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Just need to vent...

Discussion in 'Fred's House of Pancakes' started by Mendel Leisk, Jul 6, 2022.

  1. fuzzy1

    fuzzy1 Senior Member

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    I've heard of some boarding schools having very good improvements in engagement -- outside of class too -- by limiting residents to just non-internet flip-phones.
     
  2. hill

    hill High Fiber Member

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    That's what our daughter bought for the two oldest grandkids - 14 & 12. They can text but that's it. And taking them away as a consequence for bad behavior really works well! Same with PC screen time
    .
     
  3. BiomedO1

    BiomedO1 Senior Member

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    You can try this:
    AVG Ultimate 2024 - 10 Devices - 2 Years - [Download] | eBay
    It isn't the greatest VPN/Antivirus but it covers Android, Windows, iOS, and Mac - good for 10 devices.
     
  4. ETC(SS)

    ETC(SS) The OTHER One Percenter.....

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    Glad I do not live in one of them.

    I do not mind states giving schools the authority (FREEDOM!) to proscribe cellular use on campus, in class, etc but my ears perk up when states say "You Cannot!"
    What about a child with Type 1 Diabetes or other condition that requires a BT (or other) app?

    We have enough state governments outlawing enough activities already.
    Let schools, school - and give parents the ability to move their children out of the ones that don't.

    Gee....
    I wonder what made the FAA change their minds about a November approval? ;)
    Actually, given the scale of the flights involved, I'm GLAD that the FAA is as deeply involved as it is!!
    We're talking about the world's largest heavier than air flying object landing it's booster in a (nearly) populated area after hypersonic suborbital flight.

    Is it just me or are people missing the other major accomplishment?
    SpaceX soft-landed a larger-than-Space Shuttle vehicle from near orbit, next to a buoy on the other side of the planet.....
    The real-time from Starlink was nothing short of amazing.

    I wish "they/them/those" were better at it.
    I would spend far less time looking for 'stuff and things' on the interwebs.

    I'm frequently very amused at the erroneous presumptions that big data make about me.
    I do vote and have a nearly 100 percent attendance record, but I'm not foolish enough to be registered with a political party - so I get nearly zero political material in the mail.
    Most of that stuff is centered around getting money out of people.

    @ VPNs:
    You have to admire the chutzpah of a for-profit company that gets people to route all of their data through THEIR servers in order to 'keep it private and anonymous.'
    - especially the 'free' ones! :ROFLMAO:
    There are 2-3 VPN services that actually have 'good intentions' in this space, but they're profit centric, and thus are also cost sensitive.
    That's sort of like watching a certain midwestern governor handling a shotgun.
    Nothing bad happened THAT time (especially to a pheasant) but it does not inspire confidence.

    I had all of my SF-86 (government security application) data scraped and sold during the Obama Administration, and I'm not into illegal or unsavory activities online - so 'data privacy' for me is a wholly unnecessary fallicy.
     
    #2164 ETC(SS), Oct 15, 2024 at 8:54 AM
    Last edited: Oct 15, 2024 at 9:30 AM
  5. hill

    hill High Fiber Member

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    Didn't the space shuttle solid rocket boosters have some type of capability to be detonated if they went awry ?
    It would stand to reason SpaceX incorporates the same safety features
    .
     
  6. ETC(SS)

    ETC(SS) The OTHER One Percenter.....

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    The Shuttle's boosters did - human activated, at least once iirc.
    NASA is dot.gov owned and operated....so it was probably a civil serpent's finger over a button.
    We used to watch them tow the boosters back into P-Can after an STS launch when I was in town on a boat.
    (They contracted THAT part out, probably.)
    SpaceX has an automated termination system for both Falcon stages that probably gets a regulatory proctology exam before every flight, and a hot wash after.
    Starship has one as well for both stages, I would bet.
    As I said before, I'm glad that the FAA is keeping them honest, and I will even stipulate that there is a theoretical chance that the elongated pause between IFT 4 and 5 was not 100 percent politically influenced.

    SpaceX is playing with BIG stuff.
    Somebody SHOULD be watching them.

    MORE transparency will result in FEWER conspiracy theories.

    (See Also: FEMA)
     
  7. fuzzy1

    fuzzy1 Senior Member

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    All major space launch rockets have this capability. Well, at least the Western civilian ones. This is for the safety of people on the ground (or ocean surface) in case something goes badly wrong during launch.

    The self-destruct charge doesn't actually detonate the whole vehicle, but merely rips it open to spill liquid fuels, or to depressurize the combustion chamber of solid fuel motors. Though viewed from a distance, the results may look similar.

    Their targeted advertising is for their benefit, not yours. If successful, they will be guiding you to the choice that most benefits them, not you.

    And to having you pay the highest price they think you'll pay. This goes beyond common dynamic pricing, to individualized dynamic pricing. Learn what triggers each individual customer to buy, and what their price sensitivities. Don't let individual customers see prices lower than they are willing to pay. Figure out which individuals don't even look at price (like my late elderly dad in a grocery store) and charge them higher prices.
     
    #2167 fuzzy1, Oct 15, 2024 at 1:48 PM
    Last edited: Oct 15, 2024 at 2:28 PM
  8. Zeppo Shanski

    Zeppo Shanski Active Member

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    [<< What about a child with Type 1 Diabetes or other condition that requires a BT (or other) app? >>]


    Were there ever any children w/ Type 1 Diabetes before we all had cell phones?!? If there were ... how did they get along and survive?!?
     
  9. fuzzy1

    fuzzy1 Senior Member

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    I certainly hope you aren't so heartless and backwards as to force people to ditch modern improved medicine and revert to the older shorter-life-expectancy treatments.