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(I was very surprised by the requirement and pharmacist was very surprised by my surprise, so I think they were unaware of this exception applying as opposed to not willing to apply it.)

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Swiss law on prescriptions is *weird*.

There are categories of medicines (Abgabekategorien) with a clear demarcation between requiring a prescription (A-B) and not (D-E). Notably category C is missing, because it was eliminated in 2019 (it used to be "can be sold in pharmacies only but without prescription" IIUC). Some of the stuff from C went to D, some of it to B.

That would be clear. However, "this medicine was once in C" is an exception to the requirement for prescriptions for medicines in B! (See fedlex.admin.ch/eli/cc/2018/58) Thus, we effectively still have C, but it's way more confusing.

This story was brought to you by a pharmacy wanting a prescription for KCl from me. (Which I'm really amused ended up in B, given that it has a similar safety profile to table salt afaik: you can overdose on it, it can have bad interactions with your other medications or diseases, it's kinda hard to overdose without really trying.)

@whitequark

Aside: not sure where you spent your childhood, but depending on that you might not know about and find en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erythroc interesting (ISTM that there's a clear split of countries that use ESR and CRP as the standard test for inflammation).

@tobi82 @Martin__Hope

Das ist hier beschrieben: lgl.bayern.de/gesundheit/infek

tl;dr Einige Arztpraxen nehmen Abstriche von allen mit Atemwegbeschwerden und das ist die Anteil von verschiedenen gefundenen Erregern.

medical procedure, blood in a container 

@whitequark

Thanks, I always thought that the anticoagulant ones contained sodium citrate. I wonder what makes EDTA unsuitable for donated blood and/or citrate for blood for analysis.

medical procedure, blood in a container 

@whitequark

Which kind of container it is? (As in, what of any additives it has?)

@driusan @luckytran

Your shirt is obviously an improvised weapon usable for strangling and smothering! Your blood is a liquid, please remove all of it before coming inside! Your shoe is a projectile (remember Bush?) -- you can't have those. Your phone is an artificial noisemaking device, so it also stays out. /s

I'm really perplexed by umbrellas -- so what should people do if it's raining? I'm also amused by "batteries", insofar the word lost its original meaning and is used to refer to single cells too, and by the ban on monopods and tripods, but seemingly not bipods (except they are also improvised bats and projectiles).

@mark

If the train was something like 13hrs it might actually have been competitive if it was a night train. (I'm pointing this out, because there's a range of travel times where travel taking longer might not be a bad thing and might be actively preferred by many people.)

robryk boosted

In the process of debugging a NUMA first-touch problem, I accidentally found my simulation becomes significantly faster when it's running on garbage data without memset() - even on non-NUMA systems... What?! Does the kernel provide a fast-path for uninitialized memory that I've never heard of?

"a read from a never-written anonymous page will get every page copy-on-write mapped to the same physical page of zeros, so you can get TLB misses but L1d cache hits when reading it."

Yes... #hpc

@wortfechterin @jobook @boran_gregovic

Das ist nicht wirklich die Frage von der eingdeutigen Identifizierung, sondern von geprüfter Identifizierung. Wenn man ein persönliches Ticket kauft (ich glaube alle DB E-Tickets waren seit lange persönlich, oder nein?), muss man natürlich sich identifizieren. Aber es ist fraglich, ob das irgendwelche Zusicherung benötigen soll: man muss sich bei der Ticketkontrolle schlussendlich irgendwie ausweisen.

TIL that a traffic warden standing with your back or front to you does not necessarily mean "stop" in Switzerland: fedlex.admin.ch/eli/cc/1979/19

@trenner @grimalkina

I also didn't know that and am wondering how widespread that is (both geographically and for CS-adjacent departments like ones that teach robotics or computational math).

@sam @sanedragon

In addition to that, they also:
- have mechanics to answer questions (for example, it's sometimes not obvious if a bike can take panniers),
- try to figure out if any of the bikes are stolen beforehand,
- deal with actually selling the bike so the seller doesn't need to be there the whole day (they just drop off the bike in the morning and pick up money or bike in the evening),
- have some sort of setup where you can take one of the bikes for a test ride.

In general it seems to me that a large part of the reason why that feels very nice (from a buyer's perspective at least) is that they remove incentives to be dishonest, so that everyone taking part can just be calm, trusting, and assume the same of others and won't be harmed by that. On the other hand, I think that a large reason why this became a major thing (there are nonspecialized flea markets and you can buy/sell bikes there too) is in large part that it's very hassle-free for sellers.

Regarding the place, Zurich has a few squares in the city center, which tend to get used for such things (I'm actually not sure how that works formally tbh). Sadly that's probably one of the larger problems with setting something like that up in the US (or am I very off?).

To give you a order of magnitude estimate, there is one such flea market organized every month Spring-Autumn in Zurich (pop. ~700k city, ~1.5M agglo) and I'd estimate that there is a bit below 1000 bikes there ~each time.

@sam @sanedragon

Something of this shape happens in an organized fashion in larger cities in Switzerland: an association of bike users (pro-velo.ch/) organizes bike flea markets (as in, the bikes being sold aren't theirs -- they only provide organization). Apart from some amount of inspecting of the bikes for sale (I'm not sure how thorough) what they also do is get mechanics to answer sellers' questions.

@tadzik @rysiek

TBF I would really like something that transcribes podcasts or videos and maybe removes/deemphasizes[1] the speech mannerisms that are helpful for speech but not for text (e.g. some kinds of repetitions). I haven't seen yet anything that would do even the first part well totally automatically, but I think both parts are much closer than other things people dream of AI doing.

[1] in text, one can use various font style tricks to do so

Hm~ is it about those salts decomposing into something else in solution at high temperature?

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Why do PWR reactors use boric acid, as opposed to some random salt of boron? Apparently boron salts are often well soluble, from the nuclear POV we only care about boron being present, and I'd expect salts to cause fewer chemical problems due to their closer-to-neutral pH. In fact some random papers (inis.iaea.org/collection/NCLCo) describe tradeoffs involved in maintaining pH as boric acid concentration changes.

There clearly must be some reason why boric acid is preferred over any simple boron salt. What is it?

@ZachWeinersmith

Can you expand on what you mean by boring? When I was a preteen I could find random websites with lots of circuit diagrams for simple things someone found useful, Seaview fanfiction, and various very esoteric topics. My impression is that finding as satisfyingly in-depth descriptions, especially of niche topics, is now harder.

@kravietz

Jeśli dobrze rozumiem gov.uk/apply-for-photo-id-vote to można dostać dokument który działa znając tylko czyjś "National Insurance Number". Czy jest to z jakiegoś powodu trudniejsze do oszukania niż wersja w której komisji możnaby podać ten numer?

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