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04:52
I wonder whether there is another country that can beat Australian post's slowness in delivery ...
Multiple times, items were transferred from warehouse 20km-30km from my house and it would take 7-8 days! I could have walked there and back in less than half of that time frame.
Australian post must be in a competition with the turtles ...
 
1 hour later…
06:23
yo yo yo
whats everybody up to yo
@PeterT use frozen :-)
I don't need it to be immutable, I barely need it to be a map
A map like container-adaptor that wraps a std::vector would probably be better for the couple of use-cases I'm talking about
 
3 hours later…
09:39
morning
 
2 hours later…
11:27
alright that emscripten memory leak's fixed, I tricked myself. Wrapped the type in a typescript interface, forgot to add the ".delete()" function, so I was like "oh, it doesn't have a .delete(), so it's probably not a C++ object"
also TIL FinalizationRegistry (not that I can use that with those browser version requirements)
nwp
nwp
11:44
Don't you just love it when you have a project with a bunch of warnings, you set a flag to treat warnings as errors and the only thing that is actually treated as an error is that details.hpp inside boost inherits from std::iterator?
11:54
we still have "unused variable" warning and warnings as errors enabled, even in debug mode, which can be really "helpful" to say the least
nwp
nwp
That annoyed me so much that I turned those off in debug mode. Which then caused lots of commits that don't compile in release mode 🤡
I'm failing to find the correct CMakeLists.txt to add warning flags to.
I blame cmake.
I'm blaming real hard, but it's not helping.
 
4 hours later…
16:17
I wonder if bloodletting has been considered as a way to remove harmful toxins like metals and microplastics from the bloodstream.
I mean, suppose I lose 1 liter of blood every month, and I do that for a year, then by the end of the year the amount of toxins should have been greatly reduced..
I mean you can get your blood cleaned
aka dialysis centers
You can?
In medicine, dialysis (from Greek διάλυσις, dialysis, "dissolution"; from διά, dia, "through", and λύσις, lysis, "loosening or splitting") is the process of removing excess water, solutes, and toxins from the blood in people whose kidneys can no longer perform these functions naturally. This is referred to as renal replacement therapy. The first successful dialysis was performed in 1943. Dialysis may need to be initiated when there is a sudden rapid loss of kidney function, known as acute kidney injury (previously called acute renal failure), or when a gradual decline in kidney function chronic...
Isn't that for people with bad kidneys?
indeed but its basically cleaning your blood
16:21
Recently there was a scandal in Belgium where it turned out that people living near a 3M factory had increased PFOS values in their blood.
So sever burn victims also do it to avoid kidney failure (which is partially due to metal release).
Can dialysis remove that? Even if it could, it might be too resource-intensive to treat thousands of people. Maybe periodic bloodletting is faster.
@Mikhail Ok.
In the USA blood dialysis centers are associated with poor neighbors where everybody is unhealthy. Just like a methadone clinic :-)
because kidney failure is more common in poor neighborhoods? (because drugs, or something?)
diabetes, drinking
etc
16:24
Ah.
> High blood pressure and diabetes are the two most common causes of kidney failure.
Shit. I'll have to change my ways...
high blood pressure can also be stress related, so better move to the beach
Or drink more alcohol
Oh wait..
Not sure which is worse, kidney failure or kidney stones.
so actual kidney failure is probably worse because the underlying issues may lead to kidney failure not being "fixable"
aka if you have kidney failure you usually have some underlying issue that can't be easily addressed
Yeah, I suppose kidney stones are at least treatable.
Like stop being Italian :-)
16:31
lol, not sure what Italians have to do with this.
diet
Hm, I think Italian food is relatively healthy compared to many other countries.
wheat bran in the noodles
so historically, Italian peasants all had kidney stones
Oh, really.
Sucks to be them :P
 
4 hours later…
20:23

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