It's one thing to have a uniform set of conditions for a number of different services -- and potentially a good thing, if the conditions are fair and well-designed.
It's quite a different question whether that should also be associated with data aggregation or consolidation . Is this actually some kind of attempted cover for data aggregation, to distract attention from simultaneous data aggregation in the hope of reducing or de-fusing objections to an unpalatable plan? After all, there's no real need for uniform conditions to be associated with data aggregation at all.
Strict liability is one of those things that seems to creep in when it seems to lawmakers like a good idea at the time. But once it's in place, the lawmakers find it rather easy to overextend it, and make it cover more and more matters that many people would say ought to be judged under the old standard of intent.
Seeing UV after cataract surgery proabbly isn't a 'tetrachromic' effect. Human eye lenses are naturally yellow at birth, browner as we get older, browner still and they start being called 'cataracts'. They filter out the UV at any age. So the retina never usually gets a chance to try out its UV-seeing ability using its basic trichromatic receptor kit.
We can have: The tree-hugging hippie party The financial, corporate, and industry party The religious extremist (pardon me, I mean evangelical) party The backwoods-montana survival-oriented libertarian party The inner-city violence and drugs party The suburbia party The illuminati Every one of those hates every other, and nothing would ever get done since any coalition would dissolve within days. From where I sit, that'd be a better situation than the one we're in now.
Yes but just think, as soon as two of them suss it out (like maybe the evangelicals and the suburbanites....) then their coalition would be in power for ever.....
Well, if you don't demand that somebody audits their code (for airplanes/airlines) you are pretty stupid.
Agreed in principle that it's desirable/vital to get that job done. But it's not so easy to achieve in practice, and I think it's not just stupidity (on the part of consumers/customers) that blocks it.
Some years ago I was a regular flier with a certain airline, and then they flew a couple of my work colleagues into the ground [:( ]. The circumstances brought their operating procedures into question -- human code, if you will. I quizzed them about the relevant points. They told me to get lost. If it wasn't in the official accident report (which turned out to be a whitewash, btw) then I would not be permitted to know it.
Needless to say, I never flew with them again, but that's not much good, the other lines might misbehave in a similar way.
I suspect that maybe there is not as much external scrutiny of these things as some of the posters in this thread optimistically believe or expect.
>They are just doing what the United States is telling them to do. >Honestly, Why are the Citizens of the Netherlands allowing the USA To dictate their own laws? Why are you people not protesting in the streets over this stuff?
>>>You honestly think there would be no copyright laws abroad without American pressure? Really?
No, no, no, that's not the argument about US influence on copyright laws and other IP laws of other countries. They had their own laws before -- and even before the US joined the Berne Copyright Convention. Mostly they were better balanced too.
What the lobbying influence has done is to insinuate changes that skew the balance that used to be set, between the authors'/publishers' interests and the public interest.
Copyright terms have been drastically lengthened. New infringement offences have been created in the law. New procedural powers have been introduced that can lead to new claims, often enabling control of materials and works that are not even in copyright and would not be eligible for copyright at all (like the 'TPM's that can be used to padlock anything, copyright or not).
On the other hand, look what has become of the parts of the law that were intended to ensure public rights broadly equivalent to 'fair use': in some places they used to go farther, in others not so far, as in the US. They have been narrowed, whittled down, even taken away from some classes of user entirely, under the influence of this lobbying pressure.
And why or how has it been happening? It often isn't the 'citizens' or even their legislatures primarily doing this. These insidious cripplings of public rights often come in through the relatively new channel of international treaties or EU directives carved out in private conferences, not in legislative assemblies. 'Poison pills' of rights removal have been insinuated as part of larger packages: their design has been fixed so that for some larger and usually economic reason, the 'victim country' won't refuse the 'poison pill', so as not to lose whatever the unrelated material was.
Then, what happens in the local legislative assembly is that the mass of lawmakers are held by their bought-and-sold government executives as if at pistol-point, with a dilemma: they can either rubberstamp the whole thing or reject the whole thing. But the design has fixed it so that the latter will be practically infeasible.
The democratic legislative process is not primarily to blame here, it is the sharks who have bypassed it and subverted it that are to blame.
according to the BBC, there was a lot of pushback against some of Newton's workings... this may damage Newton's place in history...
There are plenty of nuts who are keen to get publicity by claiming to debunk Einstein, Newton, or almost anybody famous who will get them some attention.
'Never at Rest' by R S Westfall (http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=3ngEugMMa9YC) was widely reviewed as a good scientific biography. The biographer more or less admitted that he was somewhat hostile towards his subject but even so there's plenty of solid information there.
It seems weird that they chose to digitize a printed copy of the Principia that had many of its pages so badly burnt away that they can't be read. There are better copies around even in the same library that could have been scanned. Perhaps the best scanned image of Newton's Principia is one that was put online by the Bibliotheque nationale de France (http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k3363w.r=.langFR)!
Thanks for that idea, I do in fact use Opera 9.something (Opera 10.something gives me compatibility problems with the needed older print functions). It might surprise you, but I get a lot of websites throwing brickbats at me for using Opera.
Are you joking, or serious? Are you seriously suggesting that software written in 2011 should work perfectly on operating systems released when Bill Clinton was the President?
Sure I'm serious: and I don't understand why this should be treated like a joke: the suggestion, after all, is that backwards compatibility is important. Lack of it means all sorts of problems, ranging from general inaccessibility in practice of nearly all digital material archived on old media, to smaller scale problems like the ones that I face right now just getting my laserprinter to work properly with new software products written by people who forgot that it exists.
I just looked at the Chrome system requirements: "100MB disk space, 128MB RAM, WinXP SP2+, Pentium 4 or later": It won't even look at Win2000, so if I want to use it at all I have to change my hardware, expand my OS size by '00s of MB and lose backwards compatibility with stuff that I use all of the time. With the number of websites that demand updated web-browsers such as Chrome it begins to look as if I'm being squeezed off the internet. (I wish I could switch more to linux, for which I have a double-booting system, but I can't get it to do the printing work that I need, and even then, Chrome claims to be very picky about which linux distro it works with.)
-wb-
Wider problems in how to design tests
on
Of Mice and Cancer
·
· Score: 2
The article made good points: the issues are even wider. There is much more besides the type of test-animal strain that can make for problems in effective testing.
Nowadays some new pharmaceutical product-candidates are designed and intended to work by specifically interacting with some very human-specific features of materials present in the eventual treated patients. Sometimes product-candidates of this kind are not expected to interact with non-human animal substances in a corresponding way at all.
An example lies in the specificity of human-antibody-related products (some of them intended for use against types of cancer). Their effects may be hard to mimic and test in any non-human animal subject whatever.
This makes for much harder problems in test design than in the more straightforward old days of (for example) testing candidate antibiotics. That involves checking that the material does kill the target bug and does not damage the treated animal or human subject, and in the past, observations of tested animals often gave very good indications of what would happen next when the substance was given to humans. (Caution is still needed, and clinical trial regimens accordingly have to include careful human safety testing as a follow-up to successful and careful animal safety testing.)
But when the product candidate is supposed only to interact in a special way with very human-specific substances, somehow its safety and efficacy has to be effectively tested before it gets to humans -- but how? -- when no non-human animal can be expected to show the same type of effects whether wanted or unwanted.
This new twist to the problem of test design has not always been addressed successfully. A tragic example occurred a few years ago, when a modified antibody with a design incorporating very unusual and specifically human-human interactions passed the animal safety testing that was decided on, but then went on to injure severely the first few human test volunteers by causing major acute iflammatory effects not seen in the animal tests.
The issues go well beyond selection of strains of test animals and sometimes the solutions may have to be developed on a case-by-case basis..
I believe you're making some unjustified presumptions. It wasn't relevant in the original post to go into so much detail, but the patient in question was an insulin-dependent diabetic, and the first physician certainly should have seen a clear reason for using antibiotic in an infected -- or even a probably infected -- patient of this category. There was no mistranslation or misunderstanding by the patient, but there are frequently a whole lot of unjustified putdowns of patients by folk who assume with much hope but little reason that the physician is always right.
btw, you also mis-represented my earlier post, which did not mention any role of 'not finishing the prescription': What I did mention was antibiotic courses being too short. There are two causes, not one, of antibiotic courses being too short, the patient may not finish the course, as you suggest, or the course prescribed may not be long enough. So here is another example of presuming in the absence of facts that the patient is to blame: it seems you could not conceive of any cause of the too-short course other than the patient not taking the medicine as prescribed.
-wb-
[]ColdWetDog wrote:] I suspect that the 'ideologically taken' physician is relatively rare (never say never in medicine). It is much more likely that the first physician did not see a clear reason for using antibiotics, the second doc already had the benefit of the first doc being 'wrong' and he/she did the obvious second thing - start the antibiotic. The rationale gets mistranslated or misunderstood by the patient - or simply was never explained in the first place. In that respect, the system did it right - try to avoid the antibiotic if at all possible, if not use it wisely.
The article misrepresents the position - antibiotics don't "encourage bacteria to develop new ways of overcoming them", they just leave behind bacteria that have more resistance. It's therefore very important to go Darth Sidious on their ass and "wipe them out. All of them.", or the few that remain will multiply, unobstructed by their cream-puff peers who are all dead now.
Yes, the parent post makes an important point -- at least, the chance of fostering resistant bacteria is higher if a treatment course with antibiotics leaves any of the bacteria still alive, which might happen if the course was too short, or if the dose was not high enough to reach lethal concentration for the bacteria in some place in the body that the bacteria were using as a hideout, with poor blood circulation (e.g. sometimes tooth or bone). Then the surviving bacteria descended from those exposed to sublethal dose _may_ have more resistance.
There's a problem, though, with existing stories of how to discourage the growth of bacterial resistance to antibiotics. The stories tend to concentrate on human antibiotic prescriptions, while they often ignore the role of the enormous use of antibiotics for non-human animals, especially in agriculture. Human physicians sometimes forget the veterinary role in causation. Some of them are so ideologically 'taken' with the message 'be restrained in your prescriptions' that I have seen a patient who really needed antibiotic actually refused it on environmental grounds. She got sicker and sicker until another physician acted at last with some common sense, and then (thankfully) the effect of the medication was as dramatic as in the early accounts of antibiotics from the mid-20th c. when their use first spread.
Much of the discussion about why/why not switch to linux seems to stay with very generic arguments.
For me, the generic argument has been made, and it does come down on the linux side. But the specifics then simply compel me to take the (opposite) decision. It might be useful if I describe how this happens.
I run double-booting systems with both Windows and linux, but I find myself booting up linux less often instead of more often. There is one specific function that I can't work without: I can't get a linux system to do it. No matter that else linux will do etc, not doing that one specific thing is what bars my way from exiting Windows for linux -- which otherwise I would like to do. Maybe it is not a very difficult function, but it seems to call for more cooperation between sub-systems than actually exists.
Maybe the details don't matter so much in this thread but here they are in case they show more than what's just been said.
It's only about viewing and printing pdfs. When I want to print to my laserjet printer from a pdf that is basically a scanned image, I want to see a thumbnail of the image as it will be on the page, that reflects the current state of the image magnification control. Then I often adjust the control of the magnification, to adjust the fit with the page, before I hit the 'print' button.
Only certain s/w combinations in Windows do this, the rest (and all the linux measures that I have tried) provide instead uninformative symbols that do not include the needed adjustable pre-print thumbnail. My questions in various times and places have got me nowhere: answers have been either generic ('use xpdf' -- which I've tried), without relating to the specifics of the question, or no answers at all.
This looks to be a function that no-one else is interested in. So by itself, it obviously can't account for any slowness of linux adoption. But if there are other folk who might change, and they have their own different individual wants, and they meet similar obstacles, then in the aggregate this lack of process could account for a lot.
The reason Javascript is the most popular is obvious (to me at least): the web is based primarily on three languages - HTML, CSS, and Javascript.
The article said it is overrepresented in SO queries. That's like being 'popular' in something of the way that a highly prevalent disease might be called 'popular'. (I don't deny it may be actually popular as well.)
But the features or bugs of js that make its problems overrepresented on SO are probably linked to the characteristics of js that make me groan whenever I see that a webpage demands the use of it.
Ok, Novell put up a stalwart defence and won it, yes, kudos to them. And as you say, it took 6 1/2 years.
But did they get SCO nailed for bringing an action that was frivolous or vexatious in the first place? I don't recall reading that this was part of it? So we might still be looking for any example of that.
>> "there should be stiff penalties for frivolous lawsuits"
> There are, if you can prove that its frivolous and/or using the court systems as an anti-competitive hammer. If the court really decides that youre a nuisance, they can nail you pretty hard.
But it's so costly and difficult to run that particular legal marathon, hardly anybody has ever completed the course. (Really, has anybody _ever_ actually completed it?)
The problem is more fundamental: "The grant of invalid patents is a serious evil insomuch as it tends to the restraint of trade and to the embarrassment of honest traders and inventors..." That was the Fry Committee in 1901, recognizing that fundamental truth. The same applies, of course, to other forms of IP as well, not only patents. But which policymakers and legislators in power remember that now?
Still doesn't make it right to get a secret court order to inflict willful damage on a person's property.
I agree. Reads like a sickening abuse by the complainant company that asked the court to grant this disproportionate remedy. I've deleted their s/w application off my two computers that had it, and I will watch out to make sure I don't make use of any product from them again.
Maybe the developers want me to have the latest version, but it's not always what I want, and above all, whether latest version or not, I want to know what I've actually got.
From my pov, this will ensure that I never go back to Firefox (after abandoning it a while back because of the memory leaks and denials that there was a problem.)
Just think -- wikipedia can be changed in a few seconds by any schoolkid with an idea for some online graffiti -- would you want it chugging away at _any problems at all_?
In areas where it "works" -- science, engineering, other technical subjects, reference information (e.g. documenting the stations of a country's rail networks) -- Wikipedia has vastly increased the consistency, coverage, and quality of easily-available information on a huge number of subjects.
It would be good to think that it "works" at least in those areas --- but I'm afraid that's not true without qualification.
There are many technical and scientific topics where there are popular misconceptions around. In too many Wikipedia cases it is unfortunately the popular misconception that survives on Wikipedia.
In some cases, editors favor a popular but mistaken view, and even take down sound citation-supported posts, deleting good references to replace them with substandard material (supported by poor citations that occasionally are even journalistic hogwash).
They can do this within Wikipedia policies, because Wikipedia has a policy for "verifiability, not truth" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Verifiability. A journalistic hogwash print source can still be a perfectly "reliable" (in the Wikipedia sense) supporting citation to "verify" (in the Wikipedia sense) a popular misconception.
So when editors put in substandard references and delete better references, in support of edits pushing their preferred point of view, this false 'Verifiability' standard means there is nothing much in practice to stop them.
The Wikipedia "verifiability, not truth" standard is false because a verifiability that is 'not truth' is only a pseudo-verifiability. There's seemingly no policy that (with any reasonable force) facilitates and encourages exclusion of pseudo-verifiable but untrue material.
I would want to wish Wikipedia success in building a truthful and reliable encyclopedia, but the current pseudo-verifiability policy means that it can't even be moving in the right direction.
This is why it's important to cite reliable sources, so any reader can verify the information. The real problem with Wikipedia is not the incorrect information (although there certainly are some errors), but all the useless crud that keeps gathering in articles.
Ok, it's important, but first, there's no real effective mechanism to make sure it happens at all, there are plenty of articles with unsupported outlandish statements.
Second, even when sources are given, there's nothing to stop any old rubbish that finds its way into half-credible print being used as 'supporting' citation to peddle some false line. Some editors will even put in substandard references and delete better references, in support of their chosen point of view, and again there's nothing much in practice to stop them.
For me the clincher is the Wikipedia policy for "verifiability, not truth" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Verifiability. A verifiability that is 'not truth' is only a pseudo-verifiability. There's seemingly no policy that (with any reasonable force) facilitates and encourages exclusion of pseudo-verifiable but untrue material.
I can't understand how Wikipedia credibility can survive a policy like the current state of its 'verifiability' 'standard'.
Proper verifiability should be expressly a means or a route towards truth, not a substitute for it, and subject to scrutiny and recall in that light.
It's one thing to have a uniform set of conditions for a number of different services -- and potentially a good thing, if the conditions are fair and well-designed.
It's quite a different question whether that should also be associated with data aggregation or consolidation . Is this actually some kind of attempted cover for data aggregation, to distract attention from simultaneous data aggregation in the hope of reducing or de-fusing objections to an unpalatable plan? After all, there's no real need for uniform conditions to be associated with data aggregation at all.
-wb-
you need a guilty mind and a guilty act to constitute a crime.
The law might have been like that once, but it isn't now (strict criminal liability) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strict_liability_(criminal).
Strict liability is one of those things that seems to creep in when it seems to lawmakers like a good idea at the time. But once it's in place, the lawmakers find it rather easy to overextend it, and make it cover more and more matters that many people would say ought to be judged under the old standard of intent.
-wb-
Seeing UV after cataract surgery proabbly isn't a 'tetrachromic' effect. Human eye lenses are naturally yellow at birth, browner as we get older, browner still and they start being called 'cataracts'. They filter out the UV at any age. So the retina never usually gets a chance to try out its UV-seeing ability using its basic trichromatic receptor kit.
-wb-
We can have:
The tree-hugging hippie party
The financial, corporate, and industry party
The religious extremist (pardon me, I mean evangelical) party
The backwoods-montana survival-oriented libertarian party
The inner-city violence and drugs party
The suburbia party
The illuminati
Every one of those hates every other, and nothing would ever get done since any coalition would dissolve within days. From where I sit, that'd be a better situation than the one we're in now.
Yes but just think, as soon as two of them suss it out (like maybe the evangelicals and the suburbanites ....) then their coalition would be in power for ever .....
-wb-
Well, if you don't demand that somebody audits their code (for airplanes/airlines) you are pretty stupid.
Agreed in principle that it's desirable/vital to get that job done. But it's not so easy to achieve in practice, and I think it's not just stupidity (on the part of consumers/customers) that blocks it.
Some years ago I was a regular flier with a certain airline, and then they flew a couple of my work colleagues into the ground [ :( ]. The circumstances brought their operating procedures into question -- human code, if you will. I quizzed them about the relevant points. They told me to get lost. If it wasn't in the official accident report (which turned out to be a whitewash, btw) then I would not be permitted to know it.
Needless to say, I never flew with them again, but that's not much good, the other lines might misbehave in a similar way.
I suspect that maybe there is not as much external scrutiny of these things as some of the posters in this thread optimistically believe or expect.
-wb-
>They are just doing what the United States is telling them to do.
>Honestly, Why are the Citizens of the Netherlands allowing the USA To dictate their own laws? Why are you people not protesting in the streets over this stuff?
>>>You honestly think there would be no copyright laws abroad without American pressure? Really?
No, no, no, that's not the argument about US influence on copyright laws and other IP laws of other countries. They had their own laws before -- and even before the US joined the Berne Copyright Convention. Mostly they were better balanced too.
What the lobbying influence has done is to insinuate changes that skew the balance that used to be set, between the authors'/publishers' interests and the public interest.
Copyright terms have been drastically lengthened. New infringement offences have been created in the law. New procedural powers have been introduced that can lead to new claims, often enabling control of materials and works that are not even in copyright and would not be eligible for copyright at all (like the 'TPM's that can be used to padlock anything, copyright or not).
On the other hand, look what has become of the parts of the law that were intended to ensure public rights broadly equivalent to 'fair use': in some places they used to go farther, in others not so far, as in the US. They have been narrowed, whittled down, even taken away from some classes of user entirely, under the influence of this lobbying pressure.
And why or how has it been happening? It often isn't the 'citizens' or even their legislatures primarily doing this. These insidious cripplings of public rights often come in through the relatively new channel of international treaties or EU directives carved out in private conferences, not in legislative assemblies. 'Poison pills' of rights removal have been insinuated as part of larger packages: their design has been fixed so that for some larger and usually economic reason, the 'victim country' won't refuse the 'poison pill', so as not to lose whatever the unrelated material was.
Then, what happens in the local legislative assembly is that the mass of lawmakers are held by their bought-and-sold government executives as if at pistol-point, with a dilemma: they can either rubberstamp the whole thing or reject the whole thing. But the design has fixed it so that the latter will be practically infeasible.
The democratic legislative process is not primarily to blame here, it is the sharks who have bypassed it and subverted it that are to blame.
-wb-
according to the BBC, there was a lot of pushback against some of Newton's workings ... this may damage Newton's place in history...
There are plenty of nuts who are keen to get publicity by claiming to debunk Einstein, Newton, or almost anybody famous who will get them some attention.
'Never at Rest' by R S Westfall (http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=3ngEugMMa9YC) was widely reviewed as a good scientific biography. The biographer more or less admitted that he was somewhat hostile towards his subject but even so there's plenty of solid information there.
It seems weird that they chose to digitize a printed copy of the Principia that had many of its pages so badly burnt away that they can't be read. There are better copies around even in the same library that could have been scanned. Perhaps the best scanned image of Newton's Principia is one that was put online by the Bibliotheque nationale de France (http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k3363w.r=.langFR)!
Thanks for that idea -- I'll look into it.
-wb-
Thanks for that idea, I do in fact use Opera 9.something (Opera 10.something gives me compatibility problems with the needed older print functions). It might surprise you, but I get a lot of websites throwing brickbats at me for using Opera.
-wb-
Are you joking, or serious? Are you seriously suggesting that software written in 2011 should work perfectly on operating systems released when Bill Clinton was the President?
Sure I'm serious: and I don't understand why this should be treated like a joke: the suggestion, after all, is that backwards compatibility is important. Lack of it means all sorts of problems, ranging from general inaccessibility in practice of nearly all digital material archived on old media, to smaller scale problems like the ones that I face right now just getting my laserprinter to work properly with new software products written by people who forgot that it exists.
-wb-
a lean, fast browser with a stripped down UI
I just looked at the Chrome system requirements:
"100MB disk space, 128MB RAM, WinXP SP2+, Pentium 4 or later":
It won't even look at Win2000, so if I want to use it at all I have to change my hardware, expand my OS size by '00s of MB and lose backwards compatibility with stuff that I use all of the time. With the number of websites that demand updated web-browsers such as Chrome it begins to look as if I'm being squeezed off the internet. (I wish I could switch more to linux, for which I have a double-booting system, but I can't get it to do the printing work that I need, and even then, Chrome claims to be very picky about which linux distro it works with.)
-wb-
The article made good points: the issues are even wider. There is much more besides the type of test-animal strain that can make for problems in effective testing.
Nowadays some new pharmaceutical product-candidates are designed and intended to work by specifically interacting with some very human-specific features of materials present in the eventual treated patients. Sometimes product-candidates of this kind are not expected to interact with non-human animal substances in a corresponding way at all.
An example lies in the specificity of human-antibody-related products (some of them intended for use against types of cancer). Their effects may be hard to mimic and test in any non-human animal subject whatever.
This makes for much harder problems in test design than in the more straightforward old days of (for example) testing candidate antibiotics. That involves checking that the material does kill the target bug and does not damage the treated animal or human subject, and in the past, observations of tested animals often gave very good indications of what would happen next when the substance was given to humans. (Caution is still needed, and clinical trial regimens accordingly have to include careful human safety testing as a follow-up to successful and careful animal safety testing.)
But when the product candidate is supposed only to interact in a special way with very human-specific substances, somehow its safety and efficacy has to be effectively tested before it gets to humans -- but how? -- when no non-human animal can be expected to show the same type of effects whether wanted or unwanted.
This new twist to the problem of test design has not always been addressed successfully. A tragic example occurred a few years ago, when a modified antibody with a design incorporating very unusual and specifically human-human interactions passed the animal safety testing that was decided on, but then went on to injure severely the first few human test volunteers by causing major acute iflammatory effects not seen in the animal tests.
The issues go well beyond selection of strains of test animals and sometimes the solutions may have to be developed on a case-by-case basis..
-wb-
I believe you're making some unjustified presumptions. It wasn't relevant in the original post to go into so much detail, but the patient in question was an insulin-dependent diabetic, and the first physician certainly should have seen a clear reason for using antibiotic in an infected -- or even a probably infected -- patient of this category. There was no mistranslation or misunderstanding by the patient, but there are frequently a whole lot of unjustified putdowns of patients by folk who assume with much hope but little reason that the physician is always right.
btw, you also mis-represented my earlier post, which did not mention any role of 'not finishing the prescription': What I did mention was antibiotic courses being too short. There are two causes, not one, of antibiotic courses being too short, the patient may not finish the course, as you suggest, or the course prescribed may not be long enough. So here is another example of presuming in the absence of facts that the patient is to blame: it seems you could not conceive of any cause of the too-short course other than the patient not taking the medicine as prescribed.
-wb-
[]ColdWetDog wrote:]
I suspect that the 'ideologically taken' physician is relatively rare (never say never in medicine). It is much more likely that the first physician did not see a clear reason for using antibiotics, the second doc already had the benefit of the first doc being 'wrong' and he/she did the obvious second thing - start the antibiotic. The rationale gets mistranslated or misunderstood by the patient - or simply was never explained in the first place. In that respect, the system did it right - try to avoid the antibiotic if at all possible, if not use it wisely.
The article misrepresents the position - antibiotics don't "encourage bacteria to develop new ways of overcoming them", they just leave behind bacteria that have more resistance. It's therefore very important to go Darth Sidious on their ass and "wipe them out. All of them.", or the few that remain will multiply, unobstructed by their cream-puff peers who are all dead now.
Yes, the parent post makes an important point -- at least, the chance of fostering resistant bacteria is higher if a treatment course with antibiotics leaves any of the bacteria still alive, which might happen if the course was too short, or if the dose was not high enough to reach lethal concentration for the bacteria in some place in the body that the bacteria were using as a hideout, with poor blood circulation (e.g. sometimes tooth or bone). Then the surviving bacteria descended from those exposed to sublethal dose _may_ have more resistance.
There's a problem, though, with existing stories of how to discourage the growth of bacterial resistance to antibiotics. The stories tend to concentrate on human antibiotic prescriptions, while they often ignore the role of the enormous use of antibiotics for non-human animals, especially in agriculture. Human physicians sometimes forget the veterinary role in causation. Some of them are so ideologically 'taken' with the message 'be restrained in your prescriptions' that I have seen a patient who really needed antibiotic actually refused it on environmental grounds. She got sicker and sicker until another physician acted at last with some common sense, and then (thankfully) the effect of the medication was as dramatic as in the early accounts of antibiotics from the mid-20th c. when their use first spread.
-wb-
Much of the discussion about why/why not switch to linux seems to stay with very generic arguments.
For me, the generic argument has been made, and it does come down on the linux side. But the specifics then simply compel me to take the (opposite) decision. It might be useful if I describe how this happens.
I run double-booting systems with both Windows and linux, but I find myself booting up linux less often instead of more often. There is one specific function that I can't work without: I can't get a linux system to do it. No matter that else linux will do etc, not doing that one specific thing is what bars my way from exiting Windows for linux -- which otherwise I would like to do. Maybe it is not a very difficult function, but it seems to call for more cooperation between sub-systems than actually exists.
Maybe the details don't matter so much in this thread but here they are in case they show more than what's just been said.
It's only about viewing and printing pdfs. When I want to print to my laserjet printer from a pdf that is basically a scanned image, I want to see a thumbnail of the image as it will be on the page, that reflects the current state of the image magnification control. Then I often adjust the control of the magnification, to adjust the fit with the page, before I hit the 'print' button.
Only certain s/w combinations in Windows do this, the rest (and all the linux measures that I have tried) provide instead uninformative symbols that do not include the needed adjustable pre-print thumbnail. My questions in various times and places have got me nowhere: answers have been either generic ('use xpdf' -- which I've tried), without relating to the specifics of the question, or no answers at all.
This looks to be a function that no-one else is interested in. So by itself, it obviously can't account for any slowness of linux adoption. But if there are other folk who might change, and they have their own different individual wants, and they meet similar obstacles, then in the aggregate this lack of process could account for a lot.
-wb-
The reason Javascript is the most popular is obvious (to me at least): the web is based primarily on three languages - HTML, CSS, and Javascript.
The article said it is overrepresented in SO queries. That's like being 'popular' in something of the way that a highly prevalent disease might be called 'popular'. (I don't deny it may be actually popular as well.)
But the features or bugs of js that make its problems overrepresented on SO are probably linked to the characteristics of js that make me groan whenever I see that a webpage demands the use of it.
I wish it could be outlawed!
-wb-
Ok, Novell put up a stalwart defence and won it, yes, kudos to them. And as you say, it took 6 1/2 years.
But did they get SCO nailed for bringing an action that was frivolous or vexatious in the first place? I don't recall reading that this was part of it? So we might still be looking for any example of that.
-wb-
>> "there should be stiff penalties for frivolous lawsuits"
> There are, if you can prove that its frivolous and/or using the court systems as an anti-competitive hammer. If the court really decides that youre a nuisance, they can nail you pretty hard.
But it's so costly and difficult to run that particular legal marathon, hardly anybody has ever completed the course. (Really, has anybody _ever_ actually completed it?)
The problem is more fundamental: "The grant of invalid patents is a serious evil insomuch as it tends to the restraint of trade and to the embarrassment of honest traders and inventors..."
That was the Fry Committee in 1901, recognizing that fundamental truth. The same applies, of course, to other forms of IP as well, not only patents. But which policymakers and legislators in power remember that now?
-wb-
Still doesn't make it right to get a secret court order to inflict willful damage on a person's property.
I agree. Reads like a sickening abuse by the complainant company that asked the court to grant this disproportionate remedy. I've deleted their s/w application off my two computers that had it, and I will watch out to make sure I don't make use of any product from them again.
Maybe the developers want me to have the latest version, but it's not always what I want, and above all, whether latest version or not, I want to know what I've actually got.
From my pov, this will ensure that I never go back to Firefox (after abandoning it a while back because of the memory leaks and denials that there was a problem.)
-wb-
Just think -- wikipedia can be changed in a few seconds by any schoolkid with an idea for some online graffiti -- would you want it chugging away at _any problems at all_?
-wb-
In areas where it "works" -- science, engineering, other technical subjects, reference information (e.g. documenting the stations of a country's rail networks) -- Wikipedia has vastly increased the consistency, coverage, and quality of easily-available information on a huge number of subjects.
It would be good to think that it "works" at least in those areas --- but I'm afraid that's not true without qualification.
There are many technical and scientific topics where there are popular misconceptions around. In too many Wikipedia cases it is unfortunately the popular misconception that survives on Wikipedia.
In some cases, editors favor a popular but mistaken view, and even take down sound citation-supported posts, deleting good references to replace them with substandard material (supported by poor citations that occasionally are even journalistic hogwash).
They can do this within Wikipedia policies, because Wikipedia has a policy for "verifiability, not truth" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Verifiability. A journalistic hogwash print source can still be a perfectly "reliable" (in the Wikipedia sense) supporting citation to "verify" (in the Wikipedia sense) a popular misconception.
So when editors put in substandard references and delete better references, in support of edits pushing their preferred point of view, this false 'Verifiability' standard means there is nothing much in practice to stop them.
The Wikipedia "verifiability, not truth" standard is false because a verifiability that is 'not truth' is only a pseudo-verifiability. There's seemingly no policy that (with any reasonable force) facilitates and encourages exclusion of pseudo-verifiable but untrue material.
I would want to wish Wikipedia success in building a truthful and reliable encyclopedia, but the current pseudo-verifiability policy means that it can't even be moving in the right direction.
-wb-
This is why it's important to cite reliable sources, so any reader can verify the information. The real problem with Wikipedia is not the incorrect information (although there certainly are some errors), but all the useless crud that keeps gathering in articles.
Ok, it's important, but first, there's no real effective mechanism to make sure it happens at all, there are plenty of articles with unsupported outlandish statements.
Second, even when sources are given, there's nothing to stop any old rubbish that finds its way into half-credible print being used as 'supporting' citation to peddle some false line. Some editors will even put in substandard references and delete better references, in support of their chosen point of view, and again there's nothing much in practice to stop them.
For me the clincher is the Wikipedia policy for "verifiability, not truth" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Verifiability. A verifiability that is 'not truth' is only a pseudo-verifiability. There's seemingly no policy that (with any reasonable force) facilitates and encourages exclusion of pseudo-verifiable but untrue material.
I can't understand how Wikipedia credibility can survive a policy like the current state of its 'verifiability' 'standard'.
Proper verifiability should be expressly a means or a route towards truth, not a substitute for it, and subject to scrutiny and recall in that light.
-wb-
Wikipedia:Errors in the Encyclopædia Britannica that have been corrected in Wikipedia
It looks like about 50 errors were recorded.
How many britannica volumes would it take ..... to correct the errors in Wikipedia?
-wb-