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User: bmxeroh

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  1. Re:How about not blowing away work? on Windows 10 To Use Machine Learning in Latest Attempt To Make Reboots Less Annoying (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 1

    Yeah this kills me. Nothing better than being at a clients house and being forced to stand there like a dumbass waiting for it to finish updates.

  2. Re:Ah yes.. The reason the FDA does reviews on FDA Worried Drug Was Risky; Now Reports of Deaths Spark Concern (cnn.com) · · Score: 1

    First, relax, I was taking a stab at the regs themselves, not pharmacies or pharmacists. I specifically didn't mention what schedules as it is nuanced depending on said schedule, and most people that have never dealt with it don't really know or care about the different schedules. A schedule 2 is much, much different as to the level of effort you must go through to sell, store, dispense, etc as you alluded to. You also are omitting some info when you state that you have to submit a 222 form to the DEA, as you only have to do that for a schedule 2. I'm not sure what kind of mix of controlled drugs human pharmacies (I worked in the Vet industry) dispense in regards to schedule, but I'd assume that it's MOSTLY C3-C5. And I'm not discounting the points you made about keeping track of every tablet that falls off the counter at the volume a human pharmacy is doing. However, the fact is the estimate requirement for C3-C5 for some reason still applies to returned bottles. It makes no sense as I'm assuming your point to the pharmacy/store level comment you made is that you can't estimate how many pills you are dispensing. Perhaps the investigator that was doing my audit, as well as her supervisor was mistaken. Remember the Buprenorphine recall a few years ago? It was a shit show. The recall notice stated that it should have been returned directly to the mfg, however I had clinics sending me back partial syringes and vials that I somehow was supposed to keep track of the exact ml left in the container, according to my auditor. Exactly how do I measure whats left in the vial? My point was I had the exact same problems you do, but without the legal leeway. As it turned out I didn't get into any actual trouble, but I was given a hard time about it none the less.

  3. Re:Ah yes.. The reason the FDA does reviews on FDA Worried Drug Was Risky; Now Reports of Deaths Spark Concern (cnn.com) · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I remember seeing an article somewhere about converting meth back into a decongestant. The allure is that it's far easier to get meth than it is to get the decongestant. I used to work in the pharm industry, and the regulations are laughable as to their inconsistencies. Did you know that dispensing pharmacies don't have to keep an exact pill count on controlled substances? They are allowed to estimate what's there. Distributors are REQUIRED to keep an exact pill count of any open bottles returned, but since the pharmacy was just guessing the paperwork doesn't match up. Imagine how a DEA investigator doing an audit feels about that.

  4. Re: Who gives a fuck on MIT No Longer Owns 18.0.0.0/8 (ttias.be) · · Score: 2

    Mod up (+1, Facial)

    FTFY.

  5. Re:Have it all the time... on One in Five of Us May 'Hear' Flashes of Light (theguardian.com) · · Score: 1

    Same deal. I would describe it as the flash and noise associated with a CRT being turned on, but far more jolting since it's all in my head.

  6. Re:Three wise men on Scientists Predict Star Collision Visible To The Naked Eye In 2022 (npr.org) · · Score: 1

    That all seems so overly complicated and also completely ridiculous.

  7. Re:There perfect cup is the one you pour in the si on Maths Zeroes in on Perfect Cup of Coffee (bbc.com) · · Score: 1

    Coffee and beer are two of the most vile things I've ever tried. I just have no taste for bitterness I guess. At best, I've found a couple of beers that I can tolerate, and one that was actually kind of agreeable, but it had an IBU rating of 17, so that kind of makes sense. I still keep trying though, I'm somewhat convinced that most of my problem is that I don't even know where to start.

  8. Re:It's the size of two football fields on Facebook Achieves 20Gbps Data Rate Over MMW Radio Spectrum (thestack.com) · · Score: 1

    What do you mean? It's in the name; it's Olympic-sized. https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/us/olympic-sized

  9. Re:Examples needed on Security Firm Shows How To Hack a US Voting Machine (bleepingcomputer.com) · · Score: 0

    Re-read the AC's comment with a Russian accent and it all makes sense.

  10. Re:It takes me much longer than 6 seconds... on Pornhub Offers To Buy Vine Because 'Six Seconds Is More Than Enough' (cnet.com) · · Score: 2

    Ugh, now all I can think about is rigging up some sort of hardware solution to log said roundtrips. Hall effect sensor perhaps? I feel like this might not go over well with the significant other..."but, it's for science!"

  11. Does anyone in the male gay community have a job? I mean seriously who even has time for that? Kudos I guess, but I like to have some energy left in the day to do things other than sleep and have sex.

  12. Re:Link to the paper on CO2 To Ethanol In One Step With Cheap Catalyst (sciencedaily.com) · · Score: 4, Funny

    Obviously we should just remove all of the oxygen from the water first...boom problem solved.

  13. Re:Cable Packages, Duh on Viewers Only Watch 10% of Pay-TV Channels: Nielsen (usatoday.com) · · Score: 1

    I think the time thing is far more important than most folks realize. I've realized that I can watch quite a bit of high-quality content, and still have plenty of time to actually do something other than sit on the couch all day. It's kind of nice. Honestly I have enough subscription services that my total bill is probably more than what I was paying for cable+internet, but I find the VALUE to be much higher do to the time factor as well as the sheer amount of stuff that I actually want to watch.

  14. Nothing really, other than being "in spec" as the 1080p spec doesn't include things like Wide Color Gamut. HDR also requires HDMI 2.0a and HDCP 2.2 (sort of, my understanding is that the Dolby Vision type of HDR doesn't). It's all done in software save for a Dolby chip (think betamax vs VCR) offering that all of the MFGs I talked to at CEDIA aren't interested in.

    The long and short of it is that there is no incentive to do so. A 1080p TV that they broke all sorts of spec on to make HDR would cost every bit as much, if not more than, a comparable 4K TV. Sales would be dismal, since folks could simply buy a 4K TV for the same price and everyone knows from the constant marketing speech that 4K is better, no matter what size screen.

  15. I don't know, Sony's new 100 inch Z series that they had on display at CEDIA was pretty sweet. $60k, but pretty sweet none the less. Seriously though, at normal screen sizes, I'm with you. There's not a huge leap in quality by simply changing from 1080 to 4k. However, what the 1080p TV's don't have is HDR, which to me is far more important than the resolution increase.

  16. Re:Fallout 4 mods on Every PlayStation 4 Gets HDR This Week With System Update 4.00 (cnet.com) · · Score: 2

    I'm with you. I really enjoy Sony hardware and really hate Sony company.

  17. 3 minutes ago I just brought this term up in the office. It's definitely my new favorite term and like you, I can't wait to slide it into a serious conversation.

  18. Re:Not quite... on America's First Offshore Wind Farm In Pictures (businessinsider.com) · · Score: 1

    I'm with you on this. I love the sight of turbines. I'm in central Ohio so there's not many around, but there is a giant wind farm in the northern part of the state that always impresses me when I drive by,

  19. Re: Bad Choice of Location on America's First Offshore Wind Farm In Pictures (businessinsider.com) · · Score: 1

    you abbreviated miles wrong...

  20. Emojis part of unicode to begin with on Microsoft Swaps Toy Gun Emoji For Revolver -- Days After Apple Does the Opposite (arstechnica.co.uk) · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Why are emojis part of unicode to begin with? Is it literally just because it became popular with 12 year olds and 30 year olds who still think they're 12 so they needed to do something with them? Couldn't we have just made the right choice, declare emojis absolutely stupid, and take away the phones of people that try to use them? I loathe that my phone highlights words it has an emoji for. "Hey do you want to swap out this perfectly understandable English word for a tiny little picture of the thing your talking about?". "Actually, no I don't. I don't live in a pictographic culture so the written word is just fine. Thanks." I received a text invitation from my cousin (See 30yr old bracket above) to a party and I almost couldn't figure out what it meant. There were pictures of chicken drumsticks, ballons, fried shrimp, those stupid noise makers you blow into, a strawberry, a piece of cake or pie, a hotdog, and a couple of drink looking things. There were more emojis than text, so I just couldn't bring myself to actually respond to that mess.

    TL;DR I hate emojis and everyone that uses them.

  21. Re:"Hello World" app on Google Launches Android Programming Course For Absolute Beginners (zdnet.com) · · Score: 1

    And it's 200+ lines of boilerplate...

  22. Ugh, must be nice. 20/2 on a good day for $79.

  23. SpaceX Nailed it. on Small and Heavy Arms Traded On Facebook By Libyan Militants (rt.com) · · Score: 1

    The landing of the first stage on a freaking barge was pretty damn impressive.

  24. Re: You can't defer maintenance forever on What's Frying the Electrical Systems On BART Trains? (ieee.org) · · Score: 1

    No mod points today, so all I can give you is an lol.

  25. Re: Ghost electric vampires finally dealt with on New Energy Efficiency Standards Take Effect This Week In the US (nrdc.org) · · Score: 1

    Since we're on the subject of cable boxes. You know what else is stupid in electronics? Power toggles instead of discrete power commands. A lot of the home automation stuff we do ties in with home theaters. Our options are either leave the box on, use variables to track power state and hope the power never surge, or use aditional hardware sensors and programming to track power. Time is money, guess which path is normally taken?