My mistake. Misread the comment while at work
My mistake. Misread the comment while at work
I love my 3 monitor setup 🥲
Fun fact! Glue is put into the cheese on pizza slices for promotional purposes. It’s what gets them that nice stringing stretching cheese on video.
Got any peer reviewed scientific evidence for your positions?
I’ve got both going for dual cloud backup. Immich is hosted local so I’ve got a backup at home, and I pay $5/month for 500GB storage with Google
It’s a pretty great tool. Downloaded the entirety of Murder Drones on Saturday to add to my Plex server. Strictly for preservation, going to re-watch on YouTube to support them
It’s a pretty good introduction for those who don’t care for swearing and sexual jokes. Better than Apples to Apples, I’d say. Could use room for improvement, I’ve been meaning to put together a combination of the full game and expansions that my whole family can play
I’d love to be on a GLP-1 (Ozempic, Wegovy, Mounjaro, etc). I’ve had Wegovy prescribed, but my plan excludes it and the others unless you have diabetes.
It’s definitely one of the current “trendy” prescriptions in the USA right now, which I hate since a lot of people are using them as “get thin quick” hacks that will fix their life. Being a 300lb guy without diabetes where general diet and exercise aren’t dropping the pounds, my prescriber said I’d be a perfect candidate for it.
Is this in regards to a specific recent event or article? Or just purely hypothetical?
In practice, an AI that’s trained on drug-drug interactions, duplicate therapies, and common dosings would be beneficial. We already have specialized models that are helping scientists discover groundbreaking technologies, such as recent advancements in discovering cancers years before we are used to with more traditional methods.
Let’s look at your hypothetical. Prescriber sends in an order to their in-house pharmacy for amoxicillin and the patient has a recorded penicillin allergy. Under ideal circumstances, the pharmacist would review the patients chart, note the potential for a reaction (While they are different antibiotics, there is still potential for a reaction due to the drugs being related), and contact the prescriber to verify therapy and discuss if a change to another antibiotic is in order. (This is all ignoring the fact that for an ear infection you’d likely get an otic ear drop, not an oral suspension. Something like Neo-Poly-Dex or ofloxacin).
Unfortunately the pharmacy hellscape we’re in today leads to rushed verifications, where therapies aren’t being checked too closely and many things get missed. Pharmacies already have systems in place to warn techs and pharmacists of any interactions with recorded allergies, but if you’re traveling or need to go to a new pharmacy or doctor, things get missed.
An AI that is trained on these specific things would help alleviate some of the pressure of the already overworked pharmacy staff, while giving consise and consistent information. If a pharmacist misses an allergy or interaction, the AI could send a warning to them and the prescriber.
Note that I’m referring to job specific AI, that are trained for specific purposes. A general LLM, which it sounds like you’re referring to, would not be able to work in these environments.
Source: I audit pharmacy claims, with training in retail, LTC, and PBM pharmacy settings. It’s literally my job to catch the errors (both billing and clinical) that pharmacies make.
It depends on your client. In Sync, you need to click into the post then the image to get full resolution. Clicking the image from the front page just blows up the thumbnail
Same, been using it long before it was bought by Microsoft. It has customizations I like, and (when it works properly) I can copy and paste between my phone and computer.
It’s hard to be non-biased. There’s not a single person who does not have a bias of some sort. The way people get bent out of shape over the bot makes me sad. It gives a decent starting point for anyone looking to start learning about the different biases and how different outlets report information. Of course it’s not a perfect bot or website it’s getting the info from, but it’s a valuable tool.
I did block it myself though. Sync gives large previews of links, so it did get a bit spammy. This could be disabled in the app’s settings, but it’s a feature I like so I can easily get to linked articles or videos. Wish I could turn it off for bots
To be fair, Oral-B doesn’t require an account. You can just use it as a normal electric toothbrush. I’d also say the Oral-B is a lot better than Sonicare in terms of cleaning
One of our systems at work won’t let you use the last thirteen passwords. And it makes you change it monthly.
You convinced my wife to go digging for them! Entire Box Row 1 Row 2 Row 3
I’d love to show you! Unfortunately they’re in storage at the moment
I collect spoons as a 30 year old. I think I picked it up from my grandma. Sadly gift shops rarely carry them anymore.
The following was added to my fstab
//192.168.86.181/TrixieTV /home/brobot/Storage/Completed/TV cifs credentials=/home/brobot/.smb 0 0 //192.168.86.181/TrixieMovies /home/brobot/Storage/Completed/Movies cifs credentials=/home/brobot/.smb 0 0
The credentials are using a new user ‘moose’ that owns the folders and has full control
user=moose password=3141
I’ll look into that, thanks!
We just had a total power outage, and restarting my main machine I remembered I have Linux Mint installed as duel boot. I’ve been waiting for a final push to get me to migrate away from Windows. Would it be easier to do all this from Linux Mint instead of Windows?
I’m in healthcare, and it would be such a huge HIPAA risk if this was rolled out to our users. I’m interested to see what the company will do with this new information. We’re Enterprise edition so I’d assume they have ultimate control over it being on our computers.