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All animations are just wasted time while you can't properly interact with the UI, it's much better to just turn every one of them off.

Psychiatrists are useless because LLMs don't respond to drugs, psychologists are also useless because LLMs don't learn.

The only actually serious one on that list is Covid, and the title and the nyt are lying, they declared an international emergency, not a global one, there is no chance this spreads outside of sub-saharan Africa.


>The only actually serious one on that list

Based on what? The final body count?

This isn't a weather forecast, people and ressources flew towards making sure these emergencies didn't spiral into global pandemics.

You are falling face first into the preparedness paradox.


How much effort was thrown at each one in dollars or hours? Can you fill in that context?


The flu kills 300-500k every year, and did not make the list, while absolute bullshit like Zika and Monkey pox did.


Death by infected count, and level of infectious ess both matter. Flue kills more, but its also a lower death per infected count. This is why comparing COVID to flu was a statistic only pursued by those with a wilful misunderstanding.


Flu kills mostly babies and elders, ebola kills at any age. Hence the logistical and cultural and societal impact are nothing alike.


> only actually serious one on that list is Covid

That's the only one on the list that turned into a pandemic emergency.

> they declared an international emergency, not a global one

...you're mincing words in a silly way.

> there is no chance this spreads outside of sub-saharan Africa

Not what the public-health experts are saying! We currently don't actually know where it's gone. Given multi-week incubation periods, we won't know for a couple weeks where it is right now.

Keep in mind that eastern DRC and South Sudan are host to multiple internationalised conflicts right now. There are easy ways this could spread to the Gulf, Russia, America or Asia through troops and trade.


Ebola will never create an epidemic anywhere with a working health care system. And it's not mincing words, a few countries on a single continent is not global in any form, the WHO never said global, that's just something the nyt made up.


What constitutes a working health system? I would say the definition varies wildly.


In this case, it'd be one that says "if you're going to allow people from those countries to enter your country make sure they're quarantined until clear" without being stopped by "it so nazi racist"


> and why left handed sugar is perfect for diet sodas

If you want to get diarrhea.


In an OoO CPU it won't even hit an execution unit because it's handled as a dependency chain break.


You could buy a 8087 for your 8086 or 8088, the 486DX just moved it on chip.


Be that as it may, carpet bombing has a specific meaning, and it's not bombing one's not on board with.


In the context of Iran I agree with you.

Not so sure about South Lebanon. From whatever media coverage I saw, some look not that different from carpet bombing.


Aarch64 is just 15 years old, and shares pretty much nothing with 32 bit arms apart from the name.


I haven't seen a single firefox or chrome crash in months now, you should really stress-test your hardware.


I can't recall a single Firefox crash in at least a decade. What are people doing? I run ublock origin, nothing else. I do sometimes have Firefox mobile misbehave where it stops loading new pages and I jave to restart it, but open pages work normally as do all other operations, so not a crash exactly. Happens maybe once a month

Edit: more context, I power cycle at least once a week on desktop and the version is typically a bit behind new. I also don't have more tabs open than will fit in the row. All these habits seem likely to decrease crashes.


We have 5 computers running Firefox. One computer has regular Firefox crashes. I've done some memory testing that didn't detect anything wrong.

I've tried all kinds of things software-wise but keep getting random crashes.

I wonder if I should do a longer memory test, maybe some CPU stress testing at the same time...


If you want to dig into it, you can post a bunch of that computer's crash reports (navigate to about:crashes) on bugzilla: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/enter_bug.cgi?product=Firefox&c...

Or you can view several of them and see if there's a common pattern in the "Signature" field. Firefox really should only be regularly crashing if: (1) there's a real bug and the thing that triggers it, (2) you're running out of memory, or (3) you have hardware.

I don't know what the odds of faulty hardware are for a randomly chosen user, but they're much higher for a randomly chosen user who is seeing regular crashes.


Yeah. Lately even if I OOM my system, firefox doesn't crash so easily, individual tabs do.


For me, OOM effectively crashes my system 90% of the time, usually caused by firefox (chromium too), if a website goes out of control (rarely it's caused by too many pages open, as tab discarding takes care of that).


And there's an app for that, aptly named stressapptest (originally developed by google). In the (now distant) past, I found it to be much more efficient (in terms of runtime until fault detected) and effective in finding memory related (RAM chips or memory controller) defects than memtest.


firefox crashes... decently often for me, but it's usually pretty clear what the cause is [having a bunch of other programs open]. every time i can recall my computer bluescreening [in the last year~, since that's how long ive had it] it was because of firefox tho.

this may have something to do with the fact that my laptop is from 2017, however.


firefox should not be able to cause a bluescreen, that is a bug somewhere in the kernel (drivers)


That was Zen 1, the later ones don't have per chiplet memory controllers, it's all on the single IO die, and they are not NUMA for a single socket.


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