No. You must bet right - and it depends on how right you are. Look up the Kelly criterion. Bet 1 - 2*probablity of losing of your current pot - will maximize expected return (but is a bit volatile for some tastes)
It is pretty well agreed upon that the Kelly criterion strongly overestimates bet sizes for continuous bets where accurate probabilities are hard to determine, like the stock market. It has given rise to many variations such as Half-Kelly, Kelly minus constant, etc, which is a pretty good tell that it's an inaccurate approximation. Using Kelly to invest in the stock market is roughly like using half the Black-Scholes formula to invest in options. You'll get good results when the market agrees with your direction, but spectacular failures when it doesn't.
Braeburn is probably the closest to Bramley that's easy to find in the US. Jazz is not a bad cooking apple either, but it's quite a bit sweeter than a Bramley. Neither one gets that distinctive Bramley texture when cooked though.
For a cooking apple, the texture is everything! McIntosh and Northern Spy are heritage breeds sold in the US that have good texture, though not so good as a Bramley. They can be hard to find, though, and usually expensive, whereas Bramleys in the UK are standard supermarket apples, available everywhere. I don't think I've ever seen a Bramley in the US; if I had room, I'd plant a tree.
Is Switzerland some internally-accepted authority on how food content is supposed to look like everywhere, and force it down the throat of literally whole world? We know how that would work...
These are private corporations, their HQs are in Switzerland purely for corporate tax reasons, otherwise they would move away long long time ago, given massive salaries required to get & keep top staff.
If given countries were really that concerned and wanted to push for better products sold in their countries, there are numerous ways. They can do literally anything they want back home on their own market, or they can push ie via WTO arbitrage, heck even European courts do handle some Swiss lawsuits.
Or you know, people just educate themselves a trivial bit about nutrition and stop buying stuff that is harmful.
We can have a smart discussion with facts and reality check, or emotional outbursts that lead nowhere.
Obligatory counterexample, comedies. A quickfire screwball classic like "His Girl Friday" has lots of smart lines per minute where recent Hollywood ones will have two jokes in 90mins that they've had to put into the trailer, and slow build ups so that everybody can get the lame joke.
It's not so much the language as the horrible layout - with all the navigation at the left leaving the text so small.
The reported lower
vitamin D levels in more severe RA are more likely to be
consequence than cause. Our data do not support vitamin D
supplementation as a direct therapeutic intervention to
modify RA outcome,
Vaguely competent financial management is by no means assured. I suggest reading Tim Geithner's "Stress Test" to to see how hard he had to fight to get some basic things done.
However there are lots of us writing applications which are delivered by browser. With that lens you're completely wrong. Then I do want to send json from the backend and have lots of behaviour in the frontend viewing that in different ways.
So basically it's the differences between web pages and applications.
Truth is that there aren't many other sensible ways to deliver applications any more. All big companies still have windows machines - but MS broke all of the ways of writing applications on windows so going to the browser makes sense and you get some cross platform ability - plus you get to move it to the cloud.
No. Every golang stdlib proxy I've tried to use is a toy. They very inefficiently copy the message body and the memory behaviour is just horrible. Try posting a 10MB message. (That's actually not a lot for modern technology) and it will grind to a halt.