otter

joined 2 years ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] otter@lemmy.ca 3 points 2 weeks ago

This is a good resource

https://www.privacyguides.org/en/search-engines/?h=search

I've been using Startpage and I like it. I may try Kagi at some point

[–] otter@lemmy.ca 3 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

Do you actually want to be in those communities?

Your account is new, the username is specifically against the mod and the topic of those communities, and you have 2 other removed posts in the communities you were banned. The posts were images of a crying witch drinking from shot glasses, which you titled "tastes good doesn't it"

[–] otter@lemmy.ca 4 points 2 weeks ago
Estimate Me: 2025-07-19 (Scoop of pennies)
Rank #1 of 47
🟨🎯
🔗 https://estimate-me.aukspot.com/archive/2025-07-19

Got it :)

[–] otter@lemmy.ca 3 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

I looked up some photos of it and I can't find any pattern. For any particular photo, I've seen people give each other a similar look across all age groups

[–] otter@lemmy.ca 9 points 2 weeks ago (6 children)

That can be a quick way to get device / IP banned if you do it wrong

[–] otter@lemmy.ca 4 points 2 weeks ago
Estimate Me: 2025-07-18 (Pile of almonds)
Rank #5 of 60
🟨🟩🟨
🔗 https://estimate-me.aukspot.com/archive/2025-07-18

Off by 2 on the second guess

[–] otter@lemmy.ca 5 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

@Canconda@lemmy.ca, @SincerityIsCool@lemmy.ca

We run a few different frontends to give people choice over how they view the site. The site lemmy.ca has one main backend where all the data is stored and managed, and then a few different frontends that connect to it. Only the default frontend is made by the same developers as the lemmy backend, so it tends to be the most stable and up to date with features, and that's the one we have set for when you just type in lemmy.ca

You can check out the other frontends with the following links:

In the case of this post, you can find the list of instances while using the default frontend by going to this page: https://lemmy.ca/instances

This information will be true regardless of which frontend you are using to use the site. old.lemmy.ca might also display that information on some other page, but I'm not as familiar with it personally. I use the Photon interface sometimes, and that one displays it here: https://photon.lemmy.ca/instances

We have some guides about all this on our website if you want to see a comparison of the frontends: https://fedecan.ca/en/guide/lemmy/for-users/alternative-uis

Happy to clarify further on anything!

[–] otter@lemmy.ca 3 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

Streisand Effect incoming?

[–] otter@lemmy.ca 4 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

I have no strong preference, I'm happy to post to both in the meantime

[–] otter@lemmy.ca 1 points 3 weeks ago

Could you edit your post and add a [solved] to the title, and maybe edit the post with the solution?

[–] otter@lemmy.ca 1 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago)

To clarify, do you have a separate account on https://lemmy.blahaj.zone/ and can you log in with it in the web browser?

If you want to access communities from lemmy.blahaj.zone, you can do so by searching from them while logged into your lemmy.world account. See here: https://fedecan.ca/en/guide/lemmy/for-users/detailed-overview

[–] otter@lemmy.ca 7 points 3 weeks ago (6 children)

WhatsApp is awful with permissions. I couldn't find a way to use it without giving it access to all my contacts. I installed it on the work profile and uninstalled it as soon as I didn't need it anymore.

 

A major overhaul is expected of the national body that issues Canada's cancer screening guidelines.

The changes were ordered by the federal health minister, following an external review of the Task Force on Preventive Health Care.

The task force is an arm's-length panel set up by the federal government to publish national guidelines for family doctors, advising them on when to send their patients for routine screenings of various illnesses, including common cancers.

But the panel has been criticized for years for failing to fully take in expert advice, using outdated research and being too slow to update its guidelines. Many of the task force's recommendations are over a decade old.

 

It should update on your device soon, but if you want to join the beta you can do so through the buttons on the link above.

394
submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by otter@lemmy.ca to c/comicstrips@lemmy.world
918
submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by otter@lemmy.ca to c/comicstrips@lemmy.world
 

Kaitlin Stockton's lawsuit claims her job was threatened after she took action to warn patients of ER delays

 

I appreciate how little fluff there is on this channel.

 

Journalists from a few major Metro Vancouver news publications that closed earlier this year are now banding together in a fight to save local news.

[...] The three publications that closed were Burnaby Now, New Westminster Record and Tri-City News.

Now, journalists who formerly worked at these publications are hoping to launch a new publication. Daily Hive spoke with Cornelia Naylor, who has over a decade of experience and was part of the Burnaby Now and New Westminster Record teams.

They’ve launched a fundraiser with a goal of $100,000 and hope to launch a new publication later this year. We asked Naylor why Glacier Media shut down the local news publications.

“They cited financial problems or financial challenges, and there was not much more explanation than that.”

Naylor says the end goal is a community-owned, worker-run news cooperative, and the hope is that this publication will fill all the gaps left behind by the shuttered Glacier publications.

“I think this model is already working in Quebec. It would be the first in Western Canada.”

We often hear politicians talk about local news and its importance, and asked Naylor if the government can play a role in this journey to build a new publication. Naylor first expanded on the situation in Quebec, where six daily newspapers were set to be shut down.

“The government, I think, jumped in with interest-free loans, and there was fundraising.”

 

I've copied some of the story below

Dr. Donald Craig greeted by surprise guest during award presentation in Saint John

Dr. Donald Craig was an intern at the old General Hospital in Saint John on a snowy night in January 1968 when a doctor asked him for help.

The doctor had to deliver a baby at nearby St. Joseph's Hospital, but a woman at the General was also about to give birth. That child was three months premature and expected to be stillborn.

"Can you handle this?" the doctor asked.

Craig had delivered babies before, but only under the supervision of a doctor or a resident. So he grabbed a book on human labour and began to review it.

Then a nurse came and told him the baby was breech — something the doctor hadn't mentioned. So he went back to his book to look that one up. A few hours later, a nurse came to take him to the delivery room.

"She screams at me, 'Craig, she's ready, she's pushing and she's crying. Let's go.'"

Craig had to break the baby's clavicle on its way out, but he manged to deliver the baby, still expecting it to be stillborn.

And then the baby started to cry.

"My heart took off faster than the baby's heart, and the mother started crying, 'Is that my baby crying?'"

The baby was alive and Craig's thoughts quickly turned to her survival. She weighed two pounds and was three months premature. Her odds of survival weren't great.

He knew the General had just hired a pediatrician who specialized in newborn child care and premature births — and she happened to be in the hospital overnight in case she was needed during the storm.

Craig said that doctor soon appeared, wearing a bathrobe over her pyjamas. She looked at him and asked, "Did you deliver that by yourself? Give me the baby."

He said the doctor "let the mom kiss her baby and said, 'We're just taking the baby down the hall. We're going to be fine.' Then she disappeared."

To this day, Craig says the doctor's skilled care was critical to the survival of the baby, who was in the hospital for a month before being released. Craig checked on her every day and gave updates to her mother, who wasn't allowed to stay in the hospital with her.

"I delivered that baby, but [the doctor] had the skill, and was trained to handle it from there," Craig said.

More than 55 years later, Craig is retired after a decades-long career in family and emergency medicine. He has served as president of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of New Brunswick and the Saint John Medical Society.

He also founded the New Brunswick Medical Education Foundation, which provides scholarships to the province's medical students who agree to set up practice here — a critical part of the efforts to increase the number of doctors in New Brunswick.

In April, the foundation gave Craig the Champions of Care Founder's Award at a gala at the Saint John Trade and Convention Centre. The person who presented him with that award was Krista Barczyk, the premature baby he delivered as an intern decades ago during that January snowstorm.

It was a planned reunion the foundation kept secret from Craig until the moment Barczyk was called to the stage.

"I didn't hear half of her speech because I was so shocked," Craig said. "Then I got a copy of her speech and I printed it off to put up on my wall."

 

Parking apps is an interesting one:

  • it is very convenient to not have to run back and put more money in the meter if your appointment / event goes over time
  • there are some significant privacy issues
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