@freemo I guess. I thought it was normal, actually - just checked with my gf (also not in healthcare) and she had to as well.
@freemo Ohio. I didn't have to for my previous job in Pennsylvania though, as far as I remember.
@freemo Off the top of my head, I was required to show measles, mumps, rubella, and hepatitis vaccines for my job (fluid dynamics research, has no medical relation at all). I didn't have "passports" for any of those, but I think I got a doctor's note? I might have just had to sign an affadvit or something; I've forgotten the details. And it's an indirect requirement for many flights, at least internationally - because an airline won't board you without a proper visa, and vaccines for things like yellow fever are widely (though not universally) required.
About the only new thing here is the idea that a business might require its customers to show proof - I think that's stupid, but hey let the free market show them when they lose the customers. Unless Biden starts requiring businesses to require their customers to show proof, I still think the alarm is unwarranted.
@freemo [Here](https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/press-briefings/2021/03/29/p)'s the primary source:
Relevant quotes:
> [A] determination or development of a vaccine passport, or whatever you want to call it, will be driven by the private sector.
> [T]here will be no centralized, universal federal vaccinations database and no federal mandate requiring everyone to obtain a single vaccination credential.
It looks like it'll be up to the individual to prove he's vaccinated in some way that's acceptable to his school or employer - which is pretty much how measles or hepatitis or whatever already works. I don't think it's quite the cause for alarm it sounded like initially.
@freemo Are you sure about this? Of the three general news sources I normally consume, two (which I would've expected to support the president) have no coverage of this at all, and the third (which I would've expected to criticise the president) is carrying a statement from the White House Press Secretary which denies that the administration is creating vaccination passports.
I think it's much more likely they'll treat it like other vaccines anyway - your school or employer or whatever can require you to document that you're vaccinated against measles, for example, but there is no national "measles passport" everyone's required to have.
@gawrsh Math seems off in calculating the ratios. McDonald's is 563:1; Papa John's is 961:1 as I run the numbers. Intuitively it doesn't make sense that the McDonald's ratio is nearly 2x higher given that they report both a lower executive salary and higher median salary.
I take it the median is dragged down because these companies mostly employ part timers? Even at current US national minimum wage, those medians aren't close to the 2000 hours per year a full time employee puts in.
I don't think this particular post is banworthy. He's not soliciting, and he's not trying to incite others, so even if he comes out and says "I *don't* oppose such interactions and I think they should be legalised" it's just "unpopular opinions voiced respectfully" which are explicitly allowed by our rules.
The problem as I see it is that he's out of place on a STEM server like QOTO. His entire timeline is about pedophilia; nearly everyone he talks to is on NNIA. He's here to talk about his sexuality, not science, but without being subject to NNIA's restrictions on what can be said on the subject.
@miamiautumn Regardless of what decision the mods arrive at, it might be wise to start hunting for a new home on the Fediverse where you're willing to participate in the local community. If you do this sooner rather than later, you'll be able to port your followers over. If you wait to get banned, you'll lose that option.
> ... using it commonly as a medium of exchange is pretty important. It’s just that even from that perspective I don’t quite get the argument.
It's the same argument, really, because loans are some of the most economically important exchanges in terms of dollar value. Bitcoin might operate in certain niches (and to be fair to @Aurelius_17_6_313, I don't think it's "failed" yet - the experiment is ongoing) but the fact that it is deflating is a good reason not to expect it to be useful in the rest of the economy.
> I’m not entirely convinced that
> i) interest rates in a free market won’t converge to where people are willing to lend anyway
Interest rates converge to where people are willing to lend *and borrow*. The upper limit for the borrower (appreciation of the business) has to be greater than the lower limit for the lender (appreciation of the currency) for such a point to exist. Very little of the economy is at that point wrt Bitcoin.
> ii) making a startup do better than deflation when currency is deflationary is significantly harder than making it do better than inflation in the current world.
These mean slightly different things. "Doing better than inflation" means keeping your *real* growth above zero; "doing better than deflation" means keeping your *denominated* growth above zero. The degree to which the one is harder than the other corresponds to the degree to which real growth outstrips denominated growth; i.e. the rate of deflation. Whether that's "significant" is a judgement call, although with Bitcoin deflation as high as it's been this winter, I don't really think it's reasonable to conclude otherwise.
> must be used commonly as a medium of exchange
That's kind of the point of a currency though, so it's a reasonable assumption that's the goal of something that purports to be a crypto-currency. If bitcoin fans called it a crypto-asset or something instead and stopped trying to push it as an alternative to fiat currency, people would probably stop pointing out why it sucks in that role.
The argument is that a deflating currency discourages investment if loans are denominated in it. Only investments that appreciate faster than the currency make financial sense. So the economy suffers because value-generating enterprises can't get startup capital if the bankers would rather sit on the money than lend it out.
https://github.com/cselab/aphros/wiki/Aphros-Explorer
Gallery of interactive fluid simulations. They are configured with plain text, run in the browser, and can be easily shared
#CFD #WebAssembly #fluiddynamics
@homeomnis I've since played with it a bit more, mainly on the first level as there seems to be much more to do there. I use Pale Moon, a Firefox derivative, and the sound works but occasionally crackles.
It might be nice to offer a right-click that places the planet on an orbit with the same perihelion and apihelion as the left click, but oriented so it lies in the plane of the screen. I've been able to achieve this a couple times by placing two that orbit at right angles and getting them to interact so one is flung in an oblique direction, but it's difficult to do so with any precision. Having all three dimensions available opens up more possibilities to explore the physics.
I believe I've noticed one bug. Orbital radius and planetary surface radius seem to get out of sync, so under some conditions the smaller body appears to "pop through" the larger body. This most frequently occurs in binary star systems or when a planet has a moon. I *think* what might be happening is that the planet is drawn larger as it approaches the screen, but perspective isn't accounted for when plotting the coordinates of any moons orbiting it, so the apparent orbital radius stays fixed.
Assuming the crossposter and the instance have the same blacklist, QOTO is blocked on their end. You'll see us under "Servidores banidos" at the bottom of https://masto.donte.com.br/about/more
@biomedmax Alchemy posited that one metal could be turned into another. Chemists then discovered that the metals were distinct elements which precluded this transmutation, but nuclear reactions were later discovered in which one metal did become another.
@homeomnis I played with this a bit today. As far as I can tell, there are three levels:
Spheres orbiting a white sphere
Disks orbiting a black sphere
Hemispheres orbiting a coloured sphere
Each appears to have slightly different collision mechanics, but the only one I really understand is the first level. More info would be welcome.
A couple questions for you:
What is the camera fixed to? It doesn't appear to be either the barycentre or the largest sphere - the main star wobbles relative to the view, but there is a discontinuity when you build up a star that overtakes the main one in size.
Is it possible to adjust the initial conditions of the planets placed by clicking? They appear to have zero velocity in the x and y directions, and a small velocity coming out of the screen.
@freemo I don't think the earth needs to be curved to have that effect though - even on a plane, if you have a thin layer of less-dense air along the ground, the ray from any distant point on the surface to your eye will originate at a shallow (nearly horizontal) angle, then be refracted upward to strike your eye at a steeper angle. So the horizon will appear depressed, because a ray originating at a point on the horizon strikes your eye along a line which intersects the ground at a point nearer to you than the true direction of the horizon. The ship, on the other hand, sits mostly above the density gradient, so rays originating from it travel a more or less straight path and strike your eye from an angle above the apparent horizon.
Another example of the problem of steaming audio pitch being shifted to an extremely low frequency from a completely different web source than my previous post. (I actually found several streaming sites that did this.)
Solution: The user agent in my browser had been changed to identify it as Win 7, Chrome. My browser is actually FireFox, Linux. (I had changed it in an attempt to get a misbehaving website to work and forgot to change it back.) The sites probably assumed I was using a different player or they used an incorrect audio codec.
#audio #pitch #codec
#PutTheLotionInTheBasket
(posted as plain text toot with attached image)
video controls:
<video width="560" height="315" controls> <source src="https://video.qoto.org/videos/embed/bfaebe57-4be7-4113-872b-09e9c4dc3c07" type="video/mp4">
<source src="https://video.qoto.org/videos/embed/bfaebe57-4be7-4113-872b-09e9c4dc3c07" type="video/ogg">
</video>
iframe embed:
<iframe width="560" height="315" sandbox="allow-same-origin allow-scripts" src="https://video.qoto.org/videos/embed/bfaebe57-4be7-4113-872b-09e9c4dc3c07" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
naked video url:
https://video.qoto.org/videos/watch/bfaebe57-4be7-4113-872b-09e9c4dc3c07
I see that #QOTO now has 14,000 users! Thanks to everyone who's decided to become a part of our community :-)
To be even more pedantic, an exception also occurs north of the Arctic Circle during polar night, when there are no shadows cast by the sun ;)
But it has snow, the sun is shining, and the caption says Lake Michigan, so I'm pretty sure it's just the calving of an ice sheet playing backwards.