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Comment Re:She’s not totally wrong (Score 1) 334

The vaccines and their trial data as presented by the pharmaceutical companies made the claim that both mRNA vaccines had a 95% of preventing infection and that is most definitely a lie. (I’m going to ignore that no one in the 75+ age cohort received it, that handful that were included only in the placebo group.) Statistically, only 3.5% of the admissions should be SARS-CoV-2 positive while already vaccinated. (We can ignore variance due to the huge sample size.) What you are advocating is that the vaccines are mitigating the expression of the virus in vaccinated individuals. First off I agree, all the datasets are demonstrating this, everywhere. However, before you pat yourself on the back, not a single trial for any of the vaccines tested for this. None. We just got lucky, thankfully.By the way, I wouldn’t be at all surprised to find out that this is the reason behind the price jump for both mRNA vaccines.

Comment She’s not totally wrong (Score -1, Flamebait) 334

Despite reaching the herd immunity goal of 70% of the population, SARS-CoV-2 is spreading unchecked by the vaccines. 75% of the known new cases are people fully vaccinated. Those are hard facts from the CDC&P. What we have found is that the vaccines are ineffective at stopping the Delta mutation. Further, the transmission rate between individuals vaccinated or not is the same (no statistical difference). From some of the Israeli data, even a booster fails to stop the spread of Delta. Calling the vaccines ineffective is too harsh a conclusion, at the least with Delta. Frankly I barely have a clue who Greene is or her politics. I do know the conclusions above have nothing to do with her. These are conclusions by myself and those in the fields of epidemiology and immunology. Epidemiology is one of my fields both in the lab and out.

Comment Re: Qemu 3D Acceleration (Score 1) 67

That's my need as well. Tons of accelerators, lots of licences, can't afford the various VDI taxes lurking out there. Intentionally. Buying Server 2008, 2012, or 2012 R2 licenses to get a VDI going is absolutely bonkers. Retail Windows 7 is cheaper for small shops. And if whatever comes out the sausage factory Windows 10 Enterprise might be retail worthy if the damn licenses make sense. It will be ever thus as Microsoft's mindset is extracting the most fees ala Oracle versus helping SO/HO and SMBs. Either accept subscriptions or just go away.

Comment Re:+1 funny (Score 1) 618

So we're going to end up with a huge network of international *** on the one hand, and a bunch of draconian anti-free speech rules [codes] on the other.

You've dead-on nailed that. When you don't "feed the trolls," you usually end up with fewer of them vying for attention. They never totally disappear unless a lot more people [about five percent] carry, and use, weapons. That sorts itself right quick just as criminals start targeting less likely armed people, say tourists, instead. But we aren't allowed to go there. Whatever.

Comment Re:Great... (Score 1) 137

The standard t-test for detecting an effect is already probabalistic. In science and medicine a 95% confidence value is commonly used, which means a 1/20 of detecting something that isn't there.

Unless things have been radically relaxed in the last decade, the standard in hard sciences and medicine remains a 99% confidence interval. It's the social sciences that allow for a 95% confidence interval. Having worked in all the different schools out there, I think I have some confidence in my assertion.

Comment Re:HyperDuo (Score 1) 353

I don't have any trouble remapping who's going where, why, and when and my setup is as you describe save a couple of misses most anyone might make. You have to make sure that the RAM disk is properly saved and restored across restart/shutdown cycles otherwise you'll see some bizarre software post-installation behaviors. The other miss is RAID 0 and SSD's. If you do a serious testing regime, you have to reduce stripe length (4K here), use more than two drives and forget using any controllers except the motherboard directly connected drives. I'm seeing all the usual SSD benefits with 5.6 GBps (yes Bytes) transfer rates. YMMV. And no, I didn't believe it either which why I tested real-world and benchmarks, cache/nocache, ....

Any unices are far easier to deal with allowing you to map the filetree as suits. Windows needs a whip hand, the right tools, and really good backups as you climb one hell of a learning curve.

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