Listening to Little Earthquakes for the first time in forever. During Winter, a video for Frozen starts playing in my head. It’s perfect.
If this doesn’t exist, I need to learn how to edit a fan video and *make* it exist.
Archiving my Twitter, Facebook and other social network activity
Listening to Little Earthquakes for the first time in forever. During Winter, a video for Frozen starts playing in my head. It’s perfect.
If this doesn’t exist, I need to learn how to edit a fan video and *make* it exist.
Food allergy & asthma are #preexistingconditions. Before ACA, I had to prove continuous coverage every time I changed insurance…so that the new carrier couldn’t refuse to cover my allergist visits, testing or medication. Like EpiPens.
Thinking of past inaugurations & what-ifs. Yes, I’m more worried than I was in Jan 2001 or 2005, more than I would have been in ’09 or ’13.
This isn’t just the pendulum swinging. Someone’s grabbed it & either doesn’t care if it breaks the clock – or wants it to.
If your email consists entirely of the subject “Please Read” and a link to a file, I’m not going to trust it no matter who you are.
There’s no context. No reason to believe it’s not a piece of malware being spread through a hacked account or faked sender.
Email from @peetscoffee: “Coffee first, then back to school” – yeah, that sounds about right.
Though “Send them back to school with coffee” sounds like it might not be the best idea for a five-year-old… #isthereanymorecoffee
Amazon is breaking compatibility with my internet TV and wants me to buy a new TV to keep using Amazon video. Are you kidding me?
Or I could by a Fire Stick. Which might be more appealing if I didn’t already have a Chromecast.
Doubt I’ll buy a Fire Stick to watch @AmazonVideo after you discontinue my TV app. Make your service work w/Chromecast & I’ll keep watching.
Actors sometimes use stage names that are easier to pronounce than their real names, but it doesn’t change their acting ability.
Same goes for ingredients: Whether you can pronounce its name doesn’t change its nutritional value.
I mean, would you want to eat Brassica oleracea? No? How about kale? Same thing. Whether you can pronounce the name doesn’t matter.
I’m all for looking for deeper context. Dietary headlines are pretty much always overly simplistic, and it’s important to consider scale (doubling a tiny risk is still tiny), interactions, and trade-offs (avoiding one ingredient and increasing another beyond healthy levels isn’t going to help).
But ridiculing an organization for saying that sunlight and air pollution can cause cancer? That’s so blatantly dishonest I thought I was reading a satirical quote from the Onion.
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Also: Treating the various categories as if they’re all the same. Quick reference: Group 1 means there’s sufficient evidence that something causes cancer. Group 2A and 2B mean there’s limited evidence, so they’re not saying they’re sure. Group 3 means that there’s no indication that it causes cancer, but they haven’t ruled it out.
If anybody tells you something is dangerous because it’s a Group 3 carcinogen, they are either mistaken or lying to you. It might very well be dangerous for other reasons, but Group 3 specifically means they looked at it and didn’t see enough evidence either way.
(I recently saw someone claiming bananas were carcinogenic because of the ethylene gas used to ripen them after they’ve been picked. Ethylene is in Group 3. It’s also given off naturally by plants to do things like…ripen fruit.)
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https://www.iarc.fr/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/pr240_E.pdf
Here’s the actual IARC press release. It still doesn’t describe the scale of the effect they found, but it does at least define what they consider to be “processed meat” (basically anything cured, smoked, etc. so I guess that does include cold cuts). It’s worth noting that they don’t suggest people *stop* eating red & processed meat, but *limit* it, and that that risk/benefit analysis needs to be done to determine the best guidelines.
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https://www.vox.com/2015/10/26/9617928/iarc-cancer-risk-carcinogenic
Aha! Some numbers to indicate the actual *scale* of the risks involved: “In the United States, a person’s lifetime risk of getting colorectal cancer is roughly 5 percent. The IARC says that eating 50 grams of processed meat per day (about one hot dog’s worth) will boost that to about 6 percent.” For comparison, the article cites the lifetime risk of lung cancer at 1.3% for non-smokers and 17.2% for regular smokers – a *much* bigger difference!
I’d seen the 18% increase stat in several articles, but this is the first place I’d found the baseline rate, which is an important piece of information.
It’s an 18% increase for each daily serving, basically. If you assume the average American eats say, three servings of red/processed meat a day (I don’t know) for that 5% risk, then eating four servings daily brings you to 6%, five daily servings would bring you up to 7% and so on. Presumably going veggie or sticking to poultry would drop it to 3%. And that’s not considering confounding factors.
I understand reporting the findings primarily in terms of ratios since different cultures eat different amounts on average and will have different average rates…but at the same time, if you’re in science you’ve got to know that science reporting — and worse, health reporting — is pretty much worthless at trying to find the context. A few countries’ average consumption and cancer rates should have been in the press release.
I don’t use this app, therefore hardly anyone does. Even if it cites a 5-10 million install base.
It’s totally ridiculous someone would use this app for the first use case I can think of. So obviously it’s no use at all.
“Lots of people don’t use this” and “Hardly anyone uses this” aren’t the same thing. Don’t mix them up when deciding whether to drop it.
Maybe a million users don’t use a feature. Is that 1M out of 5M or 1M out of 1.1M? 80% usage vs. 9% is a big difference.
Even then, what if the 9% of users who use that feature are more active? (90-10-1 rule). Or they account for more revenue?
Cringe-worthy as “Are you ready to hashtag this?” is, Prez is one of DC’s few post-Convergence comics that appeals to me.
Ironically, that’s probably in part because I’m old enough to remember the Sandman guest spot in the 1990s.
I have always been fascinated by the Winchester House — but never heard this perfectly logical explanation for it. https://99percentinvisible.org/episode/mystery-house/ — @johannadc
Historian Mary Jo Ignoffo…believes that what drove Sarah Winchester to build was her desire to be an architect.
Sarah Winchester lived at a time when it was highly unusual for women to be architects. She wasn’t licensed, so her own home was the perfect place—and the only place—where she could practice architecture.
Whatever her motivations were, Sarah Winchester built a house with more than 150 rooms, 2000 doors, 47 fireplaces, 40 bedrooms, 40 staircases, 17 chimneys, 13 bathrooms, six kitchens, three elevators, two basements, and one shower. She spent nearly all of her life being an architect.
@johannadc Interesting idea! I’ve toured it a few times – it IS fascinating – but of course they play up the sensational take on it.
Webhost raising price for unique IP. SNI covers my own SSL use, but I’m also considering all-HTTPS. Compatibility: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Server_Name_Indication
Sadly, looks like ancient WinXP and Android 2.x are still big chunks of those markets, which means they won’t be able to access SNI sites.
Spam on my blog jumped by a factor of 20 when I installed Comluv in April, with no increase in real comments. Time to end this experiment.
I guess it depends on the site. I wonder how long it’ll take for the spammers searching for “powered by commentluv” to drop off.
Weird: Since I installed CommentLuv on my blog yesterday, this 9-year-old dev post has been getting hammered by spam.
Hmm. It’s not just that one post getting spammed suddenly. It’s just that one post where the spams aren’t getting caught by Akismet.
This does tell me that spammers *are* targeting CommentLuv blogs, because until yesterday, I had 1 blog w/about 600 spams & another with 6.
Interesting: I’ve started choosing ebooks vs. print in much the same way I used to choose hardcover vs. paperback: Author, series, etc.
I grabbed @robertjsawyer’s Red Planet Blues on Kobo. But I wouldn’t dream of buying @neilhimself’s Ocean at the End of the Lane except in HC
Gotta love when someone freaks out over something that’s been CHANGED OMG! when it’s actually normal & they just hadn’t noticed.
For example: “President A skipped out on event B for the first time EVER!” even though presidents C,D, and E skipped it regularly…
Or “What is that light in the sky! OMG!” Um, it’s Venus, it’s been there all month…
The airplane contrail off of the Calif. coast that people mistook for a missile launch a couple of years back…
Every time there’s a major earthquake and suddenly people are watching+reporting every tiny quake so it looks like the frequency is going up
Or those Youtube videos where the narrator was sure something had been done to water because you NEVER saw rainbows in sprinklers before?
“Doctor, will I be able to play the violin after the operation?” “Absolutely.” “Wonderful, I never could before!”
Stupid email tricks: Putting your entire sales pitch into a remote image so that the average user only sees your unsubscribe link.
Bonus points for using the nonstandard phrase “denotify” instead of something more easily understood like “unsubscribe”
It’s almost like they’re TRYING to look like spam.
Ever notice how trending topics are often full of people asking “Why is X a trending topic”…and making it trendier?
I imagine there’s some research potential in trending topics for people into chaos theory.
Because the extension added contextual advertising to the PayPal login screen. That means (a) I can’t trust my browsing, even on HTTPS sites, to be private (yeah, I know DNS and Chrome’s anti-malware filter already get this info), and (b) I can’t trust secure sites to not be modified as long as the extension is installed.
They’re finally replacing the broken window in my old 11th-floor office. (It’s been held together with duct tape for months.) I’m still in the same suite, so the air pressure just started pulling a serious breeze from the vent in my ceiling.
I should really go grab lunch…
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Why, yes, that was thunder I heard. Good thing the window replacement is done.
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Storm, smog and sky above LAX. I’ve seen one lightning bolt and heard a few thunderclaps. The darker clouds are bunched up over Palos Verdes.