fiat_lux
- 8 Posts
- 630 Comments
fiat_lux@kbin.socialto
A Boring Dystopia@lemmy.world•$6 for a hot dog? That’s how much Americans now expect to pay.
42·2 years agoLol. I’ve seen hot dogs sell here for US$13 (after conversion). The US doesn’t understand how cheap their food is, even with inflation. The minimum wage for adults is USD$15.40 though (again converted) and we don’t have “but it’s OK they get tips so we don’t have to pay them more than $2” shenanigans.
Fuck that paywall, but again the problem is largely how underpaid and exploited people are, not how much hot dogs have increased in price.
fiat_lux@kbin.socialto
News@lemmy.world•Former President Trump is found guilty in historic New York criminal case
171·2 years agoI appreciate you
fiat_lux@kbin.socialto
World News@lemmy.world•Chinese scientists develop cure for diabetes, insulin patient becomes medicine-free in just 3 months
6·2 years ago1 patient, T2 since mid-30s and now 59, had kidney transplant 2017 after end-stage diabetic nephropathy and fucked glucose control since 2019. The successful cells were endoderm stem cells from him cultivated by mice they injected with his PBMCs that they then made diabetic. So not from cadavers (except mouse cadaver i guess), which is the actual new part here. Intrahepatic implant, and cells from unrelated donor failed that were embedded at the same time. His personalised mouse-donor cells worked well enough to take him off insulin 3 months later.
It’s good news, but you’re entirely correct that the article missed the point entirely. Thanks for the crash course in islet cell therapy!
fiat_lux@kbin.socialto
World News@lemmy.world•Why Is the World Ignoring a Looming Genocide in Sudan?
13·2 years agoLooming? Sudan is past the looming stage. When do known verified atrocities reach “current reality” status?
fiat_lux@kbin.socialto
World News@lemmy.world•$20,000 annual pay: Japan's weak yen drives away Asian talent
13·2 years agoI once looked at a job listing for something with very specialist technical knowledge in specific programming areas, for a Japanese company based in Tokyo (pre-covid so remote wasn’t really a thing yet). Pretty niche stuff and needed at least basic Japanese language skills too, so I assumed it would pay ok - even if it wasn’t good or great in comparison with jobs where i was.
After conversion it worked out to be around USD$40k a year, which is probably just over 1/3 of what it would pay at minimum elsewhere. More like 1/4 or less for Silicon Valley type locations, but the rent for a tiny Tokyo shoebox is about the same price even if food is a cheaper. There was no way I was applying for that.
It isn’t just about a weak yen, it’s much more about hugely underpaying people.
How dare they be such precious little nuggets <3
Nice, I’ve never got anything as good from those techniques. Masterfully done!
I like this a lot. What’s your process?
fiat_lux@kbin.socialto
Not The Onion@lemmy.world•American Airlines backtracks on filing that blamed 9-year-old for being filmed in bathroom
18·2 years agoI’m going to hope this is some ChatGPT template response bullshit, because the other option is that someone chose to write this.
Even if they were an adult who might recognise an illuminated spy camera, it’s not like you have enough choice in bathrooms at 30000 ft to infer something resembling consent.
fiat_lux@kbin.socialto
News@lemmy.world•Wealth inequality starts at birth. Lawmakers debate whether child savings accounts can help, the 401Kids Savings Act
11·2 years agoIt starts before birth. Low socio-economic status affects the health of pregnant people, which in turn has consequences for foetal development. Stress is a big trigger for various latent congenital issues, and that’s one reason climate change is going to result in increased rates of disease.
fiat_lux@kbin.socialto
News@lemmy.world•Judge admonishes defense witness for his behavior after prosecution rests in Trump hush money trial
13·2 years agoNot just a defense witness, a former federal prosecutor. A judge had to tell a former federal prosecutor “And then if you don’t like my ruling, you don’t give me side eye and you don’t roll your eyes.” like he was a pouty teenager.
fiat_lux@kbin.socialto
birding@lemmy.world•Shredding at the feeder. (Northern Cardinal)
17·2 years agoI fucking love this so much. Great work.
fiat_lux@kbin.socialto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•In your country, what "common" animals are tourists most excited to see?
1·2 years agoWhich kind? We’ve got bunches. The sulphur crested are the most famous, and they are great but can be vandals
fiat_lux@kbin.socialto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•In your country, what "common" animals are tourists most excited to see?
3·2 years agoOh no, i got to see them. This was a decade ago, and I was told even then that there used to be many more. I was happy to see any at all though, I had only ever seen them in movies and they almost seemed mythical. They are pretty magical, it’s very sad to hear they’re almost gone.
fiat_lux@kbin.socialto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•In your country, what "common" animals are tourists most excited to see?
7·2 years agoSeeing a chipmunk was the same for me. And goddamn are they cute, I had no idea they were so small and precious. Alvin and the chipmunks are monstrosities by comparison.
fiat_lux@kbin.socialto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•In your country, what "common" animals are tourists most excited to see?
13·2 years agoThe bin chickens are my kin, I’m in the small minority here who appreciate them.
And yeah, the flying foxes are a surprise for most foreigners. They’re also pretty big and often fly low at dusk, so they can be slightly startling too, even though they’re just adorable fuzzy harmless nectar drinkers. It’s a pity they screech too, it might be easier to reassure non-locals that they’re not dangerous.
People are also often surprised to see all the other Sydney city wildlife and how much of it there is, especially rainbow lorrikeets. Everyone loves the lorrikeets, but people from the northern hemisphere are especially awestruck when they see them. It’s understandably almost a little surreal to have such brightly colored parrots hanging out in the middle of a city, if you’re someone who comes from a city that is just pigeons and sparrows.
fiat_lux@kbin.socialto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•In your country, what "common" animals are tourists most excited to see?
9·2 years agoIf you want to see a croc, just go walking near the shallow water of the top half of the country’s coast. You won’t see the croc for long, and it will be the last thing you ever see, but it will be up close and very personal.
Seriously though, you don’t go to see salt water crocodiles in the wild or even go near any body of water on the northern coast. If you can see one with the naked eye in the wild, you’re already too close. They’re extremely fast, extremely aggressive, and the males get up to 6m / 20ft long and 1000kg / 2200lb. They are very much a zoo only thing.
fiat_lux@kbin.socialto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•In your country, what "common" animals are tourists most excited to see?
63·2 years agoI was excited to see squirrels, lightning bugs and a racoon in the US.
When people come to Australia they obviously want to see kangaroos, koalas and platypus and quokka. Koalas are very rare to see in the wild, and a visit to a zoo will score you a sleeping ball on a branch. Kangaroos are frequently roadkill if you go outside the city. Quokka require a long trip to a really remote location. You’ll also almost never see a platypus, even the ones at the zoo you might catch a water ripple at best.
But if you’re headed to Sydney city, guaranteed you’ll spot the almighty and much maligned “bin chicken”, our Australian white ibis. Often not quite white from the bins. At night they serenade you with their collective honking from their tree, which can be easily spotted by the masses of white poop underneath. And you’ll see fruit bats in the evening. Hopefully not the daytime corpses hanging from electrical cables while they slowly rot, but that’s not altogether unlikely either, unfortunately.
fiat_lux@kbin.socialto
News@lemmy.world•RFK Jr. says he had parasitic brain worm and undisclosed memory loss
9·2 years agoThere’s a person who has been living a mostly normal life with 90% of his brain missing. Perhaps we could just re-examine society’s ableism and how we design our systems of government to allow single points of failure instead? RFK Jr. has terrible opinions, but also had them before having a literal brain worm.









The video in the article has some good footage too. The “why is there bright light when I am nocturnal?!” face is a mood I felt on a deeply personal level.