I want to tell you guys something that I have not told anyone.
Half a year ago, I decided to circle back academically and two months ago, I started doing a degree in the biomedical field.
(As if physics hadn't been traumatic enough.)You're never too old/lazy to start something new.

Good luck for the degree you started.
I completed by Post Graduate studies a year ago and I am too lazy in starting my Phd program. Wish me luck and courage.
Thanks!
I totally get what you mean.
My laziness was unmatched for a long time.
But right now?
Personalized medicine? AI-customized drugs? Woah. This stuff is interesting, I barely find time to shitpost here. It is that serious.
Congrats, a valiant endeavor. If I had all the money & time in the world I would concentrate full-time on finishing my Master's degree in a similar field. And I'd just do it for fun, or self-betterment.
Thank you!
I am definitely hoping to better myself and make a difference. But it is fun.

I want to tell you guys something that I have not told anyone.
Half a year ago, I decided to circle back academically and two months ago, I started doing a degree in the biomedical field.
(As if physics hadn't been traumatic enough.)You're never too old/lazy to start something new.

Congrats! That's the spirit! Never stop learning!
Thanks! It's literally impossible to stop learning.
I think instead of "I think, thefore I am" it should be "I learn, therefore I am". It just makes more sense.
The most difficult part of the biomedical research and development (in a company) is the fact that trials take an incredibly long time and have to be done in succession: phaseI, phase II, phase III.
Very often a decade or more passes before the molecule is fully vetted and by that time a presumably better molecule might enter phase I/II and there is no upside for the first medicine.
I am talking about this from a biotech investor perspective. It's not an AI development speed, not even close.