HackerTrans
TopNewTrendsCommentsPastAskShowJobs

domofutu

no profile record

Submissions

The Surprising Truth about Exercise and Childhood Obesity

domofutu.substack.com
1 points·by domofutu·hace 6 meses·0 comments

Genetic study links impatience to broad mental and physical health risks

nature.com
4 points·by domofutu·hace 8 meses·0 comments

High-powered microwave technology is the 'holy grail' of drone interceptors

jpost.com
2 points·by domofutu·hace 8 meses·0 comments

Detection of triboelectric discharges during dust events on Mars

gizmodo.com
97 points·by domofutu·hace 8 meses·52 comments

Can the U.S. Make Big Nuclear Reactors?

wsj.com
4 points·by domofutu·hace 8 meses·0 comments

The Strange and Totally Real Plan to Blot Out the Sun

politico.com
1 points·by domofutu·hace 8 meses·0 comments

Happiness Is a Skill You Can Build

domofutu.substack.com
14 points·by domofutu·hace 8 meses·4 comments

Europe wants to make space food out of thin air and astronaut pee

space.com
4 points·by domofutu·hace 8 meses·0 comments

Clinically ready magnetic microrobots for targeted therapies

science.org
3 points·by domofutu·hace 8 meses·1 comments

The Optimization Trap

domofutu.substack.com
2 points·by domofutu·hace 8 meses·0 comments

The Fundamental Error of the 'Science' of Economics [pdf]

paecon.net
3 points·by domofutu·hace 8 meses·1 comments

Distributive Consequences of Neoliberalism in Russia [pdf]

paecon.net
2 points·by domofutu·hace 8 meses·0 comments

[untitled]

1 points·by domofutu·hace 8 meses·0 comments

First clinical pregnancy following AI-based microfluidic sperm detection

thelancet.com
2 points·by domofutu·hace 8 meses·0 comments

The dangers of driving after too much coffee

telegraph.co.uk
4 points·by domofutu·hace 8 meses·0 comments

The Island Where People Go to Cheat Death

newrepublic.com
7 points·by domofutu·hace 8 meses·0 comments

Beta-Alanine

domofutu.substack.com
1 points·by domofutu·hace 9 meses·0 comments

The Kayfabe of American Politics

domofutu.substack.com
2 points·by domofutu·hace 9 meses·1 comments

Picasso painting vanishes en route to Spanish exhibition

barrons.com
7 points·by domofutu·hace 9 meses·3 comments

He's 58 and Trying to Break into College Football

wsj.com
10 points·by domofutu·hace 9 meses·2 comments

comments

domofutu
·hace 4 meses·discuss
This is not an argument against redistribution in principle. It’s an argument that the method of redistribution matters systemically, that a state which degrades its productive ecosystem to fund redistribution is not actually a more equitable state over time, but a less productive and ultimately less equitable one.
domofutu
·hace 9 meses·discuss
I've written an essay comparing political spectacle to professional wrestling's "kayfabe," using immigration policy as a case study. I'd appreciate the HN community's feedback on the argument's clarity and strength.
domofutu
·hace 9 meses·discuss
Also, this: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45597478
domofutu
·hace 9 meses·discuss
Is this a trend? https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45609875
domofutu
·hace 10 meses·discuss
Thanks for that; I'll check it out.
domofutu
·hace 10 meses·discuss
Thanks, George. I’m a new Australian (U.S. transplant) and still getting up to speed on the local medical culture. But, re: SAD/mood, bright-light therapy is first-line; I treat vitamin D as “correct deficiency, don’t expect it to replace standard care.”

On MS (the bit I didn’t cover well): Higher lifelong 25(OH)D is linked to lower MS risk (observational + genetic lines point the same way). In people already diagnosed, adding high-dose D3 to disease-modifying therapy hasn’t reliably cut relapses; MRI signals are mixed.

So, test and correct deficiency (good general health practice), but don’t expect vitamin D to function as a disease-modifying add-on.
domofutu
·hace 10 meses·discuss
Great question and fair push-back. Two quick clarifications:

The ETCS isn’t a ratio scale. A 70 vs 68 isn’t “1.02× more true”; it’s a weighted confidence score that blends consistency of RCTs/meta-analyses, effect size, heterogeneity, external validity (who benefits), dosing clarity, and risk trade-offs. Small gaps (especially near band edges) should be read as “roughly comparable confidence,” not a meaningful quantitative jump.

Why 70 (“Strong, with nuance”) for fractures vs 68 (“Moderate-to-Strong”) for respiratory infections? Because the fracture claim is consistently positive when paired with calcium in older/institutionalized adults (clear population + pairing guidance), whereas the respiratory finding shows a modest, baseline-dependent benefit (strongest only when deficient; daily/weekly dosing beats bolus; more heterogeneity and large neutral trials in sufficient populations). Same neighborhood numerically, but the value proposition differs (i.e., Fractures: act when risk is high; pair D3 with calcium; practical, repeatable benefit; Respiratory: correct deficiency first; expect at most a modest protective effect, not population-wide gains).

To make this clearer going forward, I’ll add a short ETCS legend in each post and note that ≤3–5-point differences within a band are “near-ties.” Thanks for the nudge. This is exactly the kind of reader feedback that I'm looking for.
domofutu
·hace 10 meses·discuss
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45207175
domofutu
·hace 10 meses·discuss
https://www.herox.com/NASARockandRoll