Immortality 4 81. I deduced that I was safe in immortality. 82. The interstitium was replaced and maintained with pharmaceuticals. 83. I predicted what I needed (arguments and medicine). 84. I stayed close to positive people, food, thoughts and activities. 85. I breasoned out 50 As for each body system each day (I just asked for it and took the medication). 86. I maintained positive feelings and relationships. 87. I analysed the differences between meeting and not meeting the standard of simplicity in medicine. 88. I avoided risks. 89. I avoided unnecessary travel. 90. I avoided writing while walking in a new place. 91. I helped my organisation with popular products. 92. I wrote one A per day. 93. I used my motor skills and exercised my cardiovascular system. 94. I took care to use people's names and look them in the eye. 95. I participated in philosophy reciprocation relationships. 96. I unenrolled from non-useful degrees. 97. I regularly checked my meditation daily regimen. 98. I wrote algorithms to help my business. 99. I helped expand my business. 100. I went to many meetings with many people. 101. I was professional as an immortal. 102. I kept my wits about me, and avoided high winds. 103. I had sexual harassment policy. 104. I had 50 As to overcome a seen-as death. 105. I went for regular runs to maintain my bodily mechanism. 106. I researched and copied the number of As in my own way. 107. Each A had its own icon. 108. I recorded my daily regimen, meditation philosophy and autobiography. 109. I wrote down my mental and physical limits, and danger zones to keep away from. 110. I either used text to breasoning software or wrote As, asking for protection. 111. I made a point of asking how people were in a friendly and polite way. 112. I kept tolerance and making space for those from other cultures in mind. 113. I showed unconditional friendliness to humans, robots, human animals and aliens. 114. I wrote the phenomena and reasons that had different expressions. 115. The live-saving nutrients, including zinc, were teleported into the bloodstream. 116. I resolved disputes and had friendly relations with neighbours. 117. I extended my algorithm library and those of my business. 118. I naturally extended my business' lifespan sevenfold. 119. I used the interquartile range to eliminate outliers when mind reading for safety when immortal. 120. I found the contents of the appropriate food list. 121. I made time and space for nothingness during my day to relax. 122. I approximated, then found the exact time of events during the day. 123. I predicted the appearance of certain objects during the day, for example ones that affected my safety, job-related ones or other people. 124. I wrote about the thoughts that I had when immortal. 125. I calmed my nerves with meditation. 126. I planned my days off. 127. I italicised (slanted) the text by a certain angle to emphasise the advantages of immortality. 128. The immortal could take care of and influence his or her business and help others with it and with immortality. 129. The effects of the tablet were experienced with (4*)50 As. 130. The side effects of the tablet were turned off with pedagogy. 131. I had acupuncture applied to my sore foot. 132. I found that acting was the best thing, and made money from it. 133. I eventually found a way of selling my products. 134. I inserted safety precautions, safety checks and waiting periods during my day. 135. I was separate from circles (was free) while immortal. 136. I sold and left the company. 137. The company helped with the greatest things. 138. The company helped design robots. 139. The company helped with quantum energy. 140. The immortal researched medicine (pharmaceuticals for each body system). Body replacement had a separate A. 141. I examined the idea in itself and defined the differences between the positions on it. 142. I rose to the top of the area of study in immortality. 143. The immortal was powerful in health (helped others). 144. The immortal was invincible. 145. The immortal surveyed the information about the people. 146. The immortal improved his or her skills. 147. The immortal set up good communications and found what he or she wanted and attained it. 148. The immortal didn't see travel, health, money or happiness as obstacles. 149. The immortal won with each customer. 150. The immortal became a professor. 151. I found many reconfigurations of the sentence. 152. I thanked (was interdependent with) the custodians. 153. I planned work while immortal. 154. I unravelled the puzzle (research on robots). 155. I wrote on new sources, which were from new perspectives (arts, geometry, astronomy). 156. Question and answer database finder (quadb (sic)) finds the right configuration of commands. 156. The back-propagation maze in Prolog finds the right configuration of commands. 157. The back-propagation maze in Prolog finds errors in data structures. 158. Wrongness in sameness (for example unnecessariness) or difference (for example, when parts should be the same) in these are found. 159. I simplified the algorithm found with the question and answer database finder. 160. The quadb finder finds (recursive) algorithms from specs. 161. I wrote the back-propagation maze finder in Prolog. 162. I made and changed rules to appear to people when time travelling when immortal. 163. I wrote 5 secondary texts per chapter and an essay on each chapter. 164. I found enough sources for five paragraphs. 165. I used more than one source per paragraph on a keyword on the topic. 166. I wrote connections between topics. 167. I wrote on multiple keywords per paragraph. 168. I detailed each connection on a keyword. 169. I found a chain between topics and expanded it. 170. I wrote a table with columns of agreement or disagreement with a topic. 171. I asked questions about the collection of computational algorithms on the topic. 172. I made hypotheses about the input and output of algorithms. 173. I researched and applied to appear to people. 174. I visited places to research them. 175. I helped the follower. 176. I followed the follower. 177. I helped the follower do what she/he wanted to do. 178. I breasoned out (marketing) As as essays, with comments helping with the goal as essay parts. 179. There were dialogues of comments. 180. Marketing pointed to the topic as itself. 181. Marketing, the departments and subjects were done for each product, with secondary texts. 182. The As were also done for each person and time. 183. The algorithms were five lines long. 184. The television star applied the algorithm to her writing and algorithms. 185. The algorithm helped the writing by connecting it to other writing. 186. The algorithm helped the algorithm by optimising it, touching up its formatting and connecting it to other algorithms. 187. Writing had algorithms, and algorithms were connected to other writing and vice versa. 188. I wrote natural developments about writing, for example what the user thought with mind reading. 189. I filled the gaps with algorithms and mind read comments. 190. Multiple perspectives on an idea helped it to be analysed, rather than one perspective. 191. With multiple perspectives on an idea, there is enough analysis by the writer to give their own opinion. 192. Secondary education texts and sales are maintained with multiple perspectives on them. 193. Professors apply the second perspective of differing (finding disadvantages) as positive. 194. Professors examine the grammar the algorithm is supposed to process. 195. I cut out duplicate grammars. 196. I moved parts of grammars together. 197. I used grammars instead of (or rather, reduced them to) deterministic finite automata (DFA). 198. I minimised the DFA. 199. I wrote the C code. 200. I wrote the shell code. 201. I wrote the Haskell code. 202. God (or rather, the user) converted the DFA into an algorithm. 203. DFA minimisation included removing (groups of) transitions that made no changes. 204. I took note of the exception in immortality, for example if a person preferred certain ingredients. 205. I took note of whether a person preferred to avoid a particular topic. 206. I compensated for the scientific nonmonotonicity, for example I walked away from trees during a storm. 207. I found differences in the way I would write an algorithm over time, given skill, technology of the time, interest in the idea (whether it is obsolete) and new ways it could be used. 208. I wrote a converter from Prolog to other programming languages. 209. The advantage of this was to import features (for example, graphics) into my applications. 210. A converter to machine language is a compiler. 211. I could run algorithms more quickly when they were compiled in C. 212. I wrote my own video sequencer algorithm. 213. I wrote my own video server algorithm. 214. I wrote my own video graphics algorithm. 215. The bot forgot its mistake. 216. I found the simplest combination of commands to find the answer. 217. I found the simplest functional command to find the answer. 218. I went back and fixed over-complicated code. 219. I replaced the piecing-apart character-by-character command with term to atom. 220. I replaced the grammar with term to atom. 221. I replaced the verification command with maplist. 222. I replaced the list append with foldr append. 223. I replaced the string concatenation with foldr string concat. 224. I replaced the processing with foldr. 225. I replaced (some of) recursion with foldr. 226. I wrote a depth first search command. 227. I wrote the algorithm to find the depth first search algorithm. 228. I wrote a breadth first search command. 229. I wrote the algorithm to find the breadth first search algorithm. 230. I wrote the conjoiner of the finding and processing algorithms. 231. I wrote the algorithm to find the conjoiner of the finding and processing algorithms. 232. I wrote the algorithm to find the processing algorithm. 233. I wrote the degree, and decided how easy to make it. 234. I determined that the algorithm was difficult because it required a well-known part in an obscure place. 235. I determined that the algorithm was time-consuming because it required trial and error a number of times. 236. I gave 50 As to fix the muscle soreness. 237. I gave 50 As to fix my stiff back. 238. I thought of brain centres and looked for evidence of effects to maintain or correct (this was seen as me being happy with different people). 239. I used spiritual Chinese medicine As to treat muscle soreness. 240. I used spiritual baths. 241. I used spiritual relaxing time. 242. I used spiritual aromatherapy. 243. I used spiritual crystals as medicine. 244. I used spiritual sounds (spoken and singing voices, live music and soundtracks). 245. I used spiritual massage. 246. I used spiritual education to treat soreness. 247. I used meditation as medicine. 248. I used pedagogy as medicine. 249. I used text to breasonings as medicine. 250. I used mind reading as medicine. 251. I used time travel as medicine. 252. I used the quantum box (including physics sensors) as medicine. 253. I used the replicator as medicine. 254. I used the vaporiser as medicine. 255. I used bots as medicine. 256. I used sales as medicine. 257. I used body replacement as medicine. 258. I used the simulation as medicine. 259. I used immortality as medicine. 260. I used spiritual future medicines. 261. I used computer science as medicine. 262. I engaged socially as medicine. 263. I read as medicine. 264. I ran as medicine. 265. I walked as medicine. 266. I used the effects of pedagogy as medicine. 267. I used automation as medicine. 268. I used shadow bots as medicine. 269. I used parties as medicine. 270. I used inter-dimensionality (the multiverse) as medicine. 271. I used metacognition as medicine. 272. I used spiritual cupping as medicine. 273. I designed holograms. 274. The hull of the hologram was full of high-quality objects. 275. The hologram was holy - a black box that scientists fully explored. 276. The hologram was a whole object with a certain number of grams as its weight. 277. I befriended people in the simulation. 278. I had enough happiness from friends, healthy food and activity. 279. I took no risks in the simulation. 280. I respected others and their privacy. 281. I instated checks and measures in the company. 282. I looked where I was going in the simulation. 283. I checked where to meet the people on the map. 284. I also had 4*50 As in journalism as an article template. 285. I used my 4*50 As in journalism for the online encyclopaedia article. 286. I had 4*50 As in photography for the photograph in the online encyclopaedia article. 287. I had 4*50 As for the software. 288. I had 4*50 As for the hardware. 289. I had 4*50 As for each area of business. 290. I stated that the simplified version of CAW had chains of predefined commands. 291. I discovered that copywriting was the number one way of thinking and selection from one with mind reading. 292. I changed my copy from the form "A works by C, B-advantage. This (last part of A) is a D that F-what-it-does. It was written in E" to the copywritten form "A B-advantage. It works by C. Using a D that someone wrote in E, it easily F-what-it-does". 293. I produced the circuit simulation. 294. I researched the kernel algorithm. 295. I simulated visiting the holiday destination. 296. I 3D-printed the circuit. 297. I found the circuit using CAW. 298. I simplified the circuit using DFA-minimisation. 299. I minimised the computer. 300. I zeroed the computer using mind reading. 301. I minimised the software. 302. I worked out how to run desktop software on smaller screens. 303. I moved from a single terminal window to multiple browser windows.