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Vodulas [they/them] @ Vodulas @beehaw.org
Posts
11
Comments
1,050
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • For a better reference than just single ingredients, the article lists what it considers ultra processed:

    Ultra-processed foods include carbonated soft drinks; sweet or savoury packaged snacks; chocolate, candies (confectionery); ice cream; mass-produced packaged breads and buns; margarines and other spreads; cookies (biscuits), pastries, cakes and cake mixes; breakfast ‘cereals’; pre-prepared pies and pasta and pizza dishes; poultry and fish ‘nuggets’ and ‘sticks’, sausages, burgers, hot dogs and other reconstituted meat products; powdered and packaged ‘instant’ soups, noodles and desserts; and many other products see online supplementary material, Supplemental Table 1).

    The supplementary material they mention is linked later on, but the link does not work for me

    To view supplementary material for this article, please visit https://doi.org/10.1017/S1368980018003762

  • I think this is pretty niche, but 3d printer filament. Some companies sell directly (MatterHackers, ProtoPasta, etc) but the variety isn't as good. There are just things some manufacturers that only are available in my area via Amazon

  • Somehow replied to my own comment. Good thing I am actively drinking coffee. Yeah, although it makes me wonder if the game pass version isn’t basically the console version. They do some weird stuff with required windows processes.

  • The article didn't mention homeschooling as far as I can tell, just that he was "in trouble for failing some tests at school." The more concerning thing is the 15 year old with the combo to the lock box for a gun.

    Edit: It offhand mentions it at the end. Still should not have had access to a gun

  • Do you live outside the US? The way the US works is far less centralized than other countries. Most of this time this kind of stuff is left up to state regulations or even city regulations and contracts. The truth is that capless plans exist, but that is not the reality for large swaths of the US. You're taking a broad approach to a specific problem. Ending data caps ends at the Federal level ends the problem and does away with the mess of state BS. Anyway, I am done talking to a brick wall. Have a good one

  • You act like I work at the FCC. The reality is the city has tried focusing on that in the past and failed because the contracts set up with the ISPs were renewed by the centrist city government. I think you are thinking of an ideal situation where one does not exist.