a caveat, and those caveats were wrong. Grover Cleveland is one man. He cannot be two presidents. Joe Biden is the 45th president of the United States. Some of you are like, oh, but he has the 46th presidency. No, he doesn't. He has the 59th presidency of the United States. We've had 59 inaugurations.
Starting point is 00:35:35 Yeah. So I'm ready to leave it behind. But in case you're wondering if any of you convinced me that Grover Cleveland can be two people, you did not. They were a couple of people who had very small issues, with the fact that you said he was gonna be the 22nd or 24th, but in that case, he would be the 22nd or the 23rd, because if he didn't count the first time,
Starting point is 00:35:57 he wouldn't be 24th, but like, that was just a good point. Yeah, that was just like a small mistake. Hank, I liked how you were about to say that's just a small semantic detail. Hank, I liked how you were about to say that's just a small semantic detail and then you had to stop yourself because you realized that the whole thing is just a small semantic detail. None of this matters. I recognize this. But you got to pick the hills you're going to fight and die on and for me, it's that Grover Cleveland was not two presidents. Hank, the news from AFC Wimbledon is that AFC Wimbledon are
Starting point is 00:36:27 win was in 10 football matches now, but, but we tied one. So, okay. One one tie against a crew, Alexandra. It was not a great, I know what a name. It was not the best performance I've ever, I've ever seen us get up to. We, we did score way, way, way too early. Joe Piggitt scored in the second minute. There was no way that was going to work and sure enough, it didn't. But we got a point out of the game, which as things stand is not the worst thing that could have happened. In fact, at the moment, thanks to that single point, we have emerged from the relegation zone, albeit only on goal difference. Oh, God. Well, John, are you, are you still scoring too early? Are you, are you just not scoring? Well, for a long time,
Starting point is 00:37:10 we weren't scoring, but then we, we decided that that was just a disaster. Like, we lost one game for to nothing. And so not scoring, not scoring is even worse than scoring too early. So we went back to scoring too early with Joe Piggit and, you know, that got us a tie. So I guess scoring two early is back on the menu, basically, but it's a knot. Yeah. Scoring is very hard to win a football game if you don't score goals from my understanding of the process. You've nailed it, Hank. That's one of the central things to understand about football is that the team that scores the most goals almost always wins. All right, John.
Starting point is 00:37:49 In Mars news this week, it looks like Mars has gone through not one, not two, but at least six distinct ice ages. Whoa, really? Yeah. So this has been a big question. People have been curious about for a long time. And Mars has a bunch of debris covered glacier deposits. We've known about them for a long time.
Starting point is 00:38:10 So there's big pieces of ice with stuff on them. But what we didn't know is whether those glaciers were the result of multiple ice ages or if there's just like one long continuous ice age. Like I started to get cold, got colder, and is now as cold as it is as it is now. And this is a really interesting question for several reasons, but in particular because of the planet's tilt on Earth, our axis has a tilt, and that creates our seasons. And this is true for other planets as well.
Starting point is 00:38:36 But if you change the tilt of that axis, it can lead to the onset of an ice age. Fortunately for us, our planet's axial tilt is pretty stable, thanks in part to the moon. So, big ups to the moon, boy. Thanks, moon. The Mars changes its tilt a lot. The science has estimated that it can be as low as 10 degrees,
Starting point is 00:38:55 as high as 60 degrees. Wow. And that could help set off multiple ice ages to see if Mars has... That's a big wobble. It's a big wobble. It's a scary wobble. I guess not the kind of wobble you'd want to be around for. I, yeah, that makes me not one who inhabit Mars.
Starting point is 00:39:09 I mean, as if I didn't have other reasons. You really can't like prevent a planet from wobbling either. It's not like, oh, the wobble has begun. Everybody leave. Like that's what you got. I guess you could make a big artificial moon. Yeah, yeah. That seems like a lot of work, though.
Starting point is 00:39:26 But who knows? The future holds many unknowns. So to see if Mars even had multiple eye stages, researchers studied images from the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter using artificial intelligence to identify, count, and measure how rocks were distributed on the glacier deposits. It turns out that was a lot of work for the AI. count and measure how rocks were distributed on the glacier deposits. It turns out that was a lot of work for the AI, so they also recruited 10 humans to count
Starting point is 00:39:50 and measure about 60,000 large rocks over two summers. So thanks to those 10 students who did that. And from that, the researchers concluded that the rocks were dispersed in a way that corresponded to multiple distinct ice ages somewhere between six and 20 of them over the last 300 to 800 million years. Giving us an idea of how often Mars's axial tilt might have changed in that time. So Hank, the atmosphere of Mars is now very thin
Starting point is 00:40:18 as I understand it, but it used to be quite a bit thicker. When it was much thicker, would those ice ages have been like water ages, you know, like, would the amount of water have increased or just the amount of surface water? Because like, I guess, I guess what I'm asking is like less water would have been like sucked up into space. Right. Because that atmosphere was thicker, right? So is there a possibility that at some point Mars was a water planet? They're definitely in Kevin Costner's water world. Maybe not that watery, though, who knows?
Starting point is 00:40:56 But I think that the, Mars has not had a thick atmosphere for three or four billion years. So somewhere between there. Oh, so this would have been after that. Oh, the good old days. Yeah. Yeah. The real, yeah, three to four billion years ago.
Starting point is 00:41:12 Those were the days. That's when we're talking about there being life maybe, but for clarity. The golden age. We have fossils of old life on earth that is billions of years old. so it's not like it couldn't happen. Which is wild. I mean, it is so weird to me that it took less time between the formation of Earth and the emergence of life than it took between the emergence of life and the first
Starting point is 00:41:39 eukaryotic cell. Yeah. That was a big, that was a big job. That's just blows. There's a lot of mind. It was harder to make you carry out excels than it was to make life. Yeah. Wow. We are so weird. Like we are what a weird, what a weird branch of the life story humans are. Oh, I know.
Starting point is 00:42:01 People underestimate how weird we are because we are ourselves. You know, we're not going to be What a weird branch of the life story humans are. Oh, I know. People underestimate how weird we are because we are ourselves, you know? Uh-huh. And so we don't seem that weird to us because we're used to being us, but like, oh my gosh. So compared to like, first off,
Starting point is 00:42:18 we're very weird compared to viruses or bacteria. Right, like that's obvious. Well, I mean, but we're even like, bacteria are weird compared to viruses. Like viruses are, yes, nothing. If you pitch the idea of bacteria to a virus, the virus would be like, that makes no sense. It's way too complicated.
Starting point is 00:42:36 We could destroy them, which they do. They do. But then if you pitch the idea of humans to bacteria, the bacteria would be like, that's crazy. You can't have organisms with trillions of cells inside of them, including trillions of bacteria. It doesn't, it just doesn't make any sense. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:42:56 It's wise. The brains are going to be made of meat. Their stomachs are going to decide when they're anxious, but only sometimes. Yeah. And they're going to need to sleep in order to live. Yeah, but sometimes we won't let them. Like last night. Yeah, they're going to have to sleep, but sometimes they won't be allowed to sleep.
Starting point is 00:43:15 It's great. We've built the best system. Thanks for potting with me. It's always a pleasure to go try to get a nap if you can. That's not going to happen for a while. John, thank you for making a pie. I got them so confused. This podcast, uh, we're off to go record our Patreon only podcast this week and stuff. And we're going to have a great time. And I don't know what I'm going to talk about. I actually do. I think I do. Now that I said it, it's at patreon.com
Starting point is 00:43:39 slash deer hankin john. This podcast is edited by uh Joseph Cinematic. It's produced by Rosie on a Halseyrowou Haasen, shared in Gibson. Our communications coordinator is Julia Bloom. Our editorial assistant is the Bokey-Tropper-Varty. The music you're hearing now, and at the beginning of the podcast, is by the great Gunnarola.
Starting point is 00:43:53 And as they say on our hometown, don't forget to be awesome. you

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