UCMJ is very very different than civilian law in a lot of aspects, it's not at all outside the realm of possibility to have certain high-value areas adopt something like the above out of an abundance of caution.
yes. Otherwise you'd have no interest in having bodycams working. And in military in many situations it is pretty typical that de-facto one is guilty until proven innocent, so no new approach here.
If heroes are getting things done, it seems like it's possible. Wouldn't it make sense to study how the heroes are operating and try to make that part of the culture?
Yeah, HSV viruses in addition to the SARS viruses are well known ME/CFS triggers. It also appears with toxic mold syndrome and heavy metal stuff.
I suppose it’s theoretically possible for someone to get a IQ bump from HSV I think the correlation is more from selection criteria biased on severity.
There does seem to be a non-zero optimal for brain inflammations effect on IQ which could explain why smart kids have are likely to burn out when an existing predisposition to brain inflammation is made worse with age.
There were 141 deaths attributed to COVID last week. It was 838 in 2023, 1,678 in 2022, 3,694 in 2021, and 11,243 in 2020. This is practically gone away.
> CDC COVID-19 data surveillance has been a cornerstone of our response, and during the PHE, HHS had the authority to require lab test reporting for COVID-19. At the end of the COVID-19 PHE, HHS will no longer have this express authority to require this data from labs, which will affect the reporting of negative test results and impact the ability to calculate percent positivity for COVID-19 tests in some jurisdictions. Hospital data reporting will continue as required by the CMS conditions of participation through April 30, 2024, but reporting will be reduced from the current daily reporting to weekly.
"The martini may be simple, but it is not easy to make an excellent one. It's a very solid test of a bartender's skill because, unlike many drinks, ingredients alone cannot carry the cocktail. A piña colada for example, is mostly about ingredients (are you using a good coconut cream? fresh pineapple?) For the martini the chilling and dilution need to be just right. This tests the bartender's most important skill: mixing. Proper mixing of the beverage is ultimately what makes a martini."
[..]
"martinis are shockingly easy to fuck up. and this conversation is exactly the reason why the martini is a good test of a bartender's capability. being a bartender is more than putting fixed quantities of ingredients in a glass. how do you know when your martini is properly diluted, either by shaking or stirring? a good bartender will know. a bad bartender will not. a terrible bartender won't even realize dilution is crucial."
I don't really drink much and never had a martini in my life, but I thought it was pretty interesting.
True enough... Even in software, I was pretty amazed at how much of a filter of, here's a CSV, use one of N languages to load the data, do a check and output the valid entries to one file and the invalid inputs to an error file. You can use any libraries you like, please create a github repo and share with $ACCOUNT for your solution.
I know not everyone works with CSV necessarily, but there are dozens of libraries for a lot of languages. Even if focused on N being those supported in a given company/org. It should be less than an hour of work. Bonus points for any tests/automation, etc.