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Fewer small (one-level) homes is an excellent point. Also a lot of old people used to live in trailer homes or mobile homes, which are also one-level.

The stairs are probably your least likely place to fall. You have a railing. Getting out of the shower or slipping in the kitchen and catching the counter on the way down however…

There is an unmet need for mandatory (stylish) shower bars. Age doesn't matter; everybody could benefit from a solid handhold in that critical in/out transition.

Article says age-adjusted fall rates are up substantially, so it's not just older population.

People rollerblade less.

I read that fall injuries in the elderly are a significant contributor to both death and drops in quality of life.

When it comes to proprioception and balance one group of people over 60 seem to have equivalent balance to younger people and that is certain kinds of rollerbladers.

So as a person who was relatively active (40mi+ per week biking and other things) I started rollerblading and it's been unbelievable, I'm older and certain types of movements that take 8yr olds a couple weeks to learn took me nearly a year, it's absolutely amazing though, pain and soreness in parts of my leg and feet all related to stabilization, significantly strengthened stabilization muscles and improved reaction times at speed. I figure if I can rollerblade on one foot at 15 miles an hour, walking with both feet at 3 should be no problem.

I put rollerblading and bouldering as my top two 'puzzle' based activities.


Yoga has balance poses and is much more accessible than rollerblading.

Yoga is a great idea but many who find it boring are getting the same poses at 15mph and with more dynamic load and interruption (due to rocks and other high speed road defects.) There is quite a bit of overlap but unless you are doing acro yoga there is also quite a bit that doesn't overlap.

Presumably because the Wisconsin-vs-Alabama differences have not significantly changed in the last few decades? Wisconsin has been a lot snowier than Alabama for a long time.

What's possibly more relevant is that Wisconsin has unusually high rates of alcohol abuse. Their high rate of fall-related deaths may be better understood as a high rate of alcohol-related deaths which involve falls.

https://pbswisconsin.org/news-item/wisconsins-death-grip-wit...


A few videos coming out via Starlink.

Well, they did say "light evidence" rather than "proof".

"The Gentle Grafter" by Henry, O.

"Blight: Fungi and the Coming Pandemic" by Monosson, Emily "Options" by Henry, O.

"Population Fluctuations in Rodents" by Krebs, Charles J.

"In Search of the Old Ones: An Odyssey among Ancient Trees" by Fredericks, Anthony D.

"The Best American Science and Nature Writing 2024, edited" by McKibben, Bill

"The English Abbey: Its Life and Work in the Middle Ages" by Crossley, Fred H.

"The Stereoscope in Ophthalmology" by Wells, David Washburn

"Endless Forms: The Secret World of Wasps – Why Nature's Maligned Predators and Pollinators are Essential to Planetary Health" by Sumner, Seirian

"The Death and Life of Great American Cities" by Jacobs, Jane <--- best book I read this year

"The Serviceberry: Abundance and Reciprocity in the Natural World" by Kimmerer, Robin Wall

"Making Useful Things Of Wood" by Gottshall, Franklin H.

"States of Disorder, Ecosystems of Governance: Complexity Theory Applied to UN Statebuilding in the DRC and South Sudan" by Day, Adam

"Migration Mysteries: Adventures, Disasters, and Epiphanies in a Life with Birds" by Rappole, John H.


A situation in which many people care a little,but a few people care a lot in the other direction,is almost exactly what government is for. Ken Paxton has issues, for sure, but good on him in this case.


Austin resident here, and remote worker since before the pandemic. Downtown is definitely in a state. But, there are several reasons for this:

1) homeless population makes it less attractive as a workspace, and while the city has started to make progress on this it really ballooned during the early 20's.

2) there is also a lot of empty commercial real estate in Austin, and has been since before the pandemic, and yet they keep building more for some reason which I cannot figure out

3) the downturn in home prices in Austin is real, but the amount of new houses built on the outskirts is a big part of that, and also prices are really just back on trend to where we would have expected them to be based on the rate of price increase during the 20teens

4) hit to city budget is muted by the fact that appraisals cannot go up more than 10% a year, so in most cases never caught up to the market peaks. Recent news suggests that a lot of financial excesses in the city budget came about during the early 20's, as covid money, etc. goosed expectations of lots of $$ in the future


Yeah Austin is the first city that comes to mind. Everyone that was screaming "California is dead" in 2020-22 mostly moved to Austin.

Ironically, many have moved back to Cal/SF for the AI boom.

Your last point is really valid. I think these "remote boom cities" were only "Covid Boom cities" and that kind of grow is just not sustainable for these cities anymore.


A big, and little-discussed, problem across many industries is that there is no "pipeline" inside any company. Since the 1980's, the idea that you develop your own talent has fallen by the wayside. You hire it from other companies. Inside software, the issue may be bigger, but it exists in many others as well.


Does AWS intend to have that pipeline within the company, starting with juniors, like this talk implies?


They don't, that's why their CEO needs everyone else to believe they need to keep on hiring juniors aggressively so AWS can poach them a couple years down the line if needed


Really if you are not making custom silicon for this problem, you are just wasting our time here aren't you.


I mean, this is the ultimate domain for Quantum Computers:

"Is it odd or Even?"

"YES"


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