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Everything posted by Zoraptor
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Politics XXXV (Life in the Vault is about to change)
Zoraptor replied to Amentep's topic in Way Off-Topic
Court documentation (pdf), specifically #40 -
Politics XXXV (Life in the Vault is about to change)
Zoraptor replied to Amentep's topic in Way Off-Topic
No worries, I'm here to help, and am happy to fix any and all faulty opinions you have for you free of charge. FYI, the father says he did refer the police to the doctors' report, but they outright refused to check. Which is eminently believable since their stated and official position is the narrow 'no positive test means no covid19'. No there isn't. They may be more accurate than the PCR tests, but the only test for which stats are available shows a bit better than 90% accuracy, and even that is questionable due to being Chinese. There are multiple cases of countries rushing use of literally useless antibody tests, eg Britain. (Even if they were reliable a positive test for antibodies does not necessarily make you immune anyway. The close relative to SARS-CoV2 that causes one version of the common cold grants very short lasting immunity, one of the reasons people get multiple colds a year, year after year) -
Coincidentally I saw Glass last week, and also enjoyed it a lot. Kind of wish I'd waited until I'd managed to track down a copy of Unbreakable after finishing it since I probably missed out a bit on the background stuff (I did see Split a couple of months ago, and liked it way way more than I expected to).
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That was pretty much exactly my thoughts on Picard as well, though I'm not quite as effusive about the earlier episodes. From what I've seen of Kurzman that's if not a deliberate policy then it's all his projects are capable of- and it's the absolute scourge of nuTrek, Picard and Discovery having potential to be a lot better is what ultimately made them so disappointing. The writers are able to write scenes that when taken independently are reasonably well written, generally well acted and exciting enough to maintain interest. The trouble comes when they try to tie them together into a coherent whole, and find the cool scenes can't be made to fit together in a way that makes sense, and they simply don't have the dramatic fortitude to do anything with genuine emotional weight unless forced so settle for a bunch of emotionally manipulative twaddle instead.
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Politics XXXV (Life in the Vault is about to change)
Zoraptor replied to Amentep's topic in Way Off-Topic
It's definitely about whether they count clinical diagnoses as confirmed or not. That's how the police will be determining whether she's making it up, or not. They would- and did, per the article- have checked the official figures and seen no one officially had C19 in the county, they would not and could not have asked any specific doctor- and, officially, the hospital would not have had any confirmed cases if they asked there. If a doctor's diagnosis is not enough to officially determine someone has covid19 and a positive pcr is required then, officially, she would not have C19 even if she actually did, and a doctor said she did. And that is what the police base their accusation on. Police everywhere have a long history of insisting that scientific tests are infallible, because they are what a lot of their convictions are based on and any suggestion they're not leads to endless appeals. In this case the scientific test should never even make it into court as proof she didn't have it, because it demonstrably gives false negatives when people definitively are infected with SARS-CoV2. Digging in their heels even when contradicted by a doctor is perfectly in character though, because defences always have a crack at the 'scientific' evidence with their own doctors and scientists. Plus, of course, police have a distinct tendency to believe in their own infallibility, even when presented with concrete evidence. -
Politics XXXV (Life in the Vault is about to change)
Zoraptor replied to Amentep's topic in Way Off-Topic
Eh, you can have evidence that there are no cases- you just cannot have proof. There not being any confirmed cases in the area is evidence there aren't any, though per below it certainly isn't proof in the case of covid19. I still disagree with Skarpen anyway though, since... Testing is a bit of a clusterasterisk, since the PCRs seem to give up to 30% false negatives. Some places are allowing clinically diagnosed covid-19 cases into their stats while some require a positive PCR. With a clinical diagnosis but no positive PCR she'd be included in stats here, but in many other places she'd not be. It's definitely heavy handed trying to demand her silence, barring some other unknown factor like her having a history of false claims. If she did have a clinical diagnosis as claimed then there's no way she's spreading panic or anything else that might be actionable. But, I'd also give the police rather more leeway at least for their initial actions than I normally would, as the reputation for scientific tests and the PCR tests they might be familiar with (ie DNA fingerprinting) is that they are highly reliable to near completely infallible. -
Politics XXXV (Life in the Vault is about to change)
Zoraptor replied to Amentep's topic in Way Off-Topic
Taiwan should be safe so long as China and the US/ Trump are actively fighting an economic war. I'd be more worried about Trump forcing China's hand by recognising Taiwan as independent (without a very detailed plan of how to deal with the consequences) than him abandoning them. That's exactly the sort of stunt he'd pull. China, much like the USSR, gives most of its 'aid' effectively 'in kind' rather than in cash. Big infrastructure projects funded by China, and using mostly Chinese labour much as the soviet aligned bloc got soviet or Cuban engineers for their projects. In many ways that is a lot better than the old IMF/ WB model of giving countries wodges of dosh that inevitably disappeared into various Mobutu types' swiss bank accounts instead of being spent on what they were meant to, leaving the leaders as billionaires when inevitably deposed and their countries with nothing except being permanently indebted, and forced to run their economies as dictated by the IMF- debt trap neo colonialism, as absolutely deliberate policy. Of course the Chinese model isn't disinterested benevolence either and is mostly Chinese money paying Chinese workers for projects that benefit China (and secondarily the host country), but I'm always amused at 'Chinese debt trap in Africa' type articles railing against what the west has done for the past 70 years because now it's the Chinese instead; and at least the infrastructure gets built and the Chinese can't walk away with all the ports, roads and power stations they're building. -
First couple of seasons of 24 are pretty good. After that it very rapidly succumbs to threat inflation and scenario repetition. It was still (mostly) entertaining though even when it was stupid.
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Politics XXXV (Life in the Vault is about to change)
Zoraptor replied to Amentep's topic in Way Off-Topic
Because I forgot to mention it previous, the WHO definitely did make one major mistake that should not have been made- opposing travel bans up to at least early February. On that, Trump definitely has a point, and also a point against most Democrats. In hindsight travel bans were the bare minimum that should have happened, and the WHO recommended against them despite acknowledging a month earlier there was human to human transmission. The troubles with that are that the US still hasn't provided any evidence, let alone proof, for their accusations against Huawei. As such, it's being treated by everyone else as being part of Trump's trade war with China- and since he's simultaneously fighting or threatening to fight trade wars with just about everyone else there's no goodwill or benefit of the doubt. Instead, you have Europe wondering if Trump will decide that Airbus or BMW should be the next target after Huawei and China and not wanting to encourage him. Huawei is the typical Chinese loss-leader-to-drive-others-out-of-business (then jack up prices and drop down quality) model of Chinese company, but that isn't the same as it spying. There would be few people (maybe just Sarex) on this forum who'd be happier than I to see NATO fold. But NATO is irrelevant as a counter to China anyway, as it is explicitly a greater North Atlantic 'defensive' pact with its members literally half a world away from China. I tend to agree that the US should pull out of it or reduce commitments to it because I think NATO has long outlived its supposed purpose- but if that happens it will massively reduce US influence, and that has to be accepted as an obvious consequence beforehand. If you want quid pro quo for being in NATO and the largest contributor you got the return in soft power. If Obama claimed Huawei was spyware he'd be taken more seriously than Trump because Obama didn't spend his term(s) deliberately setting diplomatic fires everywhere. A leadership that everyone dislikes has a lot more difficulty getting its way than one that people want to believe is acting in their interests. The anti China treaties are with the likes of Japan, ROK, Philippines, Australia; ie greater Pacific countries. Trouble being that Trump has managed to have problems with every single country on that list too, except Australia. So much so that the Philippines- hardly friendly with China- kicked the US out wholesale a few months ago. Any China containment strategy also requires at least the tacit support of both India and Russia (who can being along ex soviet 'stans) to be effective. -
Politics XXXV (Life in the Vault is about to change)
Zoraptor replied to Amentep's topic in Way Off-Topic
Trouble is, some in the US would withdraw from NATO because others aren't pulling their weight, then wonder why Europe doesn't pay any attention to them and won't support them any more and rail about how US influence has dropped without drawing any connection between the two. And the US can always unilaterally reduce military spending, if she wants to. Nobody wants China to be the sole superpower, that's a false dichotomy. It is a potential result of Trump continually taking enormous dumps on former friends and international institutions for naked domestic political purposes though. If people end up actually taking China's side against the US what does that say about the diplomatic abilities of the US? These things don't happen in a vacuum, they happen as a consequence to deliberate US policies. Trump and Pompeo have asterisked off literally everyone who isn't Bibi Netanyahu, many multiple times on multiple issues. The ongoing collapse of US soft power is an inevitable consequence of that. It may play well to elements of the US domestically, but all the extortion, amnerican exceptionalism and unilateralism doesn't play well with anyone outside the US. -
Politics XXXV (Life in the Vault is about to change)
Zoraptor replied to Amentep's topic in Way Off-Topic
I always find it amusing that the US insisting on something clearly political isn't a bad thing when others doing the same thing is. An organisation bowing to pressure for the US is fine, bowing to pressure from anyone else is the sign of a flawed, corrupt organisation. Meanwhile members of Trump's admin are bringing in wheelbarrows of cash to Florida to make sure that the fricking WWE is labelled as 'essential' and not subject to lockdown; which about sums up how things work and the expectations of Trump's America. You can also pretty much guarantee that the people complaining about the WHO now would be incandescent with rage if a similar approach to that they wanted taken with China were taken with the US. Indeed, we can already see that, China doesn't want it called the Chinese or Wuhan virus, the US does, China doesn't want Taiwan mentioned, the US does, and toys will come out of cot when either doesn't get their way. WHO ain't going to call it Wuhan Flu because you call it SARS-CoV2 or Covid-19 or even generic old coronavirus for a reason- it's a coronavirus, not a flu. Flu is a, uh, orthomyxovirus, generically influenza/ flu (for good reason) and while they do share similarities with coronaviruses like ssRNA they are taxonomically different. Ironically the most prominent and deadly example of actual influenza was Spanish (sic) Flu which very likely originated in... the US and definitely didn't originate in Spain. The US had relatively speaking plenty of time to prepare for covid19, the failure to do so effectively is largely on Trump downplaying everything (with a hearty dollop left over for D and other orange man bad types grandstanding on issues where Trump did do the right thing, like banning travel). China's behaviour has- as pretty much always- been awful with a policy of deliberate lies throughout but the WHO cannot simply invade China to get the true picture. They have also consistently been misquoted by Trumpians trying to run interference. Eg they did not say there was no human to human transmission, they said there was no evidence for it at that time (because, basically, China was lying about it- but they also had no particular reason to doubt them given that other recent coronaviruses with animal origin like SARS or MERS do have very low infectivity). The WHO issued a directive saying there was definite human to human transmission in early January iirc, about two months before Trump started taking covid19 seriously. On a broader front and the broader issue, the US cannot complain about China's growing influence while simultaneously withdrawing from everything and anything half way multilateral they feel like because it isn't a tool for the US, Obama derangement syndrome or simple hubris. That just leads to handing China influence by default giftwrapped on a silver platter. One of the reasons there's so little international support for 'Wuhan Virus' is that pretty much everyone international literally literally hates Pompeo and Trump, and the US has already burnt through almost all of the goodwill that could have got support from Europe and others. No one wants to allow Trump the cover of blaming China, and given the low regard China is held in that really says something about how the current US admin is viewed. -
There's a recent Nature article on a similar method. (Which may well be based on the research in/ approach from the webmd link, though I skimmed the references and didn't see a direct link immediately I didn't read through carefully)
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Politics XXXV (Life in the Vault is about to change)
Zoraptor replied to Amentep's topic in Way Off-Topic
I'd disagree with it for a completely different reason- it absolves the Democrat Party for selecting a rubbish candidate, and Hillary for losing to Trump. Fundamentally, in a democratic system you're not obligated to vote for rubbish just because garbage is worse; and doing so is precisely how you make sure that you will always be presented with two bad choices. That approach also destroys confidence in your political system far more effectively than anything else, nothing breeds indifference like being told you have to vote for two choices neither of which you want. Hillary lost to Trump. She lost because she didn't get enough votes where it counted. If she'd have run a competent campaign and been a better and more appealing candidate she'd have won. Those who voted for someone they actually wanted over someone they didn't should take no blame; those giving it to them don't actually believe in a free vote, they believe in a controlled one. -
What Are You Playing Now: The Other, Other Thread
Zoraptor replied to Amentep's topic in Computer and Console
You do have to be online to play Elite Dangerous. That was a minor scandal, as it was kickstarted as having a DRM free option and initially they refused refunds based on its always online status. Both I-Wars are good, and 2 in particular has graphics that stand up very well for an early 2000s game. 1 is a bit more on the sim side of the scale, with 2 being a bit more arcadey (but still on the sim side overall). They were running out of money when making it, so the story in 2 basically implodes in the 2nd half. Everspace is pretty good as well, it's further onto the arcade side of the spectrum than the sim side. Sort of like a space flight version of Faster-Than-Light is probably the best description. While low budget/ kickstarter level it's also quite pretty. -
Stirling Moss Tim Brooke Taylor (from covid19) Loved The Goodies as a kid. Time for a Kitten Kong rewatch, at very least.
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So, is the US economy open for business again now? I seem to remember Donny promising Easter as the day the magic would have happened by. Buy a bandana and use that, it's about as effective as anything else which doesn't have proper fitting and a proper filter while also being washable/ sterilisable multiple times without the elasticised straps perishing almost instantly. They also make it look like you've joined a cool post apoc street gang while you wait in line to buy your eggs and flour.
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Noscript can do that. No idea if it's available for anything other than Firefox though. Given the first scripts I nuke are always fb and greater google services I'd imagine they wouldn't want it on chrome. Only drawback is that most of Raithe's and GD's funny stuff posts show up as a long string of numbers only with fbcdn blocked. (Though should be noted that nuking js on firefox did not also nuke the torygraph's paywall, for me at least. Even the 1-2 punch of private window and nuked js didn't work. Though that may well be my ISP caching the crap out of things to lower its record throughput...)
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Politics XXXV (Life in the Vault is about to change)
Zoraptor replied to Amentep's topic in Way Off-Topic
Dunno, Biden is in the susceptible demographic for c19. Doch, ist Prussen. But proper Old Prussian, not those genocidal g*rmanic manlet 'teutons'. Pity the Poles didn't finish the job properly in the 15th century and spare the rest of the world centuries of harm. -
The epidemiologists will be providing a bit more guidance than washing hands, but yeah, while they will have aspects of general population modelling and the like economic modelling won't be their job. There should however be economists doing their modelling as well and if the governmental organisations are competent they should be doing so alongside and in cooperation with the epidemiologists to show the potential effects of each policy and potential best recovery options. My presumption is that most of them are coming up with the same general result: you can have a very severe, quick but hopefully one off effect; or you can spread the effect out over time and hope it isn't as severe overall- and not much else as the situation is both unprecedented in modern times and we simply don't know how c19 and its effects/ treatments will evolve over time. And as much as it isn't a health modellers job to make economic policy it also isn't an economic modellers job to make health policy. Except, maybe, in the US and Brazil. Eh, I'm not sure even competent politicians can really do much else at this point. Several countries have ended up where they are- big example being the US- specifically because politicians have ignored advice from experts in favour of 'saving the economy'/ their poll numbers. I'd give the early effected countries' politicians some extra leeway too; it's often difficult to know which experts to listen to at the best of times, and human nature means that most of the time people listen to the view that tells them everything will be OK over the one preaching doom and gloom, especially when going for the doom and gloom incorrectly means losing your job. Then again our PM* has taken responsibility for almost literally everything politically and done very well out of it, politically, while following the advice of the bureaucrat (a scientist, not lobbyist or career aparatnik thank science) in charge of responding, with the health minister being entirely sidelined from the response and just running the admin. I'd imagine the situation is different in places where c19 has made it to epidemic status and glaring and obvious mistakes have been made as very few politicians are ever going to willingly own a mistake if they can avoid it. *and praise science that she won, and not Ximon Brudges who thinks driving ten hours in a lockdown to attend a fricking video conference is 'essential' work. The essential part is, in actuality, him being able to stand in front of press cameras in person to mumble his stupidities.
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Politics XXXV (Life in the Vault is about to change)
Zoraptor replied to Amentep's topic in Way Off-Topic
It's also been posted at least three times, and it's reverse ownage anyway since Canada's envoy to fricking NATO forgot that Kaliningrad is part of Russia- rather a large oversight for such an organisation. -
There's definitely nothing in the later episodes that is worth restarting a stalled watch. Loads of maudlin for the sake of it emotion and incoherent plotting and action scenes.
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Watched Picard. It was... OK and I don't regret watching it, though I think I would have struggled if watching it weekly rather than over a week. It completely fell apart in the last couple of episodes and had a substantial number of head scratching moments before that but I think that STD has largely inoculated me against the stupid and sufficiently lowered expectations so that I could park brain in neutral and not rail overmuch against the dying of the logical plot progression. I liked Victor Frankenstein and Captain Aramis (except for the stupid accented holograms) and the rest of the cast was generally OK, most of the problems they had was with inconsistent characterisation- but also no absolute standout like Captain Malfoy or Pike from STD. Though I do have to admit I've always liked Peyton List perhaps a little more than her pure acting deserves. I even got a few lols from the Mass Effect parallels. Also watched Dark on Netflix. From the name I was expecting something a bit, well, dark, but despite its name and being German it's actually an uplifting show featuring time travel and a cast of well adjusted characters whose carefree lives are seldom blighted by any trouble*. Highly recommended. *yeah okay, there might be one or two character flaws on display, and the odd bit of trouble. But nothing you wouldn't expect of a picturesque small German town next to a nuclear power plant in a show called 'Dark'.
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Limiting factor for AM5's arrival will likely be when (practically, after) DDR5 gets to mass production. TSMC 5nm is basically functional now and Apple and a few other large manufacturers are set to migrate to it soon, which should free up additional 7nm fab space. AMD has been doing a new generation a year pretty regularly with Zen, so AM5/ [Ry]Zen5/ 5nm in 2021 would not be unheard of. I personally suspect the initial AM5 offerings will be on an advanced 7nm node though, even with the obvious marketing angle of [Ry]Zen5- DDR5- 5nm. Probably also depends a bit on whether Intel's 7nm is or isn't 10nm redux, if it has even standard teething troubles like 14nm had there will not be much pushing AMD onto a more expensive option. The 4000 series laptops have been released recently too with great reviews and excellent power/ performance. [have I mentioned how much I hate AMD's incoherent naming schemes recently?]
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Theoretically* at least we'd be including deaths at home and the like before an autopsy. After a few incidents with hospital staff being infected and our first (and so far, touch wood, only) death initially being diagnosed as just flu and forcing a regional hospital to basically shut down they changed the rules so that any clinical diagnosis of/ with covid19 symptoms is assumed to be it, and included in the figures as a probable case- even if there's been a PCR that came back negative. *They could of course still lie about it, if they wanted to, but there's a lot more point when the death toll is higher and a lot more scope for an overwhelmed system systemically under reporting.
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The US is far from alone in lying/ 'lying' about the death count. I'd suspect that just about every country with epidemic level infections is underestimating deaths one way or another as deliberate policy to minimise panic. France wasn't counting deaths in either rest homes (ie among the people most statistically susceptible...) or at home in their figures for example, only deaths in hospital. The policy will absolutely be that a lot of deaths outside hospital won't be counted as they aren't 'confirmed' to be covid19, and a lot won't be counted where there are other complicating factors that can be blamed.