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14 votes
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Eli Lilly demonstrating saliva based hormone checking technology at CES
9 votes -
(PDF) Living happily ever after? The hidden health risks of Disney princesses.
16 votes -
Growing pollution in Pakistan’s Punjab province has sickened 1.8M people in a month, officials say
13 votes -
HIV/AIDs-centered camp in northern Minnesota is closing, and that's wonderful!
20 votes -
Louisiana forbids public health workers from promoting COVID, flu and mpox shots
33 votes -
More than 140 Kenya Facebook moderators diagnosed with severe PTSD
18 votes -
Medicare for all would save 68,000 US lives per year and reduce costs by $450 billion
78 votes -
Man suspected of killing UnitedHealthcare CEO is ordered held without bail after brief court appearance in Pennsylvania
74 votes -
It's time to break up Big Medicine in the US
33 votes -
Chatbots urged teen to self-harm, suggested murdering parents, Texas lawsuit says
24 votes -
Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield reverses US policy that would have limited anesthesia periods
44 votes -
Iceland's international reputation for gender equality comes with a striking caveat – new analysis shows about 40% of women have been sexually or physically assaulted, and many are grappling with PTSD
14 votes -
A bird flu pandemic would be one of the most foreseeable catastrophes in history
34 votes -
The CEO of UnitedHealthcare (insurance company) has been assassinated in New York City
105 votes -
A ‘yoga pill’ to end anxiety? Scientists find a brain circuit that instantly deflates stress.
15 votes -
Scientists are learning why ultra-processed foods are bad for you
38 votes -
We've got a lot of ways to go: Thoughts on World Toilet Day
9 votes -
Bladee's party lifestyle almost ended in disaster. Now, after a spell working in a shampoo factory, Sweden's dark teen icon is back with a furious and euphoric new sound.
13 votes -
Delhi shuts schools, bans construction as pollution levels hit new high
15 votes -
MomBoard: E-ink display for a parent with amnesia
52 votes -
Cycling typing
4 votes -
Is ADHD really that debilitating?
On another platform a female journalist warned other women not to use menstrual tracking apps. I worked in a co-op during college that sold very nice paper journals for tracking menstrual cycles....
On another platform a female journalist warned other women not to use menstrual tracking apps.
I worked in a co-op during college that sold very nice paper journals for tracking menstrual cycles. I replied to that thread mentioning that very nice specialized paper journals still exist.
Someone ( a man ) replied back to tell me that ADHD women have enough to deal with these days and proceeded to list all the ways something like that could fail.
I suggested sending emails to one's self along the lines of "update your diary" which someone could then read at home and take care of things.
Since I don't have ADHD my question is if people who do have ADHD really do find it to be that incapacitating?
I know it is an Internet thing to keep replying without a reason, even if it is only out of momentum. I'm wondering if that was the deal in that thread.
42 votes -
LGBTQ folks check-in thread - how're you all doing?
I don't want to rehash US election stuff here, but I wanted to make a space for fears and support, and idk, some community here for us. Don't feel obligated to focus on the US election, but if...
I don't want to rehash US election stuff here, but I wanted to make a space for fears and support, and idk, some community here for us. Don't feel obligated to focus on the US election, but if that's what you're dealing with it's an ok space for those feelings.
41 votes -
HPV vaccination: How the world can eliminate cervical cancer
23 votes -
Norwegian study shows microplastics in wastewater are shielding pathogens from being destroyed by treatment
13 votes -
‘Mild’ tofu, ‘mild’ carrots, ‘mild’ pine nuts: my five-year quest to understand German taste
30 votes -
E. coli outbreak linked to McDonald’s Quarter Pounders
45 votes -
US study on puberty blockers goes unpublished because of politics, doctor says
18 votes -
Local US health departments struggle to track human cases of bird flu
7 votes -
Declaration of Helsinki turns sixty – how this foundational document of medical ethics has stood the test of time
8 votes -
Character.AI faces US lawsuit after teen's suicide
31 votes -
A proposal for fixing the US healthcare system - discussion
24 votes -
Egypt declared malaria-free after 100-year effort
24 votes -
Danish initiative to support mothers with postpartum depression has provided a safe, nurturing environment for women to regain their sense of wellbeing through song
8 votes -
New study shows that hurricanes lead to excess mortality long after the storm has passed
20 votes -
In Canada, Brantford-area child dies from rabies after contact with a bat, health official says
27 votes -
Jordan becomes the first country to eliminate leprosy
21 votes -
Where can men go to become better men?
36 votes -
How Dave Grohl and Foo Fighters put actual lives at risk
23 votes -
Spotify co-founder Daniel Ek hopes his latest brainchild, the Neko Body Scan, will revolutionise healthcare
20 votes -
'I don’t want to die.' He needed mental health care. He found a ghost network.
30 votes -
Getting shorter and going hungrier: how children in the UK live today
17 votes -
Dogs bring loads of joy but also perils on a leash
25 votes -
What the death of Cohost tells me about my future on the internet
Cohost.org, an independent social media blogging platform, will be shutting down as early as next month. A lot of users are talking about how their time on Cohost changed the way they think about...
Cohost.org, an independent social media blogging platform, will be shutting down as early as next month. A lot of users are talking about how their time on Cohost changed the way they think about what an experience in an online community can be like in the modern age of the internet. People saying that they'd rather move forward with spending more time offline and with their hobbies than chasing the next social media site after Cohost's closure. I tend to agree.
After checking an old forum recently that I used to frequent in the heyday of internet forums, I found it filled with racist fear-mongering that is left unmoderated after the driving force of the community passed away half a decade ago. I wonder how much of the spirit of the old web we can realistically rekindle. If you're on Tildes, you probably know everything about the faults of giant social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or Reddit. Heck, the poor quality the YouTube comments section was a meme when YouTube was new. It was never good on those sites. Just tolerable and everybody was there so you kind of had no choice. Now, many of those platforms are self-imploding.
Cohost, like Tildes, created an atmosphere where you didn't feel like you were committing a moral wrongdoing by not immediately spewing scalding hot takes about current events, drama and conflicts. You were encouraged to write text that wasn't throwaway garbage. You could have meaningful conversations about issues and find an audience. Cohost was not without its flaws. People of colour in particular recently shared experiences of racist harassment on the site that was purely handled by moderation. But overall the takes I'm reading now is that most people will be able to look back on their time on Cohost fondly. I've seen people calling it "the Dreamcast of websites".
Cohost was a social media site that was a joy to visit for me and didn't put me on an edge by interacting with it. I could write posts, long-form posts without pressure to hit out another one-line zinger while a topic "is still relevant". I didn't see endless chains of subtweets that deliberately avoided explicitly mentioning the drama they were commenting on, lest the hate mob find their comment. I didn't get into that kind of unnerving cycle of "I don't know what this post is about, but the infrastructure of this social network suggests it's a moral failure to not chime in on the topic de jour, so I better get going and scan vile tweets for an hour to find out what's going on".
And before you say that this is only a Twitter problem, I have had pretty much exactly the same experiences on Mastodon and especially Bluesky. I feel the same in over-crowded Discord servers where it's very difficult to keep track of what's been talked about and what the current topic of discussion is. I feel the same on the few active forums that still exist, like resetera, where there's just posts upon posts that you're kind of expected to read before you chime in into a thread.
So where to go from here? I'm thinking about setting up my own proper blog, maybe hosted on an own website. That way I can continue to create long form posts about topics I want to. And bring back a little more of the spirit of the old internet. Cohost is dead, but there's no going back to me to doomscrolling. Today I set my phone to aggressively limit my daily usage of Reddit & Mastodon. I said the following when Twitter crashed and burned, but this time I'm not desperate, but genuine when I say: It's the end of the world as we know it, and I feel fine.
30 votes -
What toothpaste do you use?
Heavily inspired by last week's thread as well as my recent dental health kick, I'm looking for some toothpaste recommendations. Previously, I used an imported UK version of Sensodyne, because it...
Heavily inspired by last week's thread as well as my recent dental health kick, I'm looking for some toothpaste recommendations.
Previously, I used an imported UK version of Sensodyne, because it was the only way to get the version with novomin. I've run out of that stuff and have started using an interesting toothpaste I picked up from a Japanese store called AcessL from Sato Pharmaceuticals. It's got a unique herbal flavor to it that I like in small bits, but it's not great for my tongue because it's actually pretty salty-flavored, which turns me off of it.
33 votes -
Children under the age of two should not use any digital media, according to new recommendations from Sweden's public health agency
35 votes -
How a leading chain of US psychiatric hospitals traps patients
35 votes -
I went to Iceland for a road trip. I left with climate anxiety.
21 votes -
Ok seriously what the fuck do I do
if i chart my life happiness, fulfilment, success over the past four years, the trend is clearly downwards. some clear wins and stretches of improvement, some quite significant, which i am proud...
if i chart my life happiness, fulfilment, success over the past four years, the trend is clearly downwards. some clear wins and stretches of improvement, some quite significant, which i am proud of, but overall, i am getting worse and worse and worse. i attribute my problems mostly to two things: severe social isolation, and an extreme deficit of executive function. however i got here, i'm stuck with the fallout
my memory is bad, and my attention shot, so i kind of don't know what's happened emotionally. i know some focal points, though
this past march, i had a major depressive episode, and it feels like i spent most of a week doing nothing but crying, for no reason at all. i'm not sure how i fed myself
at the beginning of 2022, i quit my (very cushy and chill) job, which i had had for a little over a year at that point, because i felt like i was unmotivated and not actually doing work. (the facts are a bit more subtle; it was partly that the work itself was uninteresting to me, and they wanted to work with me to find something for me to do that i would find more interesting. i was going along with that, until a new opportunity appeared, which i jumped for because i wanted to be able to make a clean break. that opportunity immediately fell through.) i had been living with my parents until shortly before, so i had a lot of savings
now, i find myself in a similar situation, only much more dire. a friend got me a job working with smart people on interesting problems. i have not been doing well. i have been extremely uncommunicative. the pattern is clear: i talk to people, flex my technical chops; they are impressed and like me a lot. then i'm not very productive, and my output slowly deteriorates to nil. i think i just can't do wfh tech work. last week was a blur. i don't know what happened at all. i don't think i've checked slack in close to two weeks, and atp i'm a little bit afraid to. two weeks ago, i asked my friend/coworker to poke me every day to make sure i was doing something. it seemed and still seems like a good strategy. and then a day or two after i asked him that i just dropped off the map again
i'm not addicted to drugs or video games. it seems like i ought to be. i am a bit drunk right now, but that is quite irregular
recently, i thought i'd finally made a close friend. this morning, she broke up with me and blocked me for a really really stupid reason. i am really hurt by that, and it makes me feel a bit hopeless about the whole thing. spent the afternoon crying about it and now just feel a bit numb. i give it decent odds she comes back, but. i know one problem i have is putting my eggs in too few baskets. but there are so few baskets that seem worth investing in, and investment is so hard
she suggested i try to get prescribed add medication for my work problems, and was going to give me some illicitly to see if it helped. the latter is not happening anymore, of course. and i cannot stomach the medical system (already i have other things i have been putting off talking to my doctor about for a while), not to mention that it would take forever to do anything for me
i don't know what to do in the short to medium term. i don't know what to say to my work that i haven't said already, other than: clearly, i am just incapable of doing this. i am not super financially stable right now, and being without a job seems like a bad idea
54 votes