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Cake day: June 19th, 2023

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  • Eh, there’s some things that carry a stigma. Roaches are garbage dwellers, and it’s hard to shake that, even if the ones used to make the “milk” are rigidly contained and fed.

    People tend to think of insect foods as “free range”, where someone just scoops a bunch up, even though that’s far from the truth. Any of the insects used for human consumption can’t be free range because they just don’t stay that close together in the wild. You can’t farm bugs the way you can chickens, letting them roam and taking what you need.

    You have to farm them in containers, feeding them with something that’s generally going to be at least as clean as chicken feed. Not necessarily because doing otherwise is gross, but because you can’t risk losing your entire stock because you let a pathogen into them via bad food practices. And that’s true even when you’re farming the bugs as pet food of fish bait.

    That being said, I’d pass on roach anything. I’ve smelled roaches that were being raised as pet food. No way am I putting that in my mouth. Even crickets smell better, and they tend to be funky. Strangely, mealworms smell less, but taste worse than crickets. But the smell of roaches is bad, not just strong the way crickets are. Well, bad to me at least, that’s a subjective thing. Smell is usually a very big part of perceived taste, and nothing that bad smelling is going to taste good.


  • Well, the problem is that the kind of brace you’d want has to be shaped by hand right now.

    3d printing will likely get there eventually, but turning out a chest/back brace that’s not only effective but wearable is as much an art as anything else.

    I’m not sure where someone without training would get started. Orthotists and prosthetists are specialists; orthotics is a master’s program, and that’s the kind of endeavor your desired brace is.

    It’s doable for sure; though whether it’s practical to recreate the decades of research and experimentation that led to where orthotics is today is a different issue.

    Iirc, you’d start with thermoplastics, I can’t recall the ones that are used. But they’re shaped by mold, taken from the patient directly, then adjusted during fittings so that there’s no/less issues with long term use. And you can’t just skip the kind of shaping needed. Afaik, nobody is printing orthotics yet. Casts, yes, though that’s fairly new; but those are short term use, so don’t require the same kind of fitting.

    I’ve seen, and been present during fittings for, braces for scoliosis, which is going to be similar to the kind of orthotic you’d need.

    If you decide to go the home brew route, you’d want to start with a plaster cast of your torso. Best way to go, so you can have a solid form to shape whatever material you go with.

    TPU was a common material back when I was still a caregiver, though that has been over a decade ago now, so it may have been supplanted by other thermoplastics.

    Carbon fiber was starting to be used back then, but it tends to be too rigid for applications like a torso piece. Maybe with enough foam in between you and the rigid parts, but at that point, why not just go with something less expensive, and more flexible? Iirc, CF was being used for things like leg and ankle orthotics where they’d be bearing weight and need the extra rigidity.

    I know that there was CAD based modelling and fast prototyping being done for orthotics, but it was mainly useful in prosthetics, where they could make reproducible units that would then be customized.

    Tbh, I would try finding an orthotist irl to meet with and brainstorm. Even if they can’t/won’t help you make your own gear, they’ll likely still warn you off of really bad ideas.

    That’s at least in part because you say you have little interest in medical or anatomical study, and that’s what you need if you want your end device to do the job you want. You just can’t fine tune a torso brace without understanding the musculoskeletal system in that area, and what you’ll need to avoid doing.

    Like, the curvature of the spine. It may seem like you could just mold your body and make the brace conform to that. But, if the goal is to give support to part of your body, the brace has to apply pressure to your body applying it at the wrong place, or in the wrong way could make things worse. So if you don’t have the time/interest/willingness to gain the level of understanding of anatomy to achieve that, you’ll be better off consulting with someone that already has that knowledge. It’s kinda like self surgery, there’s only so much you can do blind without causing problems worse than what you’re trying to fix.


  • The first one or the new one?

    Haven’t seen the new one.

    The first one though? Fucking awesome.

    The important thing to me is that, even if someone has no idea about the Joker as a character could watch the movie and see an incredibly well made movie. It’s a great story, the acting is world class, the way it was shot brings depth and emotion to every scene, and the details of the writing are unusually good.

    As an example of the last, the background characters, and people with only one line, they have similar ways of speaking, a distinct almost accent in the way the lines are arranged. It ends up feeling like everyone in the movie is from the same place. You know how you go to a city, and there’s turns of phrase, word choices that show up, even when different parts of the city have their own accent? That’s what I’m talking about. Even De Niro’s distinct way of speaking shifts to feeling like his character is from the same city as the clowns.

    But, as a joker movie, it’s just as successful. It tells his origin story from a fresh perspective. It does so in a way that even as someone that’s complained about comic based movies doing origin stories instead of just telling a good story with the character/s, I was riveted. I am absolutely fine with the movie being another origin story because it’s just that damn good.

    If that’s the one you’re asking about, watch it. Even if you end up not enjoying it as much as I did, you’ll at least have seen a movie that’s crafted the way a movie should be.


  • Well, I had been taught about Munich and Ribbentrop in public school, both during standard history classes (though they were only mentioned in passing during US history, as part of the background of what happened before the U.S. joined in)

    The famine, I didn’t hear about until maybe fifteen to twenty years ago. Can’t pin it down exactly because of shit that was going on in my life at the time, but it was something I read about in one of the books on ww2 that covered events outside of Europe and the Pacific theater.

    And I’ve seen many a debate about the degree to which Great Britain was responsible for it.

    But, I’d have to say that none of them are exactly high on the list of what the average person remembers about the era. Most people I’ve even mentioned Molotov-Ribbentrop to had no idea what it is. They maybe remember hearing the words in school, but didn’t pay enough attention to link them to anything. The Munich agreement is pretty much unfamiliar to anyone that didn’t have an interest in ww2 beyond high school history. And the famine is outside of what most people that do have an interest care about. The only books I have on the subject of ww2 don’t mention the famine at all.

    Ww2 is far enough in the past now that most of us no longer know anyone that fought in the war. It’s passed into the kind of history that’s “dead”. Even though we all, everywhere still live with the ripples in world events that started then, it might as well be aztec history as far as the typical person here in the US is concerned. Even my generation, that had grandparents that were alive during the war, or fought in the war, the interest is largely no greater than surface level.

    And I’m not sure that the details like the two pacts really do matter now. They’re not anything that affects us still, unlike a lot of of events of the war. IMO, the famine is more important since it was a much broader event. Depending on how you look at it, the famine shaped a lot of events for India as a whole in ways that neither agreement did for Europe.


  • Well, fwiw, that kid wasn’t playing doctor, which is inherently a mutual event. That is a normal thing, a mutual exploitation of bodies.

    That’s not what you call what happened to you. What it was is called child on child abuse. It’s a common enough thing, but using the normal for it would be inaccurate in any common usage of the word.

    It is, sadly, not even that rare in the extreme nature of what you suffered.

    Not only that, but chances are very high that you’re exactly right about it being him reacting to previous abuse he suffered. Which doesn’t make it any better, but maybe it can serve as another point of support for your feelings being validated. The cycle of abuse is a very real thing. Not that there aren’t kids that have the ability to be horrible, there are, but it’s more likely to have been something he learned.

    Nothing anyone here can say will really make it better. The best we can offer is validation that your feelings, your pain is not you being over sensitive. There is no world in which what happened to you is anything but horrible. I would go as far as to say that anyone being dismissive of your experience would be committing a different form of abuse.

    Being pressured into sexual activity is abuse, it is rape. No qualifiers. Being threatened with a knife, even when the threat wasn’t to hurt you with it, is definitely rape.

    Ma’am, I’m sorry you experienced all of it, and any of it. Nobody should have to go through that, much less a child.

    All I can hope is that you getting this off your chest helps a little. I could wish it helps a lot, but trauma like that tends to be healed in small steps.

    I’ll repeat this again, because I think it is what you are seeking right this moment, from this post. Your experience, your interpretation of it as abuse is 100% right. Anybody that says otherwise isn’t worth the air it would take them to say it.






  • Pirate it.

    The only important concern about consuming the work of a douchebag is them gaining from it.

    Now, you may or may not be able to ignore the person having done shitty things, it might break your enjoyment of it. That tends to be more of a problem with actors and comedians because you see them, rather than their work.

    Seriously, the idea that a given body of work is somehow bad because the person or persons that made it are bad is bullshit.

    Cosby is a harder because a lot of his comedy, and the show, were based on him, portraying himself as this decent, fatherly, nice person. Him being a douche the entire time, knowing what we know now, it can be dissonant to see him being a dad, or joking about his wife. Someone like Louis CK, he was never portrayed as some kind of paragon, so it’s easy to just enjoy his work as it is since there’s no “wait a minute” inherent to his performance. You might still have trouble not picturing him being a creep with his dick in his hand, but the jokes aren’t him pretending to be some upright, moral human.

    Art and artist are always separate when piracy is an option.


  • In general, it isn’t about waiting for prices to drop, though that’s definitely a part. It’s more about avoiding early adoption, imo. Waiting until there’s some degree of information about the game that isn’t marketing, then deciding.

    The goal is to make sure the game is stable, that it’s something you actually want to play, and avoiding hype based playing. If the price drops, or there’s a sale, that’s icing on the cake.

    In the case of visual novels, I don’t really think it applies. The only thing you’ll really avoid by waiting is any bugs that need fixing, and they aren’t prone to a lot of bugs that break the enjoyment of the story. It does happen, but it isn’t like the usual mobile game bugfest at launches.



  • Eh, disgusting is subjective, but there’s never only one person with a given opinion, particularly when it comes to food.

    Uncooked meat can actually be delicious though, so it’s kind of a double subjective lol.

    While it isn’t anything I have regularly, I tend to favor some steal cuts “blue”, which is essentially uncooked at all in the middle. Steak tartare is uncooked. Sashimi exists, and is amazing. Then there’s stuff like ceviche that’s not truly raw, but isn’t cooked with heat.

    The list of raw meat foods could keep going, it’s not an uncommon thing.

    Beyond that, you can’t really go by photographs for whether or not something actually matches visually. Raw meat and cured meats often do look similar in color, but not in texture. Not that color really matches, but it’s usually close enough to fool the eye depending on lighting and the film/sensor.

    Again though, whether or not a pile of raw meat would be disgusting is indeed something that you’ll find plenty of people on either side of. And you’d likely find people that see this picture and think it looks raw, at least at first glance (it really doesn’t once you pay attention to the variations in color across the slices).



  • There really isn’t much in the way of empirical evidence regarding this. It would be difficult to set up studies and experiments to even get to get that evidence.

    So, you’re stuck with anecdotal info.

    On that level, absolutely. I did health care as my main job from 92 until 2008. Nurse’s assistant.

    During that time, my two biggest patient bases were geriatric and hospice. People that were dying, in other words.

    The patients that had no dementia lasted longer than the ones that did, in terms of time from needing an NA to keep them cared for to time of death. The ones that had a goal, a thing they wanted to see happen, or to do, absolutely did better not only in terms of time, but in how they managed their life until they died.

    Something as nebulous as “will”, that we don’t even have a way to quantify at all is difficult to impossible to credit with anything at all. But we know that the mind and body influence each other. But I am convinced that we have some ability to maintain our lives to some degree in extremis. The only question is how much, and how much of that is individual.

    Looking back at all of it, things blur, but there were so many patients with terminal cancer that just didn’t die while moving towards a goal, that died within days of that goal being met. And it really didn’t matter what that goal was. Could be something as minor as seeing crocuses bloom again, to something like seeing their child married or graduated. But it happened so fucking often it’s a little scary.




  • Eh, up votes are just as likely to be an “I agree/like” rather than a topicality, importance, or quality indicator. And it’s just as likely to be done without any engagement worth seeing.

    This is also a way to form bubbles/echo chambers since sorting by anything but new will surface just the stuff most agreed with.

    If down votes are broken, then all votes are broken. The only way for voting to be not broken is to have them not change what all users see. You’d have to use some other metric for sorting that isn’t time based, and specifically exclude any vote based sorting at all.

    Which is entirely possible, and I think that’s the way it should be. Keep votes because they work to filter out useless comments to some degree, but don’t let them matter.