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barefoot

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barefoot
·2 lata temu·discuss
How about one million kittens or one human?
barefoot
·4 lata temu·discuss
Side note: landing on this particular website was a hilariously bad experience.

The scrollable content area on my (modern and average sized) mobile device represented less than one third of the viewport.

The remaining two thirds are taken up by ads. The bottom ad drawer (1/3) contained extremely low value irrelevant ads with blatantly false claims.

The top third was taken up by an ad seemingly from the site itself to try to get me to sign up for a free “preparedness binder”. I’m assuming that later leads to some type of marketing drip campaign.

For the icing on the cake, the central tiny (less than 1/3) area with scrollable content is an ad disguised as a poll!

I give up. You’ll find me on Gemini.
barefoot
·4 lata temu·discuss
CLRS = Cormen, Leiserson, Rivest, Stein - The authors of the famous book Introduction to Algorithms.
barefoot
·4 lata temu·discuss
One of the challenges of (even modern) scuba diving is that failure conditions are at odds with normal reflexes.

For example, if you run out of air your first reflex as a non-diver might be to hold your breath and swim to the surface. As pointed out in the article, that’s a terrible idea at depth and can severely injure or kill you (instead, divers are trained to breath out during an emergency swimming ascent).

There are a number of other ways to die while diving and recorded mortality data proves that out. Each dive, on average, has a broadly similar risk profile (5, in micromorts) to a single jump while skydiving (8) or running a marathon (7) [1].

There’s seemingly room for technology to help make diving a bit more safe. It will be interesting to see if that does happen in the future.

[1] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Micromort
barefoot
·4 lata temu·discuss
Is limited supply reason enough to explain the high market prices or has there also been an increase in demand?
barefoot
·4 lata temu·discuss
I agree that we’re practically in a recession and that our present recession was brought about from congress via the fed. However, that particular chain of events was set in motion in the 1970s with the public mandate set for the FOMC. It wasn’t a recent secretive reaction to tech companies.

Do you mind expanding on your statement that the current actions of the fed/congress are a reaction to technology companies?
barefoot
·4 lata temu·discuss
I’ve had some luck with Remarkable. Remarkable has a reasonably good experience for getting a PDF to the device, working with it, and then getting it back to the source as a seemingly plain PDF.
barefoot
·4 lata temu·discuss
I’d imagine it might be technically possible but not practical. The weight required for ballistic parachute systems is substantial. On small aircraft (such as Cirrus and Icon) it reduces the useful load, and thus range/payload, substantially. Range and payload are very important aspects of commercial passenger aircraft.

Further, commercial passenger aircraft are already very safe due to system redundancy not practical on smaller aircraft. Would a ballistic parachute system help with many accidents in this category? I would be willing to bet not. Ballistic parachute systems are not a magic bullet - they require substantial altitude/time to deploy (as much as 900 feet in a spin, for example). Many substantial aviation accidents happen during takeoff and landing below or near these altitudes.

Would you pay a multiple of your current airfare for an extremely small (practical) reduction in travel risk?
barefoot
·5 lat temu·discuss
Man's Search for Meaning by Viktor Frankl (1946).

A close runner up might be Liar’s Poker by Michael Lewis (1989).
barefoot
·5 lat temu·discuss
I’ll bite, here are a few relevant observations.

I like honey bunches of oats cereal. It’s delicious. The variety I like is also ~200 calories _per cup_. That’s before adding milk of any kind. Add a little bit of milk and tip the box a bit more than usual (I imagine a lot of folks are not very precise when measuring breakfast cereal) and we’re easily sailing over 500 calories. I eat a modest 1700 calorie diet most days and I could easily crush 1,000 calories of this cereal without even feeling full.

Likewise for sandwiches. The best rated local sandwich shops near me offer a selection of (very likely) 1,000+ calorie sandwiches. They also do not list calories so my estimates are based on casually deconstructing them and plugging in constituent ingredients into MyFitnessPal ensembles with surprising results. It’s surprising because I’ve proven I can eat more than one without feeling full.

It doesn’t take a mad genius in an evil food lab somewhere underground to make food that’s guaranteed to derail a diet. The ingredients are cheap, easy, and abundant everywhere.

That’s the problem.