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13 votes
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Six distinct types of depression identified in Stanford Medicine-led study
51 votes -
IVF alone can’t save us from a looming fertility crisis
20 votes -
u/RNG investigates bitcoin town
EDIT: Album available here Note: I'm writing this post as I go through my day, taking note of anything interesting. I try to do this with my diary, however for once I'll actually share my thoughts...
EDIT: Album available here
Note: I'm writing this post as I go through my day, taking note of anything interesting. I try to do this with my diary, however for once I'll actually share my thoughts with strangers.
This was inspired by u/arqalite's post on the topic.
I'm not a journalist. I didn't even take a class on journalism in college. I'm also not a writer, but at least my text is human generated. I have an audiobook I need to catch up on and a day to spare, so I'm going to bitcoin town.
I'm not a crypto guy, but I'm not going because I think Bitcoin is bad (even though it is). I'm going because I'm curious: how loud is this bitcoin mine really? When I read the initial post I wondered about the nocebo effect, Havana Syndrome, sociogenic illness, etc. Most of the reports are anecdotes of locals, and the null hypothesis doesn't make for a sharable news article.
I'm using this app "Sound Meter" to see how loud it is in my small suburban house. It peaks at 40dB. If you, like me, don't think in decibels, Google says that's as loud as a refrigerator hum. I'm skeptical about the accuracy of a phone app, but it's what I have.
Outside my house there are some birds loudly chirping. I would have missed their song if I wasn't writing this. I decide that I should take a measurement. The app reads 55dB. Google says it's the loudness of a residential street. Spot on.
I'm entering Granbury, TX and a massive American flag hanging from a crane greets me along with a pro-Trump billboard. There's a large lake running through the town. Seems like every house has a dock. Lot's of folks on boats and jet skis are visible.
Downtown is an old court building with a clock tower. The streets are lined with mom-and-pop shops for furniture, clothing, and trinkets. To my surprise, there are a lot of shoppers here with arms full of bags. They seem cheerful. They are all white.
The GPS takes me outside the city limits. I stop at a gas station a half-mile from the mine. I ask a couple of people about the mine while I grab a water. They've never heard of a bitcoin mine, and didn't know there was one around here.
As I approach the destination, the bitcoin mine looms over the horizon. The sheer size of the facility cannot be overstated. This facility looks like it should be pursuing some massive scientific endeavor. I wouldn't guess in a million years that all of this infrastructure exists to mine bitcoin. My car reads 98°F (what I expected based on forecast.) I imagine cooling systems will be as loud as one can expect on a day like today. And yes, it is loud.
Across the way, I see signs saying "Bitcoin sux" and "Bitcoin Noisehood". I take a lot of photos. I pull out "Sound Meter" and take measurements. It consistently reads 81-83dB, peaking at 88dB. Google says 85dB is the limit of safe hearing, and is comparable to the sound of a snowblower. This seems perfectly accurate to me. I'd be pissed if I lived across from this place.
I'll be in Granbury for the next hour or so, if anyone has a specific question about the mine I'll see if I can answer it. I took a lot of photos if there is interest.
121 votes -
World’s first larynx transplant restores voice of a cancer patient
12 votes -
When medical tech can keep us alive, families face tough choices
14 votes -
The US surgeon general wants tobacco-like warning labels on social media
28 votes -
Buoyed by regulatory vacuums, Silicon Valley is building a booming online wellness market that aims to leave the doctor’s office behind
17 votes -
UK's NHS computer problems put patients at risk of harm
5 votes -
Cyberattack forces major US health care network to divert ambulances from hospitals
17 votes -
Many widely used reproductive health apps fail to protect highly sensitive data, study finds
33 votes -
Ontario family doctor says new AI notetaking saved her job
18 votes -
Enzymes open new path to universal donor blood
12 votes -
HHS strengthens privacy of US reproductive health care data
10 votes -
US medical providers still grappling with UnitedHealth cyberattack
9 votes -
US biotech executive sentenced to seven years in jail for COVID test fraud
18 votes -
Here are thirteen other explanations for the adolescent mental health crisis. None of them work.
17 votes -
HIV in cell culture can be completely eliminated using CRISPR-Cas gene editing technology, increasing hopes of cure
18 votes -
‘We’re hemorrhaging money’: US health clinics try to stay open after unprecedented cyberattack
31 votes -
Annoying hospital beeps are causing hundreds of deaths a year
27 votes -
US prescription market hamstrung for nine days (so far) by ransomware attack
39 votes -
UK's NHS faces legal action over contract with data firm Palantir
12 votes -
Vibrating capsule developed as an obesity treatment
19 votes -
AI may spare breast cancer patients unnecessary treatments
5 votes -
Using NLP to detect mental health crises
7 votes -
A new AI model can predict human lifespan, researchers say. They want to make sure it’s used for good.
13 votes -
A groundbreaking prosthetic enables amputees to experience sensation. Professor Max Ortiz-Catalan explains the implantation process of these mind-controlled bionic arms.
13 votes -
Calorie counting app of choice?
Platform: Android What is your calorie counting/meal planning application of choice? Looking for something simple and hyper-focused on calorie counting, and I'm ok with a bit of macro tracking,...
Platform: Android
What is your calorie counting/meal planning application of choice? Looking for something simple and hyper-focused on calorie counting, and I'm ok with a bit of macro tracking, however that's all I want it to do - no feature creep into other wellness/fitness goals and coaching, etc.
I'm fine with paying (as long as it's reasonable) for a simple application without a ton of ads that does this one thing really well.
Suggestions?
16 votes -
Neuralink competitor Precision Neuroscience buys factory to build its brain implants
14 votes -
How to regulate AI? Bioethicist David Magnus on medicine’s critical moment.
4 votes -
NarxCare score may influence who can get or prescribe pain medication
16 votes -
AI has helped radiologists detect 20% more cases of breast cancer during screenings, new Swedish study finds
25 votes -
Artificial intelligence versus human-controlled doctor in virtual reality simulation for sepsis team training: Randomized controlled study
10 votes -
Thermo Fisher Scientific settles with family of Henrietta Lacks, whose HeLa cells uphold medicine
26 votes -
US health insurance giant Cigna sued over algorithm allegedly used to deny coverage to hundreds of thousands of patients
27 votes -
How UnitedHealth’s US acquisition of a popular Medicare Advantage algorithm sparked internal dissent over denied care
14 votes -
Weight obsession is ruining everyone’s health
38 votes -
Which apps do you use for your mental health and wellbeing, if any?
I have lost my r/finch community, and am feeling curious to see if there are any folks here who also find apps can be helpful for their mental health. I struggle with anxiety and am processing a...
I have lost my r/finch community, and am feeling curious to see if there are any folks here who also find apps can be helpful for their mental health.
I struggle with anxiety and am processing a lot of grief, and may or may not have ADHD (I am in the process of getting tested, but it takes a while). My experiences with therapy are a bit mixed, so I am currently going down the route of trying to DIY my wellness a little. Starting simple with things like, sleep more, try to focus on drinking enough, go out in nature, switching off podcasts and phones and reading more. It's actually helped me, bit by bit.
One of my 'tools' is an app called finch, a virtual pet that encourages you to set goals, check in how you are feeling, journal, do mindful breathing and such. I tried many things and this app is the one that stuck and actually works.
Just wanted to ask, do any others here use wellness apps? And have they worked for you? Which do you recommend?
Just to be clear, I mean apps that work as a stand alone solution, rather than apps like 'better help' which ultimately just connect you to a therapist. Although Better Help has its uses too!
30 votes -
Touchlab has launched a first-of-its-kind robot which gives clinicians the ability to 'feel' patients remotely as part of a Finnish hospital pilot
8 votes -
I’m an ER doctor. Here’s how I’m already using ChatGPT to help treat patients.
14 votes -
One-hour operation could cure prostate cancer by destroying tumours with electric currents
11 votes -
Cerebral admits to sharing US patient data with Meta, TikTok, and Google
12 votes -
Could ultrasound replace the stethoscope?
3 votes -
Age that kids acquire mobile phones not linked to well-being, says Stanford Medicine study
16 votes -
Medical selfies
5 votes -
Sony releases its first over-the-counter hearing aids in the US
8 votes -
Denmark is using Patient Reported Outcome questionnaires to improve medical care – can the patient's perception of the disease become part of the treatment?
4 votes -
The underserved market of menopause
3 votes -
US Federal law now requires distribution of complete healthcare records to patients in digital formats
11 votes -
The amazing power of "machine eyes"
6 votes