I met a medically retired marine back when I was in school that changed my view on this. His superior insisted on his group walking as much as possible with their packs, but instead of it just being extra exercise he wound up having to get an amputation after all of the stress on his legs lead to an issue with the arteries or veins. At a certain point, extra punishment isn’t beneficial, and a mechanism to manage it would be useful.
Just learned about this, made editing speed limits a lot easier!
You can! Browse to the location, and then click menu button > “Download data here” and the questions will appear.
I didn’t know about map complete, thanks!
That makes sense to me. Going to space is going to space; astronauts go to space.
OpenStreetMap: https://planet.openstreetmap.org/
Ramps are assistive technology, right?
I don’t know how to do image captions in Lemmy, so I’m putting a text description of the image here instead: The post’s main image is of a large format spiral bound booklet open to a middle page. The paper is manila colored and shows wavy wrinkles from years of use. On the page is a list of planet names in black text with braille embossed over it. At the bottom of the page is a chart of the planets arranged in a line, with each planets dot embossed so it can be felt. The top right corner has a NASA logo which is also embossed.
I’m modelling a pencil holder version of the star projector at the planetarium I volunteer for.
It looks pretty bulky for now, but seems like a promising advancement.
Wow, that laptop was my family’s computer growing up. Star Gate nostalgia hits different here.
The book “Talking to Strangers” by Malcolm Gladwell does an excellent job of explaining how access to convenient means of suicide increase rates, which contradicts the common argument that suicidal people will find other means to die if guns are less accessible. It turns out suicidal behavior is often situation and time specific, and removing tools for self harm means better chances of improvement.
There are two common ways to refer to disabled individuals: identity-first language (“disabled person”) and person-first language (“person with a disability”). Both of these forms of language are fine to use, but this article will use identity-first language. Identity-first language is a growing preference among Disabled people, especially people who engage in anti-ableist and disability justice work.
This was surprising to me. During some of my volunteer work I thought I was being “good” by using the person-first language (e.g. “My team is 3D printing AT for use by people living with disabilities.”).
Thank you for the tips.
I’m a moderator on the community where I encountered the spambot account, and already banned it there. My question is wondering how I can report the user upstream to the instance admins. I’m not very familiar with Lemmy, I see that there’s a modlog, so perhaps the SDF admins would need to monitor it and act based on the user getting banned from one of their communities?
The Fordyce Bath House. These buildings were wooden shacks in the 1800s, and were replaced with the opulent resort buildings after a fire razed the street.
One of the hot spring sources. In a fountain outside you can touch the water, and it is HOT!
The Hubbard Tub Room. Complete with an elevator next door.
That font looks well made. I’d encourage you to make that link into a post to the community!
I’m not on the AI bandwagon, but found this article to be a pretty reasonable take on areas where AI could make sense.
Thank you for clarifying!
Erin Kissane has an excellent article on why Meta doesn’t deserve the benefit of the doubt. Meta/Facebook has had power over social media before and displayed incredible disregard for human life, much less anything else related to healthy communities.
To treat Threads the same as a brand new instance and federate with it is a mistake.
That’s cool!
If you feel so inclined you should submit that as a post!