A lot of phone modems ship with their own SoC (processor) running its own OS. It's much smaller and slower than the main phone SoC but, depending on its implementation, it can have full access to all of your main processor's memory through DMA.
The one real risk is that it’s a respiratory depressant and that it’s LD 50 is only a few tens of times a standard dose
The article claims it's much closer than that:
Experts and festival-goers agreed on the likely cause of GHB's disproportionate overdose burden.
"As little as 1 millilitre difference can tip you from what you're looking for to what you're not looking for," Daniel Fatovich, chief investigator of EDNA, told Hack.
I tried to find some stuff to back this up. The "therapeutic index" is probably what I'm after (ratio of effective dose to dangerous dose), despite this technically not being a therapeutic use.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8843350/ - The narrow therapeutic index of GHB renders its use hazardous with poisoning or toxicity not uncommon with small titration of doses.
Thats... annoyingly nonspecific. A number for the T.I. would be a good educational tool.
This paper claims its around 5:1 to 8:1:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4462042/ - Mortality rates after abuse of GHB are high, because there is only a narrow safety margin between a recreational dose and a fatal dose, which is only 5:1 to 8:1 [4-8]. Accordingly, accidental poisoning after recreational use of GHB is not uncommon as evidenced by admissions to hospital emergency departments for treatment [9, 10] and during forensic medical investigations of drug intoxication deaths [11-14].
Someone else in the comments here mentioned that the recreational dosage for different individuals varies, if that's true then it could make this worse.
polydrug using who get hurt [...] education if we want to save lives
Agreed. Most people don't understand what's in pills they have bought or the interactions with alcohol.
Glad you liked it :)
I’d meant to add a concrete spill pool thing at least between the locomotive and building but forgot. (Pretty sure that excuse has shown up on at least one environmental disaster report, lol).
You're hired!
Swappable boilers [...] visually distinct
I was thinking something that looks a bit like a steel-framed ISO tank, but smaller and with more connectors. At a minimum you would need:
- Lots of caution stripes on the frames (80's/90's retro futuristic)
- Removable insulation panels from the sides. You would want them installed when on the train (to save heat) but removed when the whole unit is hoisted up onto the solar concentrator. The tank itself will be painted black for this purpose, at least on the curved sides.
- Inlet and outlet for steam. Perhaps stainless high pressure pipe flanges complete with their cute tapered nozzly bit. Maybe 10-20cm or more in internal diameter? I'm not familiar with the impedance tradeoffs and pipe sizes normally used for this. I'm also not sure how you'd connect these to the engine (external pipes taken on and off all the time?).
- Electrical connector for measuring the in-built thermistors & thermocouples. Probably an ISO metric series waterproof with lots of pins like an M24 connector just dangling somewhere.
- A drain tap on the bottom of the steam loop side with a very long handle on it (so the operator doesn't die if they open it at the wrong time). Looks like a standard ball valve like you'd use on a home water or gas line, but with a very long handle that reaches to the edge of the frame.
- A water inlet for the caustic side. Something small like a household water pipe and ball valve.
- An (optional) place to install your own temp probe. Household pipe sticking out of the top.
- A drain tap on the bottom of the caustic side with a padlock installed (to stop people dissolving themselves with high-temp high-pressure sodium hydoxide).
- Redundant pressure gauges near the draining taps, as a last ditch warning to operators.
Installing and removing the steam pipe flanges would not be elegant, requiring a rattle gun (like tire shops use to change your wheels). Maybe there are some more elegant solutions? Especially since it's so easy to accidentally pressurise a system after only tightening some of the bolts (woops).
I’ve used some of those fungicides but wouldn’t have put that together.
They wouldn't look like the nice, uniform, dry powdered stuff you're used to, instead they'd be unevenly coloured slime :)
I might be wrong specifically about the copper carbonate product, but the others are probably right. No brass, no bronze and no copper allowed (sadly).
In that case one of my 3D printers would be exempt too.
"Sorry snotwrangler, you're legal"
I have a 3D printer and I've found this to work well:
https://www.printables.com/model/475587-de-safety-razor
One big problem: I left it tensioned in sunlight and it distorted (PLA probably isn't the best choice but I don't print in ABS). I had to print new parts. Probably not "buy it for life" but making replacement parts is so much easier than for a commercially bought model that it's probably now a "ship of Theseus for life".
The formerly successful site known as Twitter.
That looks super frustrating :|
I just finished the last level of Perfect Dark (released in 2000 for N64). The hardest part was right at the end (boss fight with rockets being fired at you, one hit and you're dead) and there are no checkpoints. I repeated this same level so many times and had to read a walkthrough in the end -- it turns out I was stuck at a red herring.
Me having some datasheets that claim one thing doesn't mean it applies to everything and every implementation. Your prof might be right.
Poor apprentice, he's probably use to these jokes. The face is perfect.
Perhaps the software OP is using has a second layer of generation (with a different network) that focuses on details like eyes. It might not even know the input prompt (and if it does then it might not have the training background to reward keeping things pixelated).