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Comment Been there, done that, switched hands for healing (Score 1) 131

I didn't have burns, I have recurring bouts of tendonitis which makes it impossible to work a mouse or grasp a stylus.

So I switched hands. The first few days really pissed me off! I was so slow! But it got better fairly rapidly, and now I tend to switch off a few times a week to give the dominant hand a rest and keep the other hand in practice.

The non-dominant hand will never be as fast as the dominant hand, but if I have a choice between nothing and 70-80% ... I'll take what I can get.

Having to learn new equipment and/or software as well as new dexterity would have been much harder. Switching hands left the domain knowledge usable, and all I had to do was train some muscles.

Comment Re:Impossible? (Score 1) 426

Why does he play left handed? I understand guitarists playing right-hand guitars when they're left handed (more availability)....

It puts different spin on the ball, making it slightly harder for the opponent to return the ball.

If you can develop equal skill with right and left hands, you can cover more of the court because you aren't using a backhand. I played against one opponent in high school who hit her serves with the hand closest to midline of the court, increasing her chances of an ace. (hated her!)

BUT - back to the topic of gaming. It's foolish to annoy 20% or so of your market by having game play that is difficult for lefties. (the % of lefties is increasing now that schools aren't whapping them with rulers for using their left hands, with the proportions highest in the audience the game sellers are interested in and much lower in us geezers).

Comment Look at RS-232 or USB port descriptions (Score 1) 578

Anyone who is used to playing with databases can probably search those dozen books, and find numerous instances of phrases that were copy/pasted from one author's book to another. In fact, I'll bet that technical and factual books will have a higher incidence of matching phrases and sentences than works of fiction

My favorite example is the RS-232 port, or maybe it should be a USB port now ... how many different ways can you write the explanation of what each pin does, and still write comprehensible English?

Comment Non-Programmer says "I smell SCOvian BOGOSITY" (Score 1) 578

I am not a programmer and I'm certainly not going to play one on this part of the internets, but after looking at a couple of the "infringing" examples from ELF (whatever that is), it looks like they are claiming that declaring variables, setting offsets, and other common computing activities are infringing.

If ELF is a standard format, it is going to have many "scenes a fair", standard functions, and standard names for calling things. It's as if they declared that using standard English grammar was a violation of their copyrights.

Comment Re:report it to the fcc (Score 4, Interesting) 499

You know I heard the same story ten years ago but it was that a server would spontaneously reboot. I have a feeling this may be an urban myth.

No ... I was working in a Norfolk hospital lab when some idiot turned on the horizon-scanning radar for an aircraft carrier that was nearby - it should have been locked down, but wasn't. A lot of our electronics readouts went berserk from the induced interference, harmonics and other crap that thing was belching out. ICU had it worse because all their heart monitors and ventilators were affected. It was an interesting few minutes.

Comment Re:Sounds iffy... (Score 1) 228

There's a few things that sound a bit odd to my untrained eye. What do gut bacteria have to do with urine? Why wouldn't this be more related to diet, metabolism, liver function, or possibly even neurotransmitter levels?

Many things are absorbed in your gut and excreted by your kidneys - so it is plausible. But with that small a sample compared to the complexity of the signal I would have to see a lot more data, including predictive data where they get a bunch of unknowns, analyze them, and correctly assign the sample to one of their three groups.

If they can do that, then they might have a test.

Comment VERY preliminary report! (Score 1) 228

My son is autistic. From where does the information come that it can now be detected through urine? Is there a science magazine source?

It is preliminary research on a VERY small sample. Trawling through a complex chemical substance (the urine) with extremely sensitive analytical equipment and finding a few substances that appear to differentiate among the three groups (autistic children, siblings of autistic children, and non-autistic children) is easy.

The real test will come when they get samples of urine from children outside the test group and are asked to repeat the analysis and assign the children to the correct group. IF they can do that, they might be able to claim to have a test.

Comment Re:The administrators need to get a clue (Score 1) 572

My (heavily extrapolated) understanding of the situation is that doctors work any day of the week, but technicians are more 9-5 Mon-Fri.

Unless the UK's medical system is back in the 1940s, where very little was done on weekends, that hospital should have a lab that can do any critical test any time.

If the admins of Worthing had a brain to share amongst them, they would match the lab staffing to the expected work load - the US was doing it in the 1970s. The two hospitals I worked in then had our hours arranged so shifts overlapped during peak workload.

My Google-fu says. "Worthing Hospital has more than 500 beds and provides a full range of general acute services including maternity, outpatients, A&E and intensive care." A 500-bed hospital with ICU, ER and maternity wards better be full-service 24x7.

Comment What happened to "Just Say NO"? (Score 3, Informative) 572

Administrators at England's Worthing Hospital are insisting that doctors say the magic word [CC] when writing orders for blood tests on weekends. If a doctor refuses to write "please" on the order, the test will be refused. The managers said the move is aimed at easing pressure on hospital workers charged with performing blood tests by making doctors consider whether the tests are essential.

WTF? I was a medical technologist - the staffer who would perhaps collect "the bloods", and certainly would be the one doing the lab tests. I can see several things wrong with this scenario:

  • If this is only a weekend protocol, it violates the K.I.S.S. principle of having things work the same way all the time, and of course they will forget that it's Sunday, bloody Sunday and forget to say pretty please with sugar on it at least half the time.
  • If one or more of the weekend docs are ordering tests that are medically unnecessary or ordering the tests all STAT (extremely urgent) so they can go home sooner, you review their test ordering patterns (easy to do with computers). If a pattern of abuse emerges, having the senior pathologist or the lab manager chew them out for it works wonders.
  • A pathologist, lab administrator, or hospital administrator with backbone can set up a list of tests that will be done STAT, and under what conditions. If Dr. Gottahaveitnow wants something that is not on the list, too bad. He/she can get an override from the lab director.

  • Medical technologists have their own way of dealing with the pile-up of STAT requests. We redefine the acronym to be "Start Test Any Time". We smile and say, "Certainly, I'll get right on it as soon as I finish the STATs from Dr. Wanna Playtennis, Dr. Tooimportanttowait, and Dr. Dammitiforgotmypreops. What is your pager number, I'll call you." That leaves them snarling at each other for cluttering the queue.

Comment 100% effective in FIVE monkeys (Score 3, Insightful) 129

Before you start declaring a CURE!!! look at the number of test subjects. Preventing death in five monkeys is not exactly a cure. It's a very promising start, but they need to test it in non-infected humans to make sure it's not going to cause some odd problems and to get max dosages worked out.

Ebola's death rate is so high that this treatment would have to be extremely dangerous to keep it form being used. Death rates are in the 80-90% range now, so if it dropped them to even just 50% it's worth a large risk.

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