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11:04 AM
Look at the daily new covid-19 cases vs daily death caused by covid-19, does anyone else think maybe the vaccine is more of a placebo used to calm the mass and prepare people mentally in an attempt to move back to the 'norm' (Norm as we know in the years right before 2019)?
 
nwp
11:54 AM
Yes, plenty of people think that. They tend to rub horse dewormer on their bodies.
 
12:20 PM
I had my vaccination, but that's when I started to understand anti-vaxxers.
Also countries are running out of $, that's why they need the economy to go back to normal.
 
The vaccine is like a war game for your immune system, it's not the real thing but it's close enough to prepare it
regardless the hospitalization and death rates for those fully vaccinated is massively lower than those for the unvaccinated
 
12:41 PM
One thing I don't entirely understand is why the vaccine only starts working after two weeks or so. I'd think that if you've been vaccinated for 3 days, and then get infected, that your immune system still has a 3 day head start, and that should count for something.
 
it's more that the effect is so reduced as to be not significant
and it takes time for the cells to start spewing out the spike protein and for your immune system to recognize it as a threat and memorize the antigen
 
are those stackoverflow boxes new in google?
or have I just never seen them
 
I've seen a lot of boxes in Google. But the StackOverflow one I haven't seen before I think.
I still get this:
 
1:01 PM
@StackedCrooked Think about the start of a war: Do you have all the things you need to fight? Probably not. Because you don't really know your enemy yet. It takes time to get that going. Same is true with the immune system.
 
@Mgetz Look at the graph again ... for the first half of 2020, the fatality rate of the infected are about 5%-10%, then it started to decline. During March this year (2021), it's about 2%. Vaccine has not further reduce this much. Currently, it's probably at 1%-2% and maybe it's partially because the virus has become like a flu and less fatal.
 
1:24 PM
@TelKitty First half the year most of the world was in lockdown?
And there is no indication it's become less fatal
The spike is directly attributable to the end of lockdowns without corresponding herd immunity
 
 
5 hours later…
6:15 PM
@StackedCrooked No wonder SO has such a bad reputation. That first answer is dead wrong, and clearly written by a complete idiot.
 
 
5 hours later…
11:10 PM
 
11:23 PM
also float
as numpy
 
tbh there's ctypes which brings in all the complexity of C
but 99% of the time in Python if you just need an integer you use int
 
1
Q: Get numpy to perform consistent error reporting on truncating numerical conversions

MikhailI've noticed that numpy arrays values are truncated when a narrowing conversion is performed. In my case this is expected behavior. Problem is that sometimes the conversion doesn't happen and a runtime exception is raised. Anybody know how to get consistent truncation or error behavior when a num...

I kinda hate python
infinite sized integers is dumb
 
it's comfortable
 
11:40 PM
As long as it's not enforced, it's okay. 🤔
If one wants fixed-size integers, then one should treat their integers as being fixed in size
 
What happened to the starboard? It looks totally different.
Someone cancelled all stars?
Not that I mind though.
 
Curious as to what it looked like before 👀
 
Or maybe someone has changed starboard algorithm.
 
@Lapys There's ctypes for that :p
 
ctypes in Python, or.. ctypes in C++?
 
11:44 PM
in python
 

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