They’d have to pay me seven figures to put up with that.
They’d have to pay me seven figures to put up with that.
It would me too. Especially close to sunset or after dark.
In the South, I’d bet good money it was just a local hunter playing a prank. That said, there is also some weird stuff in certain areas, so who knows?
I’m not suggesting that you should. But if the government that controls a TLD is not trusted, then no site under that TLD should be trusted either.
So they have yet another year to figure out new malicious compliance? Just fine them or ban them and get on with it.
Bless you. I do have them blocked. I don’t need the aggravation in my life.
If you trust the government that controls a TLD, then use the site. If not, proceed with caution.
Yeah, it is. We used to say they were taking a break, but I guess that didn’t sound urgent enough.
Substack really will publish anything, won’t they?
As usual, chasing profit rather than curing disease or improving lives
Great points and I agree. The tiny non-representative sample, which I missed so thanks, should make it difficult even to use this for framing the hypothesis of a proper study.
I still suspect that cost is a major barrier in seeking care. Until we address that, it won’t matter what we do about the other factors.
Good to know. Thanks!
It would also be nice if there were a way to use them anonymously. ChatGPT seems to allow this, but I’m not entirely comfortable with OpenAI.
I only have time to scan the article, but did they control for cost? That would seem to be a primary deterrent for anyone seeking any kind of medical help in the US. We simply can’t afford treatment even with insurance and can’t risk becoming trapped in our profit-making medical-industrial complex with unstoppable lifetime prescription drugs.
Isn’t that a proponent?
Not defending hurtful remarks, but any polyglot knows that context and culture are everything and that dictionary translations are rarely entirely accurate. I’d rather know what he actually said with credible interpretation than some social media screed based on Google Translate’s version.
So has this been addressed in OS updates?
Tomshardware is a blog, not journalism. It seems to be a generally credible blog (passes the CRAAP test), but it’s still just a blog.
That said, sadly, I have to agree about the general state of almost all US-based “journalism” these days. About 90% of headlines today would have gotten the editor fired on the spot in my newsroom. That was a point of strong disagreement between me and the station manager, and It’s one of the major reasons that I left the field.
Short of buying the IP catalog, Microsoft seems to be doing right here.