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Comment Re:Won't fly...privacy concerns + probably illegal (Score 2) 62

Try taking a GoPro into any public bathroom and see what happens..

Expectation of privacy

Stand in my front yard with camera, filming my family without permission and see what the cops say when they arrive. Different states have vastly different laws about recording individuals without consent.

Depends on where you stand. If you stand in the right of way there is a good chance that the police cannot stop you.

You are allowed to be in people's yards and on their doorsteps, unless there is a no-trespassing sign.

Not everywhere. Stand in my front yard after I've asked you to leave and you risk being cited for trespassing. Delivering a package I've requested to be delivered? Allowed. Filming through my windows where I expect a reasonable level of privacy, and using that video for business purposes? Time to check with your lawyers.

True, but if someone is in the right of way they can legally film anything that is visible from there (see Google's Street view cars)
https://www.acludc.org/en/know...
When in public spaces where you are lawfully present you have the right to photograph anything that is in plain view. That includes pictures of federal buildings, transportation facilities, and police.

Aaron Z

Comment Re: It's called work (Score 1) 228

The tragedy is that nobody actually wants peace enough to make it happen. All it would take is the U.N. declaring all of Israel to be a demilitarized zone, ordering the Israeli government and Hamas to both disarm, shooting anyone who refuses to comply, and then keeping those million or so troops in that region to help rebuild, slowly drawing down the number of troops over... say 200 years, so that by the time they are gone, no one alive still remembers the horrors of this day.

That plan sounds a lot like what was supposed to happen under the "Mandate for Palestine" ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... ) with predictable results...

Aaron Z

Comment Re:Welp (Score 1) 41

Does it have radar? Ultrasonic parking senors, sure, but usually those (per Bosch: https://www.bosch-mobility.com... ) max out at 5.5M or about 18' That isn't much help at freeway speeds
Near as I can tell (from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... and various Ford press releases), the Mach-E has EyeQ4 which is camera only (with 1 or 3 cameras depending on which version it has), so it is very possible that there wasn't enough light to determine that there was an obstacle in the road, especially if the stopped vehicle was a dark color and didn't have any lights on.
As Cassini2 posted below, vision "self driving" should be backed up by another spectrum (IR, Laser, etc) to handle low visibility situations (deer, stopped cars, etc).

Additionally, stopping in the travel lane of a limited access highway at ANY time is suicidal at best, let alone at night with no lights on (in TX where the speed limit is probably 75MPH).

Aaron Z

Comment Re:I don't get it (Score 1) 115

You will never get no-accidents-ever as long as SF cyclists continue to claim - and act like - traffic laws apply only to cars and pedestrians, but never them

Are you talking about the cyclist not stopping at a stop sign? You realise they don't need to right? AB 122 scrapped the requirement for bicycles to stop.

Did they pass it again? Looking, it appears that AB 122 was vetoed per: https://cal.streetsblog.org/20...
Even if it was actually passed, looking at the text from the law as was proposed: https://leginfo.legislature.ca...
It would appear that if the Waymo car stopped before the bike entered the intersection the bike would have been required to stop and yield to the Waymo car under AB122 as was proposed, from the text of the bill:

(d) A person riding a bicycle approaching a stop sign at the entrance to, or within, an intersection shall, upon arriving at the sign, yield the right-of-way to any vehicles that have stopped at the entrance to the intersection, have entered the intersection, or that are approaching on the intersecting highway close enough to constitute an immediate hazard, and to pedestrians as required by Section 21950, and shall continue to yield the right-of-way to those vehicles and pedestrians until it is reasonably safe to proceed.

As I read it, the law (as was proposed) would have allowed bikes to treat the stop sign at an intersection that was otherwise unoccupied as a yield sign, but if a vehicle was at the intersection the bike would have to stop.

Incidentally here we have a computer unable to stop despite detecting the situation, this implies poor field of vision both by the car which was required to stop, as well as the cyclist who was not.

Correction, the cyclist WAS required to stop before entering the intersection (even under AB122 which was vetoed and did not become law) as long as the Waymo car was stopped before the bike entered the intersection (which it sounds like it was).

The cyclist was still in the wrong here, but that's the issue with shitty 4-way stop intersection. It all goes to shit when a large vehicle comes through and stops providing perfect vision.

No, that's the issue with drivers who CHOOSE not to stop at the stop sign (as this cyclist chose to do). From the article:

Waymo spokesperson Julia Ilina had more details to share. The Waymo vehicle was stopped at a four-way stop, as an oncoming large truck began to turn into the intersection. The vehicle waited until it was its turn and then also began to proceed through the intersection, failing to notice the cyclist who was traveling behind the truck.
“The cyclist was occluded by the truck and quickly followed behind it, crossing into the Waymo vehicle’s path,” Ilina said. “When they became fully visible, our vehicle applied heavy braking but was not able to avoid the collision.”

Looking at the intersection and reading that, I would guess that both the truck and the Waymo car were turning left and the bike was going straight in the bike lane. The truck started its left turn, the Waymo car began its left turn (being as both can make a left turn without hitting each other) when the bike ran the stop sign from behind the truck, entered the path of the Waymo car and collided with the front of the Waymo car at whatever speed they were going (most likely IMO based on the description).
It is also possible that both the truck and the bike were making a left turn, the bike was moving quickly and was following off of the left rear quarter of the truck (unlikely IMO, because I don't see a self driving car trying to go straight through an intersection that is still occupied by a truck, or accelerating fast enough to hit a bike following right behind a truck).

Aaron Z

Comment Re:Permission change (Score 1) 143

That might work in professional and enterprise editions, but not in Windows Home. Microsoft routinely removes firewall rules that interfere with its applications. You'd need to block it in an external firewall if you want it to hold.

Interesting, I haven't run into that (yet). Was that using the "Windows Defender Firewall with Advanced Security" or the basic Windows Firewall?

Aaron Z

Comment Re:Okay ... (Score 1) 89

... the plane maker's employees failed to put back the bolts when they reinstalled a 737 MAX 9 plug door after opening or removing it during production, ...

Assuming this is accurate, how does a worker install this door plug, that requires several bolts to secure, and fail to also install the bolts? Smoke break? Shift change? If you're going to start a procedure, finish the procedure or leave a clear indication that it hasn't been finished, like a BIG red tag. On the other hand, kudos to the door plug design for staying on as long as it did w/o any bolts.

From what I read (from someone who claimed to be a employee) its because they found a way to avoid fully removing the door, so they didn't have to do that checklist item. Source (worth exactly what you paid for it): https://leehamnews.com/2024/01...

Current Boeing employee here – I will save you waiting two years for the NTSB report to come out and give it to you for free: the reason the door blew off is stated in black and white in Boeings own records. It is also very, very stupid and speaks volumes about the quality culture at certain portions of the business.

A couple of things to cover before we begin:

Q1) Why should we believe you?
A) You shouldn’t, I’m some random throwaway account, do your own due diligence. Others who work at Boeing can verify what I say is true, but all I ask is you consider the following based on its own merits.

Q2) Why are you doing this?
A) Because there are many cultures at Boeing, and while the executive culture may be throughly compromised since we were bought by McD, there are many other people who still push for a quality product with cutting edge design. My hope is that this is the wake up call that finally forces the Board to take decisive action, and remove the executives that are resisting the necessary cultural changes to return to a company that values safety and quality above schedule.

With that out of the way why did the left hand (LH) mid-exit door plug blow off of the 737-9 registered as N704AL? Simple- as has been covered in a number of articles and videos across aviation channels, there are 4 bolts that prevent the mid-exit door plug from sliding up off of the door stop fittings that take the actual pressurization loads in flight, and these 4 bolts were not installed when Boeing delivered the airplane, our own records reflect this.

The mid-exit doors on a 737-9 of both the regular and plug variety come from Spirit already installed in what is supposed to be the final configuration and in the Renton factory, there is a job for the doors team to verify this “final” install and rigging meets drawing requirements. In a healthy production system, this would be a “belt and suspenders” sort of check, but the 737 production system is quite far from healthy, its a rambling, shambling, disaster waiting to happen. As a result, this check job that should find minimal defects has in the past 365 calendar days recorded 392 nonconforming findings on 737 mid fuselage door installations (so both actual doors for the high density configs, and plugs like the one that blew out). That is a hideously high and very alarming number, and if our quality system on 737 was healthy, it would have stopped the line and driven the issue back to supplier after the first few instances. Obviously, this did not happen. Now, on the incident aircraft this check job was completed on 31 August 2023, and did turn up discrepancies, but on the RH side door, not the LH that actually failed. I could blame the team for missing certain details, but given the enormous volume of defects they were already finding and fixing, it was inevitable something would slip through- and on the incident aircraft something did. I know what you are thinking at this point, but grab some popcorn because there is a plot twist coming up.

The next day on 1 September 2023 a different team (remember 737s flow through the factory quite quickly, 24 hours completely changes who is working on the plane) wrote up a finding for damaged and improperly installed rivets on the LH mid-exit door of the incident aircraft.

A brief aside to explain two of the record systems Boeing uses in production. The first is a program called CMES which stands for something boring and unimportant but what is important is that CMES is the sole authoritative repository for airplane build records (except on 787 which uses a different program). If a build record in CMES says something was built, inspected, and stamped in accordance with the drawing, then the airplane damn well better be per drawing. The second is a program called SAT, which also stands for something boring and unimportant but what is important is that SAT is *not* an authoritative records system, its a bullentin board where various things affecting the airplane build get posted about and updated with resolutions. You can think of it sort of like a idiots version of Slack or something. Wise readers will already be shuddering and wondering how many consultants were involved, because, yes SAT is a *management visibilty tool*. Like any good management visibilty tool, SAT can generate metrics, lots of metrics, and oh God do Boeing managers love their metrics. As a result, SAT postings are the primary topic of discussion at most daily status meetings, and the whole system is perceived as being extremely important despite, I reiterate, it holding no actual authority at all.

We now return to our incident aircraft, which was written up for having defective rivets on the LH mid-exit door. Now as is standard practice kn Renton (but not to my knowledge in Everett on wide bodies) this write-up happened in two forms, one in CMES, which is the correct venue, and once in SAT to “coordinate the response” but really as a behind-covering measure so the manager of the team that wrote it can show his boss he’s shoved the problem onto someone else. Because there are so many problems with the Spirit build in the 737, Spirit has teams on site in Renton performing warranty work for all of their shoddy quality, and this SAT promptly gets shunted into their queue as a warranty item. Lots of bickering ensues in the SAT messages, and it takes a bit for Spirit to get to the work package. Once they have finished, they send it back to a Boeing QA for final acceptance, but then Malicious Stupid Happens! The Boeing QA writes another record in CMES (again, the correct venue) stating (with pictures) that Spirit has not actually reworked the discrepant rivets, they *just painted over the defects*. In Boeing production speak, this is a “process failure”. For an A&P mechanic at an airline, this would be called “federal crime”.

Presented with evidence of their malfeasance, Spirit reopens the package and admits that not only did they not rework the rivets properly, there is a damaged pressure seal they need to replace (who damaged it, and when it was damaged is not clear to me). The big deal with this seal, at least according to frantic SAT postings, is the part is not on hand, and will need to be ordered, which is going to impact schedule, and (reading between the lines here) Management is Not Happy. 1/2
2/2
However, more critical for purposes of the accident investigation, the pressure seal is unsurprisingly sandwiched between the plug and the fuselage, and you cannot replace it without opening the door plug to gain access. All of this conversation is documented in increasingly aggressive posts in the SAT, but finally we get to the damning entry which reads something along the lines of “coordinating with the doors team to determine if the door will have to be removed entirely, or just opened. If it is removed then a Removal will have to be written.” Note: a Removal is a type of record in CMES that requires formal sign off from QA that the airplane been restored to drawing requirements.

If you have been paying attention to this situation closely, you may be able to spot the critical error: regardless of whether the door is simply opened or removed entirely, the 4 retaining bolts that keep it from sliding off of the door stops have to be pulled out. A removal should be written in either case for QA to verify install, but as it turns out, someone (exactly who will be a fun question for investigators) decides that the door only needs to be opened, and no formal Removal is generated in CMES (the reason for which is unclear, and a major process failure). Therefore, in the official build records of the airplane, a pressure seal that cannot be accessed without opening the door (and thereby removing retaining bolts) is documented as being replaced, but the door is never officially opened and thus no QA inspection is required.
This entire sequence is documented in the SAT, and the nonconformance records in CMES address the damaged rivets and pressure seal, but at no point is the verification job reopened, or is any record of removed retention bolts created, despite it this being a physical impossibility. Finally with Spirit completing their work to Boeing QAs satisfaction, the two rivet-related records in CMES are stamped complete, and the SAT closed on 19 September 2023. No record or comment regarding the retention bolts is made.

I told you it was stupid.

So, where are the bolts? Probably sitting forgotten and unlabeled (because there is no formal record number to label them with) on a work-in-progress bench, unless someone already tossed them in the scrap bin to tidy up.

There’s lots more to be said about the culture that enabled this to happened, but thats the basic details of what happened, the NTSB report will say it in more elegant terms in a few years.

Aaron Z

Comment Re:No automatic install? (Score 1) 35

Why would anyone be upset that they removed something that wasn't supposed to be there in the first place?

Some non-Slashdotters actually have hp printers and may be quite upset about MS removing something that *was* supposed to be there. Remember this entire thing started because of a printer name mismatch. As far as Microsoft can tell hp pushed out a legitimate driver to a legitimate hp owner. There's no telling which users legitimately needed the driver and which ended up having it installed by accident.

Printer name mismatch? I had that software install itself on a VM with no printers installed and no HP printers on the network.

Aaron Z

Comment Re:I wonder (Score 4, Informative) 51

Nope, I had it show up last night on a brand new Win 10 VM which resides on a network with no HP printers.
It used to be that I installed a "vanilla" copy of Windows to get rid of the crud that hardware manufacturers shoveled onto their machines, now Microsoft is installing it automatically via Windows Update...

Aaron Z

Comment Re:It never ceases to amaze me (Score 2) 146

That's great as long as the garage door opener has decent safety features, like stopping and backing up a bit when it feels extra resistance.

Unattended operations like that need extra safety measures.

Stopping and backing up when the door senses that it has hit something has been required since 1990 in the US and photo eyes (to reverse the door if something breaks the beam while the door is closing) have been required since 1992.

Aaron Z

Comment Re:Even a Parasite Wants to Live (Score 1) 103

Yes, it is used in humans, when the benefits outweigh the risks.

As with ANY prescription medication.

And any human can go and get some from the pharmacy so long as they have a valid medical reason to use it, as evidenced by a prescription. And the pharmacist hasn't run out because they've been selling it as a dangerous placebo to easily-guided marks.

However, being in the "top 500" most prescribed drugs is a *long* way from being "very commonly prescribed". You're not quite out in the weeds of extreme specialty drugs, but you're well past the drugs any given person is particularly likely to to ever receive.

Though I suppose I may be quibbling semantics - on a planet of billions, there's millions of "one in a thousand" cases. That's "common" from an absolute perspective.

From the CDC's Overseas Refugee Health Guidance: https://www.cdc.gov/immigrantr...

All Middle Eastern, Asian, North African, Latin American, and Caribbean refugees should receive presumptive therapy with:
        Albendazole, single dose of 400 mg (200 mg for children 12-23 months)
        AND
        Ivermectin, two doses 200 mcg/Kg orally once a day for 2 days before departure to the United States.

All African refugees who did not originate from or reside in countries where Loa loa infection is endemic (Box 1) should receive presumptive therapy with:
        Albendazole, single dose of 400 mg (200 mg for children 12-23 months)
        AND
        Ivermectin, two doses 200 mcg/Kg orally once a day for 2 days

Not saying that those taking the worming paste were right and dosing that correctly would be a lot harder than its proponents made it out to be, but to imply that its a last ditch rarely used medication vs a commonly used and effective one FOR ITS PRESCRIBED PURPOSE is just spreading FUD.

Per https://clincalc.com/DrugStats... its FDA approved as an anti-parasitic and as a pediculicide.
It is the only drug they list in the anti-parasitic category and the only other pediculicide listed is Spinosad (which has similar numbers).
They list it as having been prescribed over 100k times a year since 2014 with a peak of over 314k prescriptions in 2017.
That's 1 in 3000 people in the US on average and that number is probably higher in 3rd world countries where parasites are more common and the money isn't there for more expensive drugs.

Aaron Z

Comment Re:Even a Parasite Wants to Live (Score 1) 103

The informed snide commentary was less to do with the fact that it's mostly used on horses

An commentator who was ACTUALLY informed would know that far more is used on cattle than on horses...

than the fact that since respectable doctors wouldn't prescribe it for covid, those taking it were almost all buying the non-prescription formulation intended for horses that was difficult to dose precisely enough for humans - risking overdose on a dangerous medicine that has a modest risk of heart problems and other nasty side effects in humans even at approved therapeutic doses.

That, and the fact that the reason no respectable doctor would prescribe it (coupled with the risks) is that there has never been any credible evidence that it does anything against covid. A couple *very* small exploratory studies very early on showed some benefits - but the studies were of a size and rigor that only let them determine whether the treatment warrants further study, rather than offering any statistically relevant results. Later placebo-controlled studies that involved enough patients to be statistically relevant showed no benefit.

So, basically, your doctor was putting your long-term heart health at risk with a "treatment" that had no medically credible evidence of doing anything.

Usability against COVID aside, its very commonly prescribed in humans, per: https://clincalc.com/DrugStats... it has been in the top 400-500 most prescribed drugs for humans in the US since 2014.
Part of the 2015 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was given to a pair of researchers researching it for use in humans against parasites...

Aaron Z

Comment Re: What rights do you want now, you fucks? (Score 1) 281

In some (most?) states, there is no sales tax on buying/selling livestock and there is no sales tax on having your own livestock custom butchered (if delivered by a farm with tax exempt status).
As such, if someone buys a live cow from a farm on condition that they deliver it to Butcher X, there is no sales tax due.
Now, if the farm declares it as income or not, is another story, but that is on the farm, not on the buyer.

Aaron Z

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