> We're on 400Mbps, and even then I manage to block internet for others when I download a large file at full speed. That's more of a router/QoS issue. A large download shouldn't negatively affect quality for other uses,…
> included alpha channels I would be very surprised by this. Raster ops, yes. Alpha channel image compositing operations, no way - that's an entirely whole nother level of complexity.
What block layer cache?
> Programmers are not commodities But usually, they are treated as such. American companies have a hard time treating most of their white collar workforce as anything but. On the other hand, Stripe has been seemingly…
I think from the part of the sentence that you took out it was clear the point was about consoles. The Atari Pong console was also successful but I tend to not count it as I was only considering programmable consoles.
> and not when the console was still in production? The "Atari 8-bit" refers to a line of 6502 based personal computers manufactured from 1979 until 1992! There was a commercially unsuccessful video game console, the…
It’s a fair point but also back in the day - “everybody” (especially the younger BBS and hobbyist crowd) incorrectly referred to them as 1200 baud or 2400 or even 9600 baud modem - as evidenced by the numerous…
> 219 bytes per second and with 98 percent accuracy. Perhaps I'm a boomer, but 219 Bps is damn fucking fast - faster then the first few modems I used. > where do you draw the line? Probably somewhere fucking much…
Wow, people like to shit on Apple, but this is yet another example of something that just works.
QR code is not particularly dense (like compared to something like a hard drive) - why waste space that could not be put towards more redundancy (error correction)?
> But 40% of non-obese Americans are sick with metabolic syndrome. 40% of the non obese adult population in the US? More BS dude. It should be easy to point to some relatively reputable public health agency or peer…
> this person has not reported any results. Ironic since you are the one making the claim and have not produced any references. I can’t prove they don’t exist but you could easily counter if one did. Furthermore I…
This is not an RCT nor does it point to one supporting your uric acid claims. And Lustig is well known, he's on the border of being a crackpot, unfortunately. Mehmet Oz is a professor emeritus of Columbia, and…
This is a non-response - or do you have a specific cite linking uric acid as causative of diabetes or cardiovascular disease? It can be in a colorectal journal for all I care. > Have to be, to do it at all. Lol. Yeah…
If we’re talking about sugar soft drinks in the US this is invariably HFCS.
Sucrose is hydrolyzed in the gut by the enzyme α-glucosidase into glucose and fructose. Without any other absorptive buffer, it's basically the same.
> Most of these are products of high uric acid level That's a very unsubstantiated claim. I'm not debating the association of hyperuricemia with metabolic syndrome or cardiovascular risk factors, but I don't think we…
> "medical failure" Medical failure in the literature is a jargon term. (Internal) medicine and surgery are traditionally two distinct fields of, er, medicine. So it is just a matter of fact that a disease such as…
You have actual Crohn's or IBS? Because your symptoms while distressing don't sound like Crohn's at all. Crohn's is an autoimmune inflammatory condition with actual tissue destruction. People with Crohn's flares don't…
You are confusing Crohn's, an inflammatory bowel condition that is life long and can often be disfiguring and requiring surgery with IBS which is completely unrelated, non-inflammatory (if it were then it would not be…
There are actually biologic treatments for Crohn's/UC, not everyone responds but they produce remission which can spare or prolong time to surgery for many.
He wanted them to officially state that he didn’t receive compensation - that it wasn’t an official endorsement of any kind, compensated or otherwise.
Checking the extent of MVP is not really preventing or treating MVP, is it? The echo isn't preventing the mitral valve prolapse, it is also not an intervention - it is a diagnostic tool to guide further intervention.…
As to the original question, unfortunately I don't know where you got the idea that all possible preventative healthcare interventions are covered under the "free" rule - ie no out of pocket - but in the US that just…
> We're on 400Mbps, and even then I manage to block internet for others when I download a large file at full speed. That's more of a router/QoS issue. A large download shouldn't negatively affect quality for other uses,…
> included alpha channels I would be very surprised by this. Raster ops, yes. Alpha channel image compositing operations, no way - that's an entirely whole nother level of complexity.
What block layer cache?
> Programmers are not commodities But usually, they are treated as such. American companies have a hard time treating most of their white collar workforce as anything but. On the other hand, Stripe has been seemingly…
I think from the part of the sentence that you took out it was clear the point was about consoles. The Atari Pong console was also successful but I tend to not count it as I was only considering programmable consoles.
> and not when the console was still in production? The "Atari 8-bit" refers to a line of 6502 based personal computers manufactured from 1979 until 1992! There was a commercially unsuccessful video game console, the…
It’s a fair point but also back in the day - “everybody” (especially the younger BBS and hobbyist crowd) incorrectly referred to them as 1200 baud or 2400 or even 9600 baud modem - as evidenced by the numerous…
> 219 bytes per second and with 98 percent accuracy. Perhaps I'm a boomer, but 219 Bps is damn fucking fast - faster then the first few modems I used. > where do you draw the line? Probably somewhere fucking much…
Wow, people like to shit on Apple, but this is yet another example of something that just works.
QR code is not particularly dense (like compared to something like a hard drive) - why waste space that could not be put towards more redundancy (error correction)?
> But 40% of non-obese Americans are sick with metabolic syndrome. 40% of the non obese adult population in the US? More BS dude. It should be easy to point to some relatively reputable public health agency or peer…
> this person has not reported any results. Ironic since you are the one making the claim and have not produced any references. I can’t prove they don’t exist but you could easily counter if one did. Furthermore I…
This is not an RCT nor does it point to one supporting your uric acid claims. And Lustig is well known, he's on the border of being a crackpot, unfortunately. Mehmet Oz is a professor emeritus of Columbia, and…
This is a non-response - or do you have a specific cite linking uric acid as causative of diabetes or cardiovascular disease? It can be in a colorectal journal for all I care. > Have to be, to do it at all. Lol. Yeah…
If we’re talking about sugar soft drinks in the US this is invariably HFCS.
Sucrose is hydrolyzed in the gut by the enzyme α-glucosidase into glucose and fructose. Without any other absorptive buffer, it's basically the same.
> Most of these are products of high uric acid level That's a very unsubstantiated claim. I'm not debating the association of hyperuricemia with metabolic syndrome or cardiovascular risk factors, but I don't think we…
> "medical failure" Medical failure in the literature is a jargon term. (Internal) medicine and surgery are traditionally two distinct fields of, er, medicine. So it is just a matter of fact that a disease such as…
You have actual Crohn's or IBS? Because your symptoms while distressing don't sound like Crohn's at all. Crohn's is an autoimmune inflammatory condition with actual tissue destruction. People with Crohn's flares don't…
You are confusing Crohn's, an inflammatory bowel condition that is life long and can often be disfiguring and requiring surgery with IBS which is completely unrelated, non-inflammatory (if it were then it would not be…
There are actually biologic treatments for Crohn's/UC, not everyone responds but they produce remission which can spare or prolong time to surgery for many.
He wanted them to officially state that he didn’t receive compensation - that it wasn’t an official endorsement of any kind, compensated or otherwise.
Checking the extent of MVP is not really preventing or treating MVP, is it? The echo isn't preventing the mitral valve prolapse, it is also not an intervention - it is a diagnostic tool to guide further intervention.…
As to the original question, unfortunately I don't know where you got the idea that all possible preventative healthcare interventions are covered under the "free" rule - ie no out of pocket - but in the US that just…