scheav
scheav t1_jd0zspw wrote
Reply to comment by KaKi_87 in [OC] My first animated visualization: Morocco's Trade from 2005 to 2021 by bladexp210
They added insult to injury by having only a single frame at the end include all data.
scheav t1_jcfi4if wrote
Reply to comment by hadowajp in How Fast Are California Reservoirs Filling Up? - Engaging Data (2015-2023) by MalleusManus
Solar panels reduce heat, not increase it. If you had nothing, 100% of the suns energy will go into the water. With solar panels, some of the suns energy will become electricity.
scheav t1_jbviqa0 wrote
Reply to comment by _BreakingGood_ in [OC] In the past four years, 19 states have enacted legislation or passed resolutions, awaiting approval by Congress, to make daylight saving permanent. by gridnews
We sure will. Hopefully I get my start time shifted from 7am to 8am.
scheav t1_jbvh28i wrote
Reply to comment by _BreakingGood_ in [OC] In the past four years, 19 states have enacted legislation or passed resolutions, awaiting approval by Congress, to make daylight saving permanent. by gridnews
DST is temporary. If businesses were willing to change their hours multiple times a year you wouldn’t need DST. If you made a permanent change to your time zones businesses would change hours accordingly - permanently. It’s not rocket science.
scheav t1_jbvgx2m wrote
Reply to comment by madattak in [OC] In the past four years, 19 states have enacted legislation or passed resolutions, awaiting approval by Congress, to make daylight saving permanent. by gridnews
Yes, because it’s just temporary. That’s the point. If it were permanent then business hours would be set appropriately. If you decided to shift the clock by 4 hours in your state do you think businesses would open up 4 hours before sunrise?
scheav t1_jbv90j9 wrote
Reply to comment by _BreakingGood_ in [OC] In the past four years, 19 states have enacted legislation or passed resolutions, awaiting approval by Congress, to make daylight saving permanent. by gridnews
Businesses are going to open an hour later if it gets light an hour later. You’re going to be working later. There’s nothing special about 5pm that makes it quitting time.
scheav t1_jbuzx89 wrote
Reply to comment by mlfblf in [OC] In the past four years, 19 states have enacted legislation or passed resolutions, awaiting approval by Congress, to make daylight saving permanent. by gridnews
What difference would it make? Wouldn’t hours of operation be set accordingly?
scheav t1_jaiaxfq wrote
Reply to comment by MassProductionRagnar in Does the spinning of a bullet have any effect on its drag? by Eastern-Ability8411
I didn’t say they are propelled by it, I said they are pushed by it. It exerts a force, which reduces its acceleration due to drag. This is called pushing.
scheav t1_jahunkm wrote
Reply to comment by MassProductionRagnar in Does the spinning of a bullet have any effect on its drag? by Eastern-Ability8411
“Filling the empty void with gases” IS pushing the shell. It might not have a net positive acceleration, but it’s like pushing a car that’s out of gas - you’re still pushing even though it’s not accelerating.
scheav t1_iy6votg wrote
Reply to comment by Purplekeyboard in In Mexico men die almost 8 more times than women. 16% of all homicide victims had high school or higher education. [OC] by Altruistic_Olives
Most men die at age 9, and a few live to be 99 and have lots of children.
scheav t1_iwd6tyy wrote
Reply to comment by Ophthalmologist in We have seen successful transplants of various organs, hands, even faces -- so why not transplants of legs or feet to lower-limb amputees? Why are these not a thing? by Pandeism
Whether or not the statistic is out of date, my point still stands that most of these deaths aren’t due to rejection. The reason that lung transplants are needed in the first place is often the cause of other health issues. Some lung transplants are done for cystic fibrosis and the transplant isn’t a cure, as the new lungs will be damaged by the disease as well.
If you lose a leg due to diabetes you’ll likely have lower lifespan than if you lose a leg due to acute trama. Pointing to lung transplant survival as indicative of survival after a limb transplant is incorrect and disingenuous.
scheav t1_iwd2efw wrote
Reply to comment by limitless__ in We have seen successful transplants of various organs, hands, even faces -- so why not transplants of legs or feet to lower-limb amputees? Why are these not a thing? by Pandeism
Most transplant recipients die from unrelated causes. The statistic you used for lung transplants is out of date, and it was largely influenced by the first few people to receive lung transplants. The average life-span increases every year.
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If the first lung transplant were done 5 years ago you could say that no lung transplant recipient lived longer than 5 years and you'd be [technically] correct, but thoroughly misleading.
scheav t1_iv2xete wrote
Reply to comment by Maakus in [OC] ETFs are increasingly popular in recent years - what are the biggest players? by giteam
I'll make sure to buy some extra Vanguard funds containing defense and fossil fuel stocks to make up for your boycott. Maybe they should come up with a fund containing only those.
scheav t1_je55lsj wrote
Reply to comment by ProLibertateCH in [OC] Research Funding vs Human Development: a country's R&D spending correlates with its societal well-being by latinometrics
You have have causation without correlation.