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Comment Re:No biggie (Score 1) 40

Arduino isn't about the microcontrollers. It's about the IDE and the community built around it.

Non-EE people may find it much harder to program up a communication systems with an external display compared to simply clicking on the display in their IDE, having it load the library, and then typing drawline(x,y).

That said PlatformIO would be a good contender, I'm not sure of any others, and I'm not sure how dependent it is on Arduino upstream.

Comment Re:This should have been a thing during the pandem (Score 2) 26

Why not also have this technology for measuring CO2?

Errr .... we do. It's been a long time since I've been in a building without CO2 monitoring. Is that just a European thing? It's literally a standard monitoring component of every heat-recovery ventilation system in all new houses and has been from before people even knew how to spell COVID. My friend doesn't even have a new house (early 90s) and she also has a CO2 monitor in the living room which controls the ventilation system.

I retrofitted such a system to my house but I used VOCs instead of CO2 as it is a better proxy for stale air and cleanliness, and CO2 gets picked up on VOC sensors along with outgassing, farts, etc. The only problem is if I walk into the study with a glass of Whiskey it triggers the ventilation system.

Comment Re:Antivirus? (Score 1) 26

I didn't know CO2 was considered a virus. Clickbait title.

Are you one of the people who says smoke burns your house down? Is a fire alarm not a fire alarm because it is triggered by smoke?

This is an anti-virus system not a primary virus identification system. CO2 is a proxy for air quality and ventilation, good ventilation and air quality objectively prevents the spread of viruses. Just because you don't understand a title, doesn't make it clickbait.

Comment Re:Okay (Score 1) 26

Putting aside COVID alarmists nonsense

Congrats, you're literally the first one to mention COVID and your post complains about others mentioning COVID. You've won the dumb comment of the year award. Shame you led with this because the second part of your post is actually quite insightful.

Yes CO2 levels above 1000ppm can make you feel hazy. It's a good idea to open the window if you get to that level, which is quite easy to reach in a closed meeting room.

Comment Re:CO2 is a virus? (Score 1) 26

They did allude to it but they did a poor job of it. "CO2 is an approximation of many things" In this case they are talking about air quality and lack of ventilation in an occupied space.

If you're sitting in a room with others and the CO2 level is rising you're rebreathing their stale exhaust. It's a pretty good proxy for when you should open a window.

That said VOCs is a better proxy. With VOCs you can approximate CO2 as well, but also pick up other things such as someone's farts, though I suspect you don't need electronics to tell you to open the window then.

Comment Re: DO NOT TELL THE PRESIDENT! (Score 1) 15

Every story doesnâ(TM)t revolve around the bloated one. Continuous references to him in unrelated stories is a sign of obsession.

This is a story about a success achieved through global action using policy at a national level. A person directly controlling that national policy is inseparably related.

And while he hasn't done anything to damage this success yet (and it's not likely he will), his actions on reversing years of global co-operation at the behest of industry, lobbying, and not wanting to see something from his golf course very much put this at risk. It's 2025, we're now sitting an angry tweet away from reversing global successes.

Comment Just because he claims it, doesn’t make it r (Score 1) 66

In fact, the opposite is more likely to be the case. The man bullshits all the time about what’s happening. There is absolutely no reason to believe that the US government will be investing on the same scale as it did for the Manhattan project: 500k people over the years, 30bn in today’s money, 0.3% of GDP, etc. I am sure he’ll waste some government money on this thing, but it won’t be on anything like that scale. Most likely just a rebadge of current private sector spending to claim any inputs/outputs as his own success.

Comment Re:overpriced vomit generator (Score 1) 19

I’d be cautious about over-interpretation of that statistic. 6% of people on placebo reported vomiting too, which is very high. It’s because any single one instance of vomiting during the entire 68 week trial — ie more than a year — counts as a vomiting incident. What actually happens with Wegovy is that people may experience one or two episodes of transient (ie single bout) vomiting in the early stages, often at a dose increase. Only happens for a small fraction of patients.

Comment Re:Dumbass puts huge money late into obvious bubbl (Score 3, Interesting) 66

Clearly we're misunderstanding each other. I was saying that investing in the bubbled asset was folly. I think the AI industry will continue to exist after the bubble pops but at a size no larger than the database industry today. So not zero value, but a small fraction of what it is currently.

I do think that the amount of money being invested in AI training for the improvements being produced is an absurd waste. They're spending larger and larger sums of money to produce rapidly vanishing improvements that customers have so far never shown an interest in paying enough to turn a profit with.

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