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sklargh

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Submissions

What Cops Saw Chasing Down New Jersey Drones

twz.com
2 points·by sklargh·4 mesi fa·0 comments

FDA refuses to review Moderna's mRNA flu vaccine

arstechnica.com
47 points·by sklargh·5 mesi fa·4 comments

Ramiro de Lorca [Passage 4, The Prince] (1516)

history.hanover.edu
1 points·by sklargh·6 mesi fa·0 comments

EKS: Russia's space-based missile early warning system (2021)

thespacereview.com
2 points·by sklargh·6 mesi fa·0 comments

Tell HN: The US NE Weather Service to end technical Area Forecast Discussions

8 points·by sklargh·6 mesi fa·1 comments

Hewlett Packard Journal Archives

worldradiohistory.com
9 points·by sklargh·8 mesi fa·0 comments

Imaginary lands – Ambridge to Middle-earth to Sodor (2021)

storymaps.arcgis.com
3 points·by sklargh·9 mesi fa·0 comments

The Great New England Hurricane of 1938

storymaps.arcgis.com
1 points·by sklargh·10 mesi fa·0 comments

comments

sklargh
·15 giorni fa·discuss
I am designing a long term early edition d&d sandbox (Delving Deeper rules) and I have found this series and ACOUP’s other worldbuilding very helpful in shaping my thoughts and filling in the edges of procedurally generated stuff.
sklargh
·27 giorni fa·discuss
If this triggers your interest in IRL firewood splitting it’s a very meditative and satisfying yard job. Also great mild to moderate workout between the splitting and stacking, especially on a crisp Fall afternoon.
sklargh
·2 mesi fa·discuss
How so and in regard to which part of my claim?
sklargh
·2 mesi fa·discuss
Meta is a normal high-comp company (for now) now. This is what it’s like to work at any mature F500 outside of privileged organizations and teams.
sklargh
·3 mesi fa·discuss
The concept of what constitutes a sale under CCPA is pretty expansive. An exchange of value can be a sale that occurs outside of a processing relationship. I’d say their note is inaccurate.
sklargh
·4 mesi fa·discuss
Also recommend nasstatus.FAA.gov
sklargh
·4 mesi fa·discuss
American Catholics aren't really a monolith on this matter...or any. There are substantial differences between Catholics who seek out Jesuit parishes and those who seek out the Tridentine Mass and people who are just achieving physical presence and thinking about kickoff at 5:00 PM Sunday Mass to fulfill obligation and get out ASAP (no choir please, keep that sermon snappy). All of these are spiritually valid approaches imho.
sklargh
·5 mesi fa·discuss
Religion is basically assembly for civilization?
sklargh
·6 mesi fa·discuss
When everything is important nothing can be important. I was particularly struck by the reduction of crew rest to service alarms. I'd sort of thought this was a problem for watch standers only but it makes sense that some alarms require a specialist or the crews are too thin. Heck, I bet the captain, engineer and first mate all have monitors in their staterooms.
sklargh
·6 mesi fa·discuss
I think a few things.

1. They do not have robust self-driving capability. At this level of expense I expect hands-free major highway driving.

2. They’ve removed a lot of physical buttons that improve quality of life, the level of technology in the cabin is simply overwhelming.

3. They’ve done a great job with the driving experience of the EVs but they have poor range relative to the competition.
sklargh
·6 mesi fa·discuss
I think Porsche is really in trouble here.

I’m not anti-EV but the electric Macan and Cayenne look awful. They are under equipped technologically relative to their Chinese peers (heck basically anything).

Porsche sort of sold its soul for this tech-forward design but it doesn’t deliver any meaningful benefits, these cars don’t even have level 2+ highway cruise control. In the meantime I get a bunch of crap screens and lose all the glorious physical buttons and I don’t even have a fun engine rumble to make up for it?

So, the cars are ugly and uncool (I grant a matter of taste), aren’t selling in their target market (China) won’t sell meaningfully in their backup market (US) and they’re behind GM, Tesla and BYD in all regards on quality of life stuff.

Not a recipe for endurance.
sklargh
·7 mesi fa·discuss
Merry Christmas HN. I offer this group my thanks for something I can learn from every day.

This is the Trinity College Choir’s advent concert - really puts me in the mood for the season, a remarkable performance and service: https://www.youtube.com/live/MsUd-twzG2U?si=1HMiaD2-Le70-fch
sklargh
·8 mesi fa·discuss
First, I want to offer my condolences to the author. I lost my father suddenly at a similar age—it's terrible. Sending positive energy. Former Firefighter-EMT here — I did this a long time ago in a rural setting). Now to the practical matter. I want to offer some frameworks for thinking about this in rural or exurban transport situations. This is not risk-free or even optimal, and can put you in worse position, but it's worth considering seriously if you suspect you may have a very long or delayed transport time to the hospital.

Before anything else, ask yourself two things:

Would this person possibly benefit from (A) an automatic external defibrillator (AED) or (B) Narcan[1]?

Can the person safely get into a car and be driven to the hospital?

If the answer to 1A or 1B is YES: Don't drive. Call 911, clearly state "cardiac arrest," or "overdose" give your exact location, and start effective CPR if required. A police officer with an AED will likely arrive quickly. Getting the location right is critical—this is life-saving information.

If 1A/1B don't apply and you can answer YES to question 2: You have some thinking to do. I suggest doing it now, in advance, whenever you move—think through how you'd handle massive bleeding, heart attack, or stroke symptoms.

It's worth briefly considering emergency scenarios and the risks you're willing to accept. Ambulances or fire engines sometimes can't reach you quickly: logistical issues, mechanical failures, dispatcher problems, insufficient volunteers. In rural settings during a cardiac event, waiting thirty minutes for basic EMS care—followed by a 30-60 minute hospital transport when you have alternative transportation—may not be your best choice. Even in a volunteer live-in program with career-grade response times, I found it could take 20-30 minutes to reach people at the edge of our territory. That's not counting the 2-3 minutes to get us awake and out the door at the station, plus another 2-3 for dispatch.

My household is minutes from two decent suburban EDs (we're lucky). Certain situations would lead us to skip 911 and drive straight to the ED: massive hemorrhage or an obvious heart attack when another adult is present to drive. This requires nuance. Time saved by skipping the ambulance can easily be lost to an incompetent admissions screener. You need to use the magic words: "heart attack," "chest pain," "think I am going to die." If you're having a stroke, you may not be able to drive at all (and you shouldn't). You'll also need to choose the right hospital—challenging in the moment, potentially impossible if you're impaired. The wrong hospital can be as lethal as waiting for an excessively delayed ambulance. In large cities with saturated EDs, this strategy often doesn't work: too many false alarms and just overall volume mean you won't skip the line.

I have direct experience managing and assessing these issues. You may not—consider getting meaningful first aid training. It helps.

The general rule: If you're confident in your department and know a nearby fire station generally has a paramedic-engine or paramedic-staffed ambulance with reasonable response times, wait for it - paramedics can do a lot for you on the way to the hospital and most critically get you to the best facility for care. You could crash your car or deteriorate en route to the point where you can't drive. But if you're fifteen to twenty minutes in and don't hear sirens (admittedly, not all departments use sirens properly), it's time to consider leaving—and how you're going to do it.

[1] Regarding Narcan: I won't engage in broader discussion about police possibly asking about circumstances requiring it—that's your business. IANAL. But many cops and almost all ambulances carry it, and the person will be alive after they administer it.
sklargh
·8 mesi fa·discuss
Simply posting here to introduce people to the Snozzle. https://youtu.be/_DNyAKcEe6A
sklargh
·9 mesi fa·discuss
Many of my biggest professional achievements were enabled via Irish Coast. I give them a few dollars a month.https://mynoise.net/NoiseMachines/windSeaRainNoiseGenerator....
sklargh
·10 mesi fa·discuss
Dark Sun is not bad, but it is definitely overshadowed by Rhodes' magnum opus.

I recommend Igniting the Light Elements for people who want a keystone piece about the early thermonuclear. https://www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/10596 - it's an extensive Thesis on the history of early thermonuclear period. Also one of the last comprehensive looks before classification fully obscures the plurality of the programs.
sklargh
·3 anni fa·discuss
Oh man it was super-disappointing and the end of my willingness to buy WoTC 5E. You'd be better off with the originals from DriveThru.