andrewducker: (Default)
andrewducker ([personal profile] andrewducker) wrote2022-04-27 12:00 pm
armiphlage: Ukraine (Default)

[personal profile] armiphlage 2022-04-27 11:42 am (UTC)(link)
I have several power monitors that are useful for measuring actual standby and operating power consumption. A few of my older devices did have high standby costs (a phone charger used $70 a year!), but everything else is reasonable.

Rule of thumb I use (with average $0.13 per kWh cost): if a device isn't warm, it's not using enough power to worry about the cost.
azdak: (Default)

[personal profile] azdak 2022-04-27 12:55 pm (UTC)(link)
#12 is a revolting piece of emotional manipulation from Aptamil Follow-On Milk. It makes it sound as if young dad can only bond with their babies if they bottle-feed them. When an article is this biased the newspaper should state right at the beginning who funded the research (and ideally it would have mentioned how Aptamil benefited from drawing these particular conclusions).
redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)

[personal profile] redbird 2022-04-27 01:08 pm (UTC)(link)
That study of MS linked at 7 is definitely preliminary: 24 patients, no control group, and not yet peer reviewed. A lot of things can look good as treatments of MS, because ups and downs are part of how MS behaves even in people who aren't being treated with anything. I really hope they're onto something useful, and the EBV connection puts them well ahead of umpteen "we have a substance that cures 17 different things including MS," but they're some way from a point where I should be asking my doctor about it.
hellofriendsiminthedark: A simple lineart of a bird-like shape, stylized to resemble flames (Default)

[personal profile] hellofriendsiminthedark 2022-04-27 08:27 pm (UTC)(link)
6 is rather horrifying, especially given the prevalence of long covid. And pediatric hospitalizations peaked four times as high during omnicron than during delta?? It's heartbreaking how preventable that could have been.

13 is very misleadingly titled. The study had nothing to do with cautiousness, only decision-making within specific domains. The article even admits in the last two paragraphs that it's not possible to directly extrapolate any implications for driving-related decisions and that the possibility of an effect on cautiousness is "worth exploring further."
mellowtigger: (hide)

[personal profile] mellowtigger 2022-04-27 09:57 pm (UTC)(link)
4 is unsurprising. I thought we could already assume that conclusion simply from pregnancy cravings? I've always known to indulge my unreasoned urges to eat specific foods (now, now, eat that weird thing NOW!) or even crush spearmint and inhale it as a child to relieve my awful allergy sinus pressures.

6. *SIGH!* We know that SARS-CoV-2 damages the immune system. Similarly to the last epidemic. And now mystery opportunistic disease is emerging in a particularly vulnerable (age 1-6, unvaccinated) demographic. It's not so silly now, watching China build its new barbed wire border, is it?
darkoshi: (Default)

[personal profile] darkoshi 2022-04-28 06:58 am (UTC)(link)
#8 surprised me with how fast the gas giant planets spin. I'd thought they would spin much slower due to their large size.