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Finder always felt like it was built with usecases and workflows in mind that had no intersection with my own.

Luckily there are Norton commander clones available for osx.


  the page itself uses low-contrast pink text on a pink background, which is hard to read
Well, the author does say about herself that she loves making things pink so I guess this is a feature.


Intuition is in the eye of the beholder


Isn't that a security risk? Having to open a port for the pi and then always keeping an eye on it in case the next heartbleed, etc. is discovered?


You could set up a DMZ if you're concerned. But even if someone gets on my LAN, it's not the end of the world. They could send goatse to my Chromecast, I guess.


No, it's literally what firewalls and DMZs are for.


An adjacent problem is how to know that you've really prevented issues/others from getting stuck with whatever you were working on. No system is perfect and engineering is also an art of knowing when to skip which corners. If nobody sees value in your preventive work then maybe there isn't any?


I might have spent too much time on Reddit to have a sensible intuition for what a Sackbut might be.


Like that, but hornier.


I would like to know whose stands to benefit from this the most. Is it about improving quality of life for patients? Or to save costs for health insurers who won't have to pay for treatment of the side effects of the more aggressive options?


The standard treatment of cancer forty years ago meant very aggressive chemotherapy, radiation, and radical surgery. Many have reduced quality of life afterwards, think having to walk with help or having brain fog for the rest of your life when for all intents and purposes, you were okay a few months before. Not being able to do strenuous chores like lifting a box off the floor. That is the nature of treatment after early detection, usually when cancer is discovered during an infection or with symptoms, it's too late. In the cases discussed above, early detection of mild cancers usually don't mean the patient has a poor quality of life at that time and would actually experience a drop in their QoL from the treatment itself.

Cancer treatment to this day is not magic, it's not like taking a pill other than in extremely rare cases. You should spend time looking at cancer statistics, the oft mentioned statistics state death rates are a result of "cancer or cancer treatments" because the treatments take a toll on your body and leave you disabled or infirmed for the rest of your life. Until we have better treatments, which are coming, yes if a tumor will go away on its own you best believe it this is better for the quality of life for patients. In fact, the people who stand to lose the most from such a re-diagnosis would be drug manufacturers or even hospitals who can charge a lot for radical surgery and hospices who care for patients undergoing chemo.


For unfortunate personal reasons I have been reading studies on rectal cancer. Rectal cancer is terminal if untreated and curable if treated, but still 20-30% of patients don't even complete radiation and chemo treatment. Standard of care is localized radiation, poison in pill and IV form, and hope the cancer dies before the patient. At 40, this is rough. At 80, I might decide to call it game over. Only in the last decade, they have downplayed surgery with ~40% dodging it altogether when chemo-radiation provides total response. Surgery typically means at least a temporary colostomy and is high risk for older patients so the incentive was there to avoid it. Modern medicine is very pro-treatment and it takes a lot of 5 year studies to get them to dial things back.


I had colorectal surgery for a 5cm tumor at 41. I had two very young kids and wife, so opting out wasn't really a serious option. I'm pretty glad how things turned out, all things considered but knowing how tough those years of treatment and surgery were, there's no chance in hell I'd go through it at 80. I lost my father to lung cancer at 85, and his last year of fighting it really hit hard on his quality of life. He thought he was going to beat it though.


The former. Something like 75% of men in their 80s probably have some sort of mild prostate cancer. It’s just extremely prevalent but most of the time they are rather non-aggressive so you will die of something else years before you’d even think of worrying about the cancer killing you.


In a competitive market, insurers don't really care one way or another whether something should be covered or not: they just adjust premiums accordingly.

(Ideally, as a customer you'd have a choice between plans that do and do not cover a particular treatment.)


Insurers are incentivized to set standards for spending as much money as possible on all health care.

They have maximum profit rates, as a percentage of revenue. So the two ways to grow the revenue, and therefore profit, are to 1) capture a larger percentage of patients, and 2) make sure that all patients, including competitors, start using more expensive care options all together.

System-wide cost savings do not increase insurance company profits. This could be considered a good thing or a bad thing, depending on your point of view, I guess.

I had always considered it a bad thing, but given the thrust of your comment, perhaps it's good that there's no incentive for health care companies to push cost-savings measures as an industry.


And this is why having government funded basic healthcare isn't as inefficient as so many people claim.

For the government the only thing that matters is net tax revenue. Healthy people pay more taxes and unhealthy people cost money.

So the solution is obvious: invest in effective low cost preventative treatments and cures. That maximizes net tax revenue.

Meanwhile private insurers only care about your health to the extent that they get paid. Healthy people bring in less money than the chronically ill.


This isn’t true. Insurers are incentivized by lowering healthcare costs as well. All you have to do is look at all the preventative care that they pay for - often with smaller or no copay (although no copay was mandated by Obamacare).


You’re missing the part where insurers have to big for coverage. Companies will say “we want a plan that includes X” then get a bunch of proposals from insurers.

Cost is a big factor in which one you go with. So while insurers do make more money by paying higher and more claims, that’s offset by customers wanting a low price.


That might be true in some regions but there also many regions in the US with very little health insurance competition.[1][2]

[1] https://www.ama-assn.org/delivering-care/patient-support-adv...

[2] https://www.ama-assn.org/delivering-care/patient-support-adv...


I was talking about standard changes to what is deemed medically necessary, and the best medical course of action.

Individual companies wanting particular things covered is quite different. And the topic of this thread is why is the entire field shifting in their care in terms of what's thought to be medically best.


> it might motivate...

That gut feeling resonates with so many that few care to question it. It just feels right. Problem is, it feels right to the kind of person that habitually weighs the benefits and drawbacks of their actions, is able to reason about consequences and has a good grip on their impulses. Those people would be unlikely to steal Amazon packages even if the sentence was a fine and 30 days of social work because they are usually in a different place in society anyway. (Don't get hung up on exceptions)

Those that decide to steal anyway are often those that think they won't get caught. It doesn't matter if they don't sit in prison for 2 years or for 25. I'm sure there are other dynamics at play as well. Unfortunately I can't cite research to support my claims but then neither can you. So I just invite you to consider them.


But those people are the kinds that we don't want anywhere near the good kind, nor anywhere close to our children. Hence why a lot of us feel like they should be, within reason, separated from the rest of us.



If that was indeed the point then his three word sentence did a very shoddy job at highlighting it.


Ultimately it was her responsibility, yes. But I've seen loud, big and aggressive people get their say too many times to not think that they are part of the problem. At least ethically.


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