Mitchie151

joined 2 years ago
[–] Mitchie151@lemmy.world 1 points 2 hours ago (1 children)

Yep I was in the same boat for years, runny nose or coughing and feeling sick mostly after eating out. Just powered through it thinking it was this or me just having a week stomach. Eventually figured out that reflux meds like Gaviscon helped and then had a gastroscopy and was diagnosed with Laryngopharyngeal reflux... Took years to put 2 and 2 together because I never got 'heart burn'. Hopefully not as serious for you!

[–] Mitchie151@lemmy.world 19 points 1 day ago (4 children)

A runny nose can also be caused by reflux, particularly if it happens after food that is not spicy such as fatty foods or big meals. It's often overlooked because it's not the typical heartburn symptom.

[–] Mitchie151@lemmy.world 17 points 2 days ago (3 children)

Hardly surprising that the sales have been soft since launch considering the shocking user reviews. The game is pretty good, but when it barely runs on most users machines people are going to either keep waiting for it to improve or write it off forever. All the die-hard fans who are even interested in the endgame content already have the game.

[–] Mitchie151@lemmy.world 1 points 1 week ago (1 children)

You normally just use very tiny wire. Anything is technically fine but certain types make it easier. Generally something solid core, 30-40AWG. Some people have a specific preference for Kynar or Teflon but there's no hard and fast rules.

[–] Mitchie151@lemmy.world 2 points 1 week ago (4 children)

If you have lifted the pad off, the only way to fix it is to use a bodge wire. You should be able to run a wire between the broken pad and the previous functional one in the network. If you look up bodge wire you'll see this is a pretty standard practice, especially when prototyping PCBs.

[–] Mitchie151@lemmy.world 22 points 1 week ago

I use a tin container from some cookies at work and as soon as the lid is placed on I know that the device immediately loses Bluetooth and wifi connectivity. Pretty easy solution, a lot more compact and safe than a microwave!

[–] Mitchie151@lemmy.world 8 points 2 weeks ago

Image categorisation AI, or convolutional neural networks, have been in use since well before LLMs and other generative AI. Some medical imaging machines use this technology to highlight features such as specific organs in a scan. CNNs could likely be trained to be extremely proficient and reading X-rays, CT, MRI scans, but these are generally the less operator dependant types of scan, though they can get complicated. An ultrasound for example is highly dependent on the skill of the operator and in certain circumstances things can be made to look worse or better than they are.

I don't know why the technology hasn't become more widespread in the domain. Probably because radiologists are paid really well and have a vested interest in preventing it... they're not going to want to tag the images for their replacement. It's probably also because medical data is hard to get permission for, to ethically train such a model you would need to ask every patient in for every type of scan it their images can be used for medical research which is just another form/hurdle to jump over for everyone.

[–] Mitchie151@lemmy.world 3 points 3 weeks ago

I use Lemmy and moved here in protest of the Reddit API pricing changes, but I'm not entirely opposed to other forms of social media. I'm aware of the privacy implications of a lot of them, and try to manage my use of them accordingly. I have Instagram and Snapchat etc which I have used for years to keep in touch with friends. 90% of my friends use Facebook messagenger to IM and I think that's pretty standard in Australia. I can't justify cutting that many people off for privacy reasons. I understand the privacy implications of using these. It's a balance. Social media can be bad for mental health, but a lack of social connection can be too. You need to find your own balance.

[–] Mitchie151@lemmy.world 30 points 3 weeks ago

They don't want to be contacted. I don't think we have any moral obligation to supply them with medicines or technologies that they don't want, even if they would objectively improve their quality of life.

No they will probably never advance substantially in technology. To get to where the developed world is today took centuries of industrialisation and trade.

But there are, presumably, happy with the status quo.

[–] Mitchie151@lemmy.world 8 points 1 month ago

I think AR and VR are actually progressing at a reasonable pace, tech like the apple vision pro and the bigscreen beyond are beginning to converge to a comfortable and powerful experience and AR will be better supported by a platform like the vision pro than by any previous major industrial AI offerings like the hololens. I think in the short term people will move to external compute on a puck worn on the waist much like the battery of the vision pro was but with all or most of the compute power.

I think BEVs will continue to advance, without even considering a major technological breakthrough I expect they will out-range many ICE vehicles very soon. If solid state truly goes commercial scale it will be even sooner.

Mobile phones I actually think are stagnating. You're right that there's more power in them than necessary these days. Batteries get bigger and cameras get better but not much else changes. Interested to see where they go.

[–] Mitchie151@lemmy.world 3 points 1 month ago (2 children)

Standard resin becomes very weak at even low temperatures. There are special heat tolerant resins you can buy though.

[–] Mitchie151@lemmy.world 11 points 2 months ago

Yes, the joke is that if the sequel is just called Cyberpunk 2, it's only logical that it is set in the year 2. The game will be set in the future.

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