I completely agree. It’s shameful that the existing open source DIY projects have to be careful about how useful they allow themselves to become. Thankfully, some of their principles have been picked up by the industry, but it’s taken too long.
A lot of harm is done to diabetics by denying them better treatments and tools in the name of avoiding extreme highs and lows.
In the self-care continuum, where would you place yourself or how do you define it? I hope such insight may help in the constructive exchange of ideas valued in this forum.
I have a friend who has to regularly go to Europe to replace her implantable pump. It's not approved in America because the bureaucrats haven't gotten around to it. So long as there's no false advertising, let people try treatments that work for them, even if there's risk. Said friend has enough money that she's okay, but most others aren't so lucky.
I dated someone with an external pump. It came off one day and caused so many problems. Just slid from sitting on the couch to the floor watching tv and the cushion caught the pump and broke it off.
I immediately thought that type of failure should be recoverable without a hospital visit and surgery and tried to figure out why it wasn't.
My mind immediately set to making it so and was held back by the fear I could go to prison for practicing medicine without a license.
"I love you. I wish I could fix you. I could fix you."
There are some other options. I use a pump (OmniPod) that is entirely attached to my body. There's a small plastic pod that's taped to the skin and operated wirelessly.
My chief complaint is that the FDA is overly restrictive. They force manufacturers to make the products expire earlier to head off concerns about them working less efficiently near the end of the cycle. Diabetes is a disease who's treatment is entirely about guesstimating but the FDA does not take that into account when approving devices.
So, who is at fault when you die or who pays when you wind up in the hospital?
This isn't theoretical--someone already wound up in the hospital "hacking their diabetes". And the FDA came down on the companies involved in manufacturing the devices--even though they had NO involvement.
I'm sympathetic and recognize that modern technology could be doing MUCH more for diabetic patients. However, my measure of importance is how much money is being thrown at the problem. And there simply doesn't appear to be very much money being tossed around for a medical system that will have to go through FDA approval.
Now the question is, when you kill your children or family because you're doing medical experiments to try to cure them, who's at fault?
Because there are people and groups drinking bleach and treating it as a cure-all for diseases. I don't think going back to the old American Wild West of snake oil selling for diseases is a good idea.
Steel shot is required by law to hunt water fowl in U.S.A. The lead shot falls in the water. It's eaten by fish then eaten by eagles or waterfowl that are then eaten by people, so it's easy to find in any gun sport shop.
Rifle bullets are mostly either lead, which leaves lead residue on the machines parts and causes jams as the tolerances decline. Thus lead coated with copper is superior technology and more reliable but more expensive to boot. It doesn't mushroom as much but the velocities are higher. Plus rifles aren't used around water do they are much less likely to end up in the food supply and this legal for hunting.
>In the mid-twentieth century, when the economy was composed of oligopolies, the only way to the top was by playing their game. But it's not true now.
It is still true. A FAANG job is the easiest path for a engineer to millionaire status in about 5 - 10 years.
The interview process is eminently hackable.
Or perhaps you want to do a startup, get funding. You build a this for that .com. Do some social media, find a few users who love it. Read pg's advice, pitch deck advice, go to some demo days.
Hack the test. Get funding. The incubators, the vc fiends are themselves, oligopolic. A handful of firms with common expectations. Mmr. Hockey stick user growth. It's the team! Here's your A good chap.
Those are the tests here. But there are other ways to get an A+. You don't have to start a business the way software people start a business. You can do it like the cabinet maker, or the electrician, or the store owner.
You can buy one increasingly easier today because the baby boomers who started than decades ago want to retire. Imagine how you can take that business into the future with the software you can use to automate it.
Business brokers abound. Go talk to one.
Stop thinking go big or go home.
Go talk to a business broker. Go ask about owner absent business options. Residual income and you didn't even have to be there. Use automation to make the employees lives better and more prodictive. And your customers' lives.
Package that software you write into a SaaS and sell it to you competitors. Profit more.
> regulations are increasingly forcing businesses to write at least some parts of their last will and testament.
Human persons do this. What happens to our data? Our hardware that depends on the cloud.
Small software companies have source code escrow because large customers require it. Large companies not so much, even though vc backed startups are more at risk.
We tend to think companies outlive people but today it feels the opposite. Growing jobs for endineers.
We should pay the most for those jobs. Instead those who move money from this account to that account our convince people to spend more money than they need to make the most. Fake work.
As radical as this sounds, there might actually be something to it.
Service and social jobs are usually those "closest to the base", being in constant contact with people from all walks of life, while at the same time usually the least well paid.
That's a lot of exposure compared to many other jobs, in particular, desk jobs and pretty much most management and executive positions.
Imho the importance of such real in flesh contact to other people, across peer groups, is vastly underestimated these days.
The ever-present social media gives digitally affine people often the misleading idea they can find everybody, with all their issues and opinions, online but from my experience that just holds not true.
There's plenty of people out there that don't even know what Facebook is, as unbelievable as that might sound.
Hypothesis: McDonald's pays brilliant automation or engineering type minds to do difficult to automate work like we are discussing here. Big salaries. Only part time. The other half is spent on the engineering. Make these jobs sought after.
Slowly the org transitions to much higher paid people in these roles across the board.
I think part of it is mgmt types think they save money reducing wages for the most numerous type of employee and it creates a black hole race to the bottom.
High end restaurants have very well paid front of house because they have a financial incentive to perform. Cashiers don't.
I begged to job shadow the future users of my software at my last job and I was told there not enough time.We are all too busy. Keep your head down. Do what you're told.
But I'll be able to understand their job better and what the software really needs to do to make than more efficient and productive. They'll appreciate that and be more likely to buy in and adapt to the product they'll be using.
That's not your job. Your job is to implement the features you're told to implement.
But the users saw those features and said that is not what they asked for.
So? Why do you care if the project fails? It's not on you if it fails. Just do what the BA's said to do.
Boss, they aren't translating the business needs correctly. We have to rebuild features 2 or 3 or 4 times. Is we could see what they do and talk to them it'd only take once. That's happened a couple times during user acceptance. They said that's not what what we asked for. I said what did you ask for? I coded it right there on the spot and they signed off on the user story.
Go back to work. I'm busy. This isn't a productive conversation.
I live in the pnw and have lots of really good friends. Only moved here a few years ago but have found more acceptance and deep connections here than the south.
It's taken those years to break through the shells but people repeatedly tell me they like hanging out with me because I listen. I empathize. I'm genuine. I'm authentic.
You have to be real. Be committed to your fellow human beings. There's a dearth of that up here. A lot of judgemental people. Closed minds. Antagonism.
But if you are patient and keep letting people show you who they are and be who they are they'll cine to love you.
We need more people like that up here. They are here. Keep the good ones close and more will collect.
I am so happy I found my place. The weather is gross right now. People are staying inside shivering and will be until May next year. Try the library. Ask people questions.
I hear the same things repeatedly. No one says hi. No one smiles. No one approaches me. Do those things. People long for that.
As much as you want people to do that for you, they want it too. Be kind. reach out. Continue with the responsive ones.
Would you like to get coffee sometime? One on one works well with introverts.
Sometimes it just makes sense to go somewhere else, either temporarily or permanently. People are influenced by their environment and trying to change it can be as futile as trying to live forever. We only have so much time here in this life. If everyone in a place seems a certain way you don't like then it can be healthy to visit other places at least for sake of comparison
While I would love to get coffee, I live in New Orleans now. You mention weather right now being gross up there, which I remember clearly. Today it will be 72 and sunny here. I wonder if the weather causes social issues, unknowingly?
I don't think there's any question it does. When you travel enough in the tropics it becomes glaringly obvious. Anyone who thinks weather doesn't affect how people act should try flying from whatever northern latitude place they live in the dead of winter to a tropical place and observe the locals, I guarantee you'll see a lot more smiling and happy looking people than where you just came from
I've never installed chrome unless I had to to test and fix a bug in it. I always use ff except on my android phone. By the second out third click ff crashed on my android phone. It makes me so sad that I can't use it on my phone.
It makes me so happy that people are finally realizing how evil Google is and pushing to end them.
I wish I could buy my own life sustaining hormone that I've been using for 20 years and understand better than most doctors outside endocrinology.