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elucubra, in What's an amusing thing to say before going under general anesthesia?

I had surgery three weeks back. The mood in the OR was good. As they were strapping me to the table for bone surgery on my femur, ( They were going to have to exert force, and I needed to be on my side), I asked them if tbay had all watched the youtube tutorials. Laughs ensued.

Mr_Blott,

*Laughs and slight sideways glances at eachother

Ftfy

Agent641,

Some of them forgot to watch the youtube tutorials

TommyAdagio,

Stealing this for my next colonoscopy.

ours,

“I’m an influencer, can I stream this on Twitch?”

silencioso, in What are some modern bullshit jobs?

If your job main tool is PowerPoint then there’s a high probability that your job is a bullshit job.

Smkia,

Cries in teacher

JackGreenEarth,

Teachers’ jobs are anything but bullshit. However, the modern schooling system sucks, teachers shouldn’t be doing/have to do what they currently do.

toiletobserver, in What do normal people look at on their phones?

text.npr.org

It’s a breath of fresh air in an otherwise chaotic Internet user interface.

200ok,

🏅

moistclump,

Thank you!!!

clay_pidgin,

Hey, nice. Thanks.

Lauchs,

Oh that’s fantastic, thanks for sharing!

ReaderTunesOctopus, in Ancient wisdom often sounds like common sense now that it is commomly taught. What is some ancient wisdom that we no longer teach because it was wrong?

Check out the history of bird migration science. There was everything from birds going to the moon for winter, swallows burrowing in the mud, transmorphing to different species, up to the 19th century

Tar_alcaran,

Add to that where people thought bugs and vermin come from. Obviously they spring fully formed for dirt and muck. Even rats come from rotting grain.

ReaderTunesOctopus,

Sounds stupid, but not worse than tiny animals in your blood making you sick (germ theory), or basically anything from cosmology from the Big Bang to dark energy

tocopherol, (edited )
@tocopherol@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

For anyone curious the history really is interesting, when reading previously I learned about Pfeilstorch, storks throughout the years that had flown to Germany with African arrows stuck in them. First seen at a time when people didn’t understand bird migration, it helped to explain where all the birds would go.

ironhydroxide, in Which of your favorite creators content quality went downhill very quickly?

AvE. Was cool until pandemic happened, then got extra “conservative”. Couldn’t watch anymore.

assplode,

This one made me really sad.

I loved his videos. I learned a lot from the disassembly videos.

Then he went all Covid denier as soon as the pandemic hit. I couldn't watch it anymore

chunkystyles,

I thought AvE was a smart guy who got it.

Then he started praising the trucker convoy for being heroes and it shocked the fuck out of me. It honestly bummed me out.

I told my Dad that I couldn’t watch AvE anymore and he said, “Well his content has been shit lately anyway.”

Junkers_Klunker,

Yea that fucking sucked, used to absolutely love his boltr videos but then he went political 🤦

BruceTwarzen,

Shiiiit i remember. His videos were genuinely fun to watch. It started to go down a bit when he kept ranting about plastic pipes, like it's some wort of conspiracy and copper was the best thing ever. Then covid hit and ooooh boy what an absolute wanker.

umbraroze,
@umbraroze@kbin.social avatar

Yeah, basically unsubbed from AvE over this too.

I can't remember who this was, but there was another engineering YouTuber who, during the pandemic, basically twittered about being frustrated with the lockdowns from business perspective and whingled about being scared talking about his political beliefs because apparently being anything anything right of a model leftist is a crucifiable offence in the bird site, according to him. And how the horse paste actually works. I was like "...oh shit, maybe this dude is a magahatter?"

commandar,

I could kind of ignore it for a while but then he started dabbling in 9/11 trutherism and I had to nope out. At that point the paranoia and politics were infecting and degrading the actual meat of the content.

ModernRisk, in Where can I NEUTRALLY keep up to date about the Palestina/Israel situation?
@ModernRisk@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Honestly don’t think you can find any neutral news about it. I recommend use multiple news places to get the overall view (that’s what I do).

I feel like every news-publisher is leaning to one or the other.

Z4rK,

ground.news/…/israeli-palestinian-conflict

This site collects news from multiple sources, tells you their political affiliation, shows the difference in summary based on left / center / right news sources, and optionally shows a lot more like ownership network etc if you pay for it.

Nothing will be neutral, but I like it to get an overview.

thorbot, in What is Something Scientific that you just don't believe in at all?

Can we not push more anti science rhetoric please

ani,

Chill science should be questioned otherwise it’s not science

lseif,

nooo you gotta have faith in the science!! trust the science!!

force, (edited )

Science should be questioned by people who understand the science, not by random people who don’t understand the research. Which a lot of people who know nothing about the science or the maths/data or whatever try to question it

ani,

People are free to express what they think about science. There’s no law saying otherwise. Why are you guys so upset?

force, (edited )

“There’s no law against it” is a laughably stupid reason to do something. They’re free to do it but everyone else is free to acknowledge that their uneducated/misinformed skepticism is harmful to society and that their opinions are meaningless to those who aren’t dumb. Leave the contemporary science denial to those who actually somewhat know what they’re talking about.

ani,

This is a question on AskLemmy. It won’t change anything in the world. Why do you care? You guys should touch grass

force,

What are you on about?

ani,

Let’s touch grass together to measure how much photosynthesis grass can do? Please, it will be fun. But I’m open to another scientific experiment if you have anything in mind

InEnduringGrowStrong,
@InEnduringGrowStrong@sh.itjust.works avatar

The person you’re replying to believes climate change to be a lie, so I think you’re probably wasting your time.

AMDIsOurLord,

Right, all the people talking shit about dark matter in this thread surely all have 4 PhDs up their ass

No investigation, no right to speak

YeetPics,
@YeetPics@mander.xyz avatar

This is a really stupid take, how do you think new scientists are made if not reaching for enlightenment to answer their own questions?

Science is about being wrong and learning.

force, (edited )

Yes, and people that challenge the science who then become scientists actually research/experiment thenselves. They don’t go and claim science is false until they have actual reason/evidence to believe so. One can question science all they want when they do their own science on the matter and it isn’t handily disproved beyond reasonable doubt by existing evidence.

Most science deniers do not do that. Making anti-science claims without obtaining solid, consistent evidence is not science.

BigBlackBuck,

This is like the second or third post I have seen in the past week talking about “belief” in science. Science isn’t about belief, it’s about understanding. Maybe this post should be, “What facts are you questioning because you don’t understand the underlying data?”

thorbot,

Seriously. Science just is. I don’t care if you believe it or not. It still is what it is.

Mango,

Science just is the way gender just is. It’s a metaphysic.

NikkiDimes,

Could you link to the studies saying this?

Mango,

Do you not know what a metaphysic is? A metaphysic is something that affects the world without actually existing. Information is metaphysics. Law is metaphysics. Gender is definitely metaphysics. Science is too.

Y’all downvoting me because you’re taking offense to a word you can’t bother looking up the definition of. Peak stupidity and tribalism right here. You make up your identity(which is also a metaphysic) based on imagery and social appeal and sling shit just like chimps.

NikkiDimes,

Could it be that people are downvoting you because you’re using words wrong while acting like you are educated on the matter? 😉

Mango,

You don’t have to take my word for it. Try Google define: metaphysics.

NikkiDimes, (edited )

I’m aware of what metaphysics is. I’m also aware that it’s based in philosophy, not science, as you stated.

Mango,

Everything is based in philosophy. Science is based in philosophy. Click the first blue link in every Wikipedia page that isn’t the pronunciation and you’ll go straight to philosophy after a few pages!

I fuckin love philosophy!

agamemnonymous, (edited )
@agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.works avatar

What it is, is an extremely powerful tool for reducing uncertainty about the world. Not eliminate, reduce. What it is not is a tool for “proving” “facts”. Claiming a “proven fact” is belief, not empirical science. An extremely consistent and useful theory, of course! But not a proven fact.

doctorcrimson,

That might have been a better title but it would get less responses and also the title never mentions “belief in science” as you put it, the explicit title is something Scientific that you DON’T believe in.

LifeInMultipleChoice,

A lot of people not wanting to disassociate the term believe from relgion here. I believe the sun will rise tomorrow. I also believe the sun doesn’t rise. Neither have to do with a religious belief system for me.

doctorcrimson,

The top comment is a proper debate about leading scientific theories, and the most downvoted comment is somebody who thinks the moon landing is faked, both of which have healthy and honest debate with goodwill from both sides.

This entire post is about Skepticism, which is an integral part of Science. To shut down the conversation would be Anti-Science.

rtxn, (edited ) in What are your "poor person" money life hacks?

Get a chest freezer. It’s much more efficient for long-term storage than an upright fridge with a freezer because the cold air doesn’t spill out when you open it.

Toss your incandescent and fluorescent lights. Get LED bulbs (not smart lights, just white LEDs). Where applicable, install timer switches.

Fuck cars, get a bike. A simple, sturdy one, like an onafiets. They run on toast and determination.

Understand the difference between having enough money to buy something and being able to afford something.

Unsubscribe from music/video streaming services. Return to the seven seas.

Maybe engage in some light tax evasion.

garbagebagel,

Maybe engage in some light tax evasion.

Not me (definitely not me) but my friend certainly had a lot more money when they had a job that made light tax evasion easier :(

Hyperreality,

I don't have an omafiets, but a single gear bike. The only gear it does have is quite tough to start, but my God is it so much better than something with 8 gears or whatever. So much less effort once you get going. I never realised this, but apparently you lose a lot of power through the gearing.

Kase,

I also like single gear because it’s simpler to fix if it breaks

Hyperreality, (edited )

And breaks far less often. Less wear and tear, and the chain rarely if ever slips off the cog.

rtxn,

The derailleur transmission design introduces a LOT of friction because the chain is forced to bend and twist between gears that are out of alignment, and it hates doing that. It also leads to increased wear.

Cheerstothe90s,

Only ride on flat trails?

Hyperreality,

Nope. Do hills too.

It is a bit tougher up hill, like cycling in a higher gear, but because you lose less power due to gearing, it's not as bad as you'd expect.

Cheerstothe90s,

I’m not an avid cyclist, and I found the inability to make inclines easier a no-go. I’m into electric assist though, but that increases bike price. I see quite a few used ones for sale tho.

MightyWeaksauce,
@MightyWeaksauce@lemmy.world avatar

Really great video on the bikes!

poszod,

Maybe engage in some light tax evasion.

haha made me lol

mean_bean279,

The efficiency trade off of a chest freezer is often broken by people’s inability to remember what’s in it. If you can’t reach the stuff at the bottom then it all goes bad. This is why an upright most likely makes more sense, even though it’s less efficient. You end up wasting as much food simply from forgetting what’s in there.

rtxn, (edited )

I consider not letting food go to waste as part of a poor person’s fiscal financial responsibility.

qdJzXuisAndVQb2,

Can I be pedantic? I’m going to go ahead: fiscal means tax-related, so probably just ‘financial responsibility’ is more what you’re aiming for.

rtxn,

I don’t know, can you?

TIL there’s a difference, thanks

_danny,

Toss your incandescent and fluorescent lights. Get LED bulbs (not smart lights, just white LEDs). Where applicable, install timer switches.

It’s crazy how efficient LEDs are. They are a little bit more expensive but you’ll save it on your energy bill over time and you’ll have to replace them less.

People also don’t realize how much of their energy bill is heat & air conditioning. If you don’t have pets, turn your heat off or way down while you’re at work. Just make sure it stays above freezing and above the dewpoint. If you can get any smart thermostat for cheap, they’ll save you a ton of money over the long run if you’re like me and constantly forget to set the temperature before you leave for work.

Also, thick drapes work wonders at keeping the cold out of cheap windows. You can get them and the hardware to hang them pretty cheap from goodwill. You can also wrap them in Saran wrap if you really want to keep the cold out. They sell kits, but painters tape and a cling film are way cheaper if you can hide them behind some drapes.

youtu.be/tbq6uZ9Y0nQ?si=m1Z9kp21PTQFhGnx

RememberTheApollo, (edited )

I’d be careful about the HVAC thing. I read somewhere a while back that it can cost more to change temperature than to just leave it slightly lower/higher and just wear a sweater or just shorts and a T shirt. Changing temperature is especially expensive if you’re drawing more electricity during peak times to make that change, like getting home from work at 6pm or so, when rates are higher. If you have a small apartment it may not be so bad to change the temp in a smaller volume of space.

YMMV, check your rates and times you’d be changing temp. Wear a sweater or strip as much as is feasible.

_danny,

Excluding variable energy pricing, it’s much more energy efficient to only heat and cool your home while you’re actually at home.

Think of it like a tea kettle. It’s definitely not energy efficient to keep the water boiling for the hours when you’re not home just because you might want a cuppa when you get home. The only benefit keeping the water hot is to brew your next cup quicker. The water is cooling off at the same rate it would if the heater was off, but energy is being pumped into it to keep it hot and therefore it is constantly losing energy.

This is also assuming your HVAC’s coefficient of performance is constant, which it’s not, but it still generally is way better to avoid heating and cooling while you’re away from home, especially if you live in an older less insulated home.

If you do have variable energy pricing, that can change things, and that’s when a smart thermostat can really save you money. Instead of heating and cooling around your schedule, you do it around the pricing treating your house like a battery. See: youtu.be/0f9GpMWdvWI?si=LjiAjNf6t8cU8OZ2

This video really only really works if your home is relatively well insulated (as he points out). If it’s not well insulated, you’ll be uncomfortable basically all the time.

Generally if you’re on a variable rate it’s better to set the thermostat closer to the outside temperature when you’re gone for more than 5 hours. If you’re not on a variable rate, that break even point is like 30 minutes.

TastyWheat, in If you could go back in time and stop any one person or group's musical career, who or what would it be?

Mariah Carey. I work retail. If you know, you know.

Dagwood222,

I worked retail for exactly one Christmas. The day I worked the toy department they had one album on repeat for eight hours. I hated Christmas music for years, and now it just annoys me.

zeppo, in What do you think would happen if Putin was assassinated right now?
@zeppo@lemmy.world avatar

He would die.

Semi-Hemi-Demigod,
@Semi-Hemi-Demigod@kbin.social avatar

Technically correct. The best kind of correct

Annoyed_Crabby,

What if he have nano machine, son?

intensely_human,

Nano machine lost in pocket. Putin die.

SzethFriendOfNimi, in What free things online should everyone take advantage of?
@SzethFriendOfNimi@lemmy.world avatar

A library card and library resources such as Libby

stackPeek,
@stackPeek@lemmy.world avatar

is this an american thing?

SzethFriendOfNimi,
@SzethFriendOfNimi@lemmy.world avatar

Not sure. May be worth checking if your library system or government has licensed/uses Libby or some other such system for digital lending/licensing

pruwybn,
@pruwybn@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

Also kanopy.com lets you make a free account with a library card or university login, and you can watch movies for free.

Atlas_, in What's some amazing technology they have in Japan that's very normal to them but would blow our minds here in the US and western world?

Takkyubin.

If you have a large suitcase or other parcel it may be unwieldy to walk around Tokyo or another city with it. Subways only allow one suitcase of a certain size, so you might have to take a much more expensive taxi.

Instead you can go to a desk at the airport and have your luggage delivered same day or next day to ~any hotel, subway station, or convenience store. It will be insured and kept safe for you there to pick up. And at the end of your trip, you can send it back. The price for this convenience? Around $10.

This is not only a good demonstration of Japanese trust and customer service, it’s also a legitimately hard logistics problem. I daresay that such a business could not succeed in the US both because of our defensiveness and sprawling cities.

meliaesc,

Well, airports already manage to lose up to 0.9% of bags, it would certainly be difficult to convince the average American to trust this service.

lazynooblet,
@lazynooblet@lazysoci.al avatar

That’s a lot of bags. Where do they go? WHERE ARE ALL THE BAGS?!

ZombieMantis,
@ZombieMantis@lemmy.world avatar

sorry I eated them

Riven,
@Riven@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Literally get auctioned off. They try to reunite bags to owners but after x time they just auction them off in bulk.

lazynooblet,
@lazynooblet@lazysoci.al avatar

That’s quite sad. I guess that’s why we put our addresses on the suitcase

adrian783,

Russia. Putin use them to build his palace.

Katana314,

There’s definitely a huge difference in service work ethic in Japan, which probably leads to those reliability stats. I don’t even know if I consider it a good or bad thing, because it’s super-nice when you’re relying on them there, but I can also tell that waiting on people hand and foot wears on people’s mental health, and it often shows across that country.

batmaniam,

Wow that is fantastic. I’m surprised no one “imported” that one to the states in “make everything a start-up!” days early-mid 2010s.

As a tip, it’s not quite as convenient but most hotels will let you check a bag with them, even if you’re not a guest. I’ve done that at different conferences (usually 1st day and/or last day) when I had a day left, didn’t want to haul my bag, but couldn’t go to from my hotel. I think I got turned down once and it was simply because they were full.

TropicalDingdong, in Have you ever seen a rudolph moment happen in real life?

I worked at a Boy scout summer camp, which was underfunded and run by 14-20 year old boys. We had to spend almost a week setting up camp. Big old army tents made of canvas, took at least 4 people to set one up. They requires these big nails, maybe 10 inches in length, as stakes. Apparently they must have been very expensive because we never had enough.

Enter “Jamie”. Jamie was most definitely on the spectrum. Cool enough kid, but always had a slushie ring around his lips and a messy uniform. Kind of a disaster if you got paired with them, because just could not stay focused long enough to do anything.

Well I got tasked with leading a team of around 20 on the task of setting up a section of the camp. Good team, but within an hour we were out of nails. No nails, no tents getting set up no 😞😭. Enter Jamie. He kept getting passed around from group to group because he couldn’t handle the individual tasks. However, it turns out Jamie was an absolute bloodhound for finding stakes that had been forgotten or abandoned from the previous years shutting down of the campsites. Through Jamie, we found out there were thousands of these nails scattered throughout the woods. I gave him two helpers and asked him to stay ahead of our team and keep us fed with stakes so we could keep working. The helpers looked but also kept an eye on Jamie from going too far from the group. Within a couple minutes Jamie had enough stakes for the rest of the group and we kept going. Worked like a charm.

Maeve,

Neurodiversity is a blessing in disguise; we look, without seeing that!

ericbomb,

Bro I can’t imagine how much of an eye for detail you must have to be able to notice where a stake was driven into the ground in an over grown forest. Like was he just really good at noticing where the underbrush had grown funny?

pirrrrrrrr,

It’s a nack. See one, the others will likely be in a tent shaped layout. Some brains are just very good at visual pattern matching.

I have an unbroken record for being the person that finds anything tiny and lost. In school the kids called me “night vision”.

Lose a ball over the fence an 1am. 10 people looking. Can’t find it. Get me to look and I find it in 1 minute or less. Lost a diamond or earring backing in shag carpet? I’ll find it ao fast you won’t believe it.

I’ve occasionally had to pretend it takes longer to find it, just so they don’t think I pranked them and took it.

ImInLoveWithLife,

My wife is like this. We’ll be on a walk and she’ll stop mid sentence to walk ten feet into someone’s yard and grab a four leaf clover. She does this all the time and we have a huge collection of them, and that’s with us usually giving them away to people we pass further down on our walks.

pirrrrrrrr,

I notice negatives to it as well.

When I trim the driveway hedge I have to pick any errant cuttings out of the rose garden. So I spend about 1-2 hours looking for one type of leaf amongst another type of leaf.

When I close my eyes for the next 12 or so hours all I can see is the type of leaf I was looking for, my brain is so locked on to looking for the pattern.

aard,
@aard@kyu.de avatar

It’s a similar thing with four leaf clovers - I never in my life found one, even during periods where I’ve been scanning every bit of green while hiking. But then we had a friend who isn’t really paying attention to her surroundings, and just randomly goes ‘oh, moment’, and picks up a four leave clover from a few metres away.

Seems my daughter is also developing that talent - last summer she picked up a few while playing outside.

deegeese,

Keep your head moving like a caffeinated puppy dog and look for the tiny glint of sunlight on the stake head as you tromp through the campsite.

AnneBonny,

However, it turns out Jamie was an absolute bloodhound for finding stakes that had been forgotten or abandoned from the previous years shutting down of the campsites.

Yeah, stakes aren’t expensive but replacing all the equipment kids lose is expensive.

ericbomb,

“Why are we all out of spike?”

Jamie pulling hundreds of spikes out of the ground that were lost by previous campers

Hikermick, in What is the goofiest Christmas present you received this year?
milkytoast,
@milkytoast@kbin.social avatar

they said goofiest not greatest

Nomad,

Salt fat acid heat cook book

normalexit,

you win! those are spectacular

agamemnonymous, (edited )
@agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.works avatar
netburnr,
@netburnr@lemmy.world avatar

I got those for white elephant this year, gave em to the dog for a few minutes then into the trash.

agamemnonymous,
@agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.works avatar

Your loss, surprisingly comfortable.

SatansMaggotyCumFart,

Such a waste of materials, time and shipping just to waste space in a landfill.

beansbeansbeans,

I got this exact pair for my SIL two Christmases ago. She didn’t like them at first, but they were such a hit at her Uni that she loves them now.

BURN, in Why is such a tunnel needed?

They disrupt the nature a little less. Animals aren’t hit crossing the street because they can go over and other small benefits like that. They also look nice and tunnels are fun when your car sounds nice

drdalek,

Yep, I love a good nature bridge!

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