and then this happened today:
https://writehere.is/nwo/hsbc-uk-bank-plc-is-acquiring-silicon-valley-bank-uk-limited-svb-uk-for-1
whomever wrote that. must be a doofus. probably a CFR controlled journalist.
what really surprises me, is how many people have never read modern money mechanics.
I thought you would. Interesting point of note:
Analog gauges in airplanes, and cars, light up at night. No "dark mode." maybe in some of these newfangled cars, but not in anything I've driven.
How are you this fine evening?
warning labels where? :) What gets really interesting is when you realize the military has microwave based weapons.
like this:
and they do scramble DNA.
I'm mitigating personal risk, and noticing I enjoy life a lot more without all that stuff. Nothing "schizophrenic" about it.
That's a very misused word, among people 15-30, these days, for some reason. It slights actual people with the situation, I think.
depends on exposure amounts, output power envelope, frequency, etc.
2.4ghz is the same roughly that the microwave oven uses.
5ghz+ will penetrate less into the skin and cranial tissue, but still has an affect on red blood cells, blood vessels, and so on.
2.4ghz will basically dehydrate you.
You've never gotten a leg cramp from having a phone in your pocket all day ?
Cordless phones used 400-900mhz, until the mid 90s.
what's interesting to me is I wonder how many people realize that the 2% reserve, means that out of all the money the bank has accepted as deposits, (that large sum x 2%) is all the money they actually have at the bank.
no, just that they're different than incandescent, and harder on the eyes. although bulbs that have bluetooth stuff in them, like the phillips HUE, do indeed output 2.4ghz radiation, which is invisible. I did not make the video I linked above.
https://donklipstein.com/ledc.html
(this is interesting, and has a lot of history and tech details about lighting.)
this is not as interesting.
:-)
Interesting.
It makes sense.
:-)
Yay!
That would be weird to see that in person. A few years ago I wrote an article about the advances in the CCTV network. LOL. It's a pretty weird scenario. We actually have more cameras here in the United States, than they do in mainland China, believe it or not.
yes but light from incandescents is a different part of the EM spectrum.
I really, really don't like them. I've been an early adopter of all that since 1998, had some really cool phones over the years. But ultimately, they all suck now. They make what would take 3 seconds on a laptop, take about 5 minutes on a phone, if it'll even let you do it. I'm convinced they're making people stupid.
Send someone 5 sentences, they won't read it. "that's too long." It changes communication styles, too. People are less apt to read a book, if they spend time on a smart phone. Because reading is "hard."
There are other aspects too, like that they're microwaving your body when you're using them. Literally cellphones use microwave energy.
Aside from that, I'm not much for having my words and camera stuff recorded 24/7 and sent off to somewhere, for profiling, analysis or whatever is going on there.. When I still used the thing, I'd be out eating, someone would mention a word, and I'd see a facebook ad for that thing. That's totally not okay.
I mean, I do have one, but it's literally kept outside, and I've turned it on about 5 times in the last 2 years. That first year, I tried to like it on and off, but every time I just ended up putting it outside again.
interesting! i'd never thought about cameras outside reading my phone. about 3 years ago, I decided to just stop using mine completely.
I got a 2 way pager that can do texts or emails, but hardly use it. Just confine computer time to my laptop, and that's the end of it.
it's nice walking around in public without a dinging microwave device in your pocket. really simplifies a lot of things.
the closest i've gotten to explaining it so far is akin to:
Think of it as looking for something in the dark, versus looking for the small change in the all white screen, during the day. Dark mode harder mentally.
as far as additional controls go in the experiment:
I don't use CFL/Neon/LED lights in my dwelling, only incandescent full spectrum bulbs.
LED's are actually brutal on eyesight.
So I have one or two lamps on, even though it's evening time. Uncertain if that makes any difference, just yet.
I don't use a smartphone. Isn't damus only on an android or iOS ? 🥺
but dark mode actually *hurts* my eyes at night.
I've been a photographer my whole life, hence the curiosity.
Crowd sourcing the answer collects more data, I only know my eyes/myself.
This is interesting.
give it a go, I'd be curious to see what your results are, actually.
I'm glad it works for you. Totally can't hang here.
What I'm wondering too though, is if there's a correlation between people that like dark mode, and their eyesight.
The armchair theory here is people with less than 20/20 vision benefit from darkmode, but I'm not sure exactly why yet.
