Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | ellisv's commentslogin

MoCA is how I get Ethernet upstairs. Works great.

Plants look very portable

I also mistook it to be about LoRa and not about LoRA

I too fell victim to mistaking LoRa for LoRa

Indiana Dunes National Park is weird and only became a national park because Pence was VP.


That maybe true, but it has been a very good State Park for much longer. It's not like they made it up.


Granted the park is not the reason a lot of the summer home owners go there but it is an easy thing to point to to underline that the stretches of lake on either side of Michigan City are very beautiful for people who have never been.


It's the 4th most biodiverse national park, and a really incredible place. But also, Dem. Rep Pete Visclosky was probably more responsible than Pence for pushing through in an appropriations bill.


I wish they'd discount their 35W dual port chargers or that I could find a similar 3rd party charger.

My main criteria are (1) dual USB-C ports to charge multiple devices in one location, (2) compact enough to not block the other receptacle, and (3) ports face down/to the side so can fit between the wall and furniture. Unfortunately most chargers fail at least one of these.


This isn't exactly what you're looking for, but it may fit the use case.

I've recently been replacing some of the wiring in my house as part of a renovation, and I discovered that Leviton sells outlets with PD USB-C built in now! Not talking about the useless 2A USB-A "built-in" chargers of yore, now they actually have proper PD up to 60W!

They do also sell non-PD, so it requires some careful checking of the model numbers. And the 60W one is pretty large (the in-wall part) so it might not quite fit in an existing wallbox if it is a small one. But briefly: - T5636: two USB-C PD, up to 60W total / 60W individual or 30W each if both in use - T5635: two USB-C PD, up to 30W total / 30W individual or 15W each for both - T5634: one USB-C PD and one USB-A. USB-A is 10W and USB-C is up to 50W (even if both are in use) They also make T8xx versions of these that have 20A receptacles (NEMA 5-20R) but those are harder to find.

They also make other T56xx/T58xx which have non-PD USB-C, good for places like bathrooms where shavers/etc work fine on 5V.

I've found that putting a few of these around has eliminated a lot of the Anker chargers I used to have sticking out everywhere. They're completely in-wall and they leave both outlets free. If I need 100W for my computer, I'll still use a separate charger, but otherwise these are fine.

The only point they don't hit on your list is the ports facing down, but because they're flush at the wall, that means they don't interfere with furniture (any more than having any plug plugged into the outlets at all would).

If you're in Europe/elsewhere, not sure if other manufacturers make similar devices. I know Legrand makes some 30W PD ones in the US market, and as they're French, maybe they make them for others as well.


This is good to know!

I might use these in my basement remodel since I can easily install deeper boxes. A right angle connector cable would also solve the issue of the port direction.


YMMV, but if you have an older house, these outlets may not fit.


Depending on your location and exact geometry needs the IKEA SJÖSS might do it.


The IKEA SJÖSS has ports on the front face rather than down or side.


This just made me realise why I've never actually used the one I purchased. My brain is like "with them sticking out, you'll be clumsy and damage your cables"

Makes them harder to plug in behind furniture too.


Admittedly I haven't read the whole study. But how do they account for the confirmation bias in their review – the fact that null results typically aren't published. Studies that look at an intervention (Tylenol) and fail to find an association are less likely to include it as a variable in their model or less likely to publish a null finding.


It's important to note our understanding is far from complete. There may be more genes associated with autism than we currently know. So 30% of cases may have a known genetic factor but that doesn't mean 70% don't have a genetic component.


True. But we’ve also seen environmental correlations as well, as well as things like age of the father, etc.


This is also explained as a genetic factor as chromosomal abnormalities and replication errors are more frequent although cumulative environmental exposures may also play a role.


MRMS is generally much better than RIDGE


This is beautiful.


I’m on mobile and can’t try it out first hand right now but looks great.

Does it include health records (eg from Epic)?


The current version does not. I’m not sure if the official Health export includes that info. My current doctor unfortunately uses some app that doesn’t integrate with Apple Health. It would be a great feature here though.


Consider applying for YC's Winter 2026 batch! Applications are open till Nov 10

Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: