- 15 Posts
- 17 Comments
What if I can hear wi fi? How could I tell?
Wouldn’t it be bothering you if you could?
Well, I suppose not necessarily… I hear a hum but it does not bother me because I don’t generally fixate on it. When I notice it, I then realise I’m being lazy and need to get out of bed and get my attention on something. Some people suffer, like Diane Schou, who moved to a town that didn’t trigger her electromagnetic hypersensitivity.
I suppose a test would be to enter a sound-proof room which then also has a faraday cage, and get tested. The tester would have controls for emitting sounds mostly outside the statistical hearing range, along with one to turn on a wifi AP, and some dummy switches that emit nothing. Then for you to raise your hand when you hear something. I read about someone taking a test like that, and she raised her hand whenever some electronmagnetic something was played (wi-fi iirc). It was something that was unusual and surprised the researchers. I cannot find the story on that now. Might have appeared in Wired mag… not sure.
plantteacher@mander.xyzOPto
Science@mander.xyz•When the quality of scientific research is reduced because the researcher relies on platforms of surveillance advertisers (Google)
2·5 months agoIndeed. We also have to consider that it has become popular¹ to boycott the US over Trump’s tariffs and US support for Israel. These boycotts would discourage the use of US tech giants, in principle.
¹ for example: [email protected]
I struggle to believe water pooled up enough to carry stuff. Condensation is possible perhaps to the extent of having some invisible amount of sweat. Unless there were puddles that formed and evaporated before I saw it. Though it’s a short fridge. The top of it is at eye level so I see the top every day.
Here’s another pic:

It does not wipe off with a rag. I have some proprietary rust stain removal liquid, which I think is intended for when rust gets on fabric. But I guess I’ll try it on these spots. Otherwise I’m left with some kind of abrasive approach.
plantteacher@mander.xyzto
Science@mander.xyz•Fake papers are contaminating the world’s scientific literature, fueling a corrupt industry and slowing legitimate lifesaving medical research.
1·9 months agoMight want to crosspost to [email protected], just to inject some life into that community.
plantteacher@mander.xyzOPto
Medicine@mander.xyz•IR heat lamps sold as medical devices have timers, but pet stores sell them for reptiles w/out a timer. Are humans extra vulnerable?
1·10 months agoAnd support Russia like a muppet? Fuck off you muppet.
plantteacher@mander.xyzOPto
Medicine@mander.xyz•IR heat lamps sold as medical devices have timers, but pet stores sell them for reptiles w/out a timer. Are humans extra vulnerable?
1·10 months agoI wonder if that’s a boiling frog scenario. I’m always tempted to keep increasing the heat in hot tubs after adjusting to temp. I wonder if your sister gradually moved closer as she got acclaimated to the temp.
plantteacher@mander.xyzOPto
Medicine@mander.xyz•IR heat lamps sold as medical devices have timers, but pet stores sell them for reptiles w/out a timer. Are humans extra vulnerable?
1·10 months agoi don’t have a microwave oven but I appreciate the suggestion.
plantteacher@mander.xyzOPto
Medicine@mander.xyz•IR heat lamps sold as medical devices have timers, but pet stores sell them for reptiles w/out a timer. Are humans extra vulnerable?
3·10 months agoI’m considering that as well and got some tips from here:
https://solar.lowtechmagazine.com/2024/12/how-to-build-an-electrically-heated-table/
So far my lower body is fine but in case it gets colder I have been keeping an eye out for excess waste roofing insulation in my area, which I would use for an under desk rig.
When you say your clothing becomes the chimney, that makes me wonder if I should surround myself in a insulated structure, unlike the link above where they seem to let heat escape around the legs.
plantteacher@mander.xyzOPto
Medicine@mander.xyz•IR heat lamps sold as medical devices have timers, but pet stores sell them for reptiles w/out a timer. Are humans extra vulnerable?
1·10 months agoThanks for the suggestion. That seems ideal because it’s directional. I could probably mount it to heat the keyboard area without adding any heat to the laptop. I’ll try to find a smaller 250 watt one so I can just heat the keyboard area.
plantteacher@mander.xyzOPto
Medicine@mander.xyz•IR heat lamps sold as medical devices have timers, but pet stores sell them for reptiles w/out a timer. Are humans extra vulnerable?
2·10 months agoI appreciate the tip. It’s probably around 7°C in my office where I have so far this winter fended off the urge to turn on the heat. I can see vapor when exhaling. I am bundled up except the fingers (which I leave naked to operate a keyboard). Presumably it’s normal to have cold fingers in this situation. It’s tolerable as well but I was looking for a comfort upgrade without heating the room.
(edit) I think drinking a beer helps. They call it a “beer jacket” (the effect of alcohol making you /feel/ warmer despite the fact that alcohol technically lowers the core body temp). It’s like putting on an imaginary jacket. Some drinkers go to the bar without a jacket because they plan to eventually wear a beer jacket.
plantteacher@mander.xyzOPto
Medicine@mander.xyz•IR heat lamps sold as medical devices have timers, but pet stores sell them for reptiles w/out a timer. Are humans extra vulnerable?
1·10 months agoFor £3 that’s certainly worth trying. I guess I would not find those locally but they look simple enough to make.
plantteacher@mander.xyzOPto
Medicine@mander.xyz•IR heat lamps sold as medical devices have timers, but pet stores sell them for reptiles w/out a timer. Are humans extra vulnerable?
8·10 months agoI just downloaded the manual and skimmed through pages of safety info. This was the only relevant statement about that:
“Limit the length of use and check the skin’s reaction.”
“Overly prolonged radiation may lead to the skin being burned.”Since they don’t mention a duration of exposure, I get the impression this is just pointing out the obvious for liability purposes in case someone does something foolish.
The 15 min seems to be more about protecting the device itself from over-heating. Which I suppose means it’s not well designed… overly fragile.
And I guess the lack of fan would enable the device itself to take on lots of heat.(edit: sorry, just read that it has a fan… though it could be fragile nonetheless)update: I also see that the bulb lasts 2000 hours. I’ve seen 250 watt bulbs claimed to last 6000 hours for like ~$20. So I guess this thing is garbage.
plantteacher@mander.xyzOPto
Public Health@mander.xyz•salvaging a cooked turkey that was in the fridge 7 days -- possible?
2·10 months agoThere is a quite useful PDF version for printing. As I was saving the PDF, I noticed I had already saved that PDF before.
plantteacher@mander.xyzOPto
Public Health@mander.xyz•salvaging a cooked turkey that was in the fridge 7 days -- possible?
1·10 months agoIf you’re able to smell the products of the bacteria,
Your phrasing implies that the bacteria itself is odorless and that any new odor (other than what cooked turkey normally smells like) is entirely borne from bacteria output. Is that correct?
The food was sealed so odor builds. Upon opening the bag I get a full strength dose of the odor – which is gone if I miss the opportunity to do the instant sniff. What plays tricks with my mind is the fact that sometimes an odor is just a stronger dose of the normal food odor. But as something rots there is a gradual subtle increase in new odors that makes it hard to know. I have always lived on the edge in this regard and consume borderline cases where it’s hard to tell. And I have always gotten away with it… never had food poisoning.
In any case, the turkey odor clearly had some wrong odors so I opted to freeze it to use as rat bait the next time rats invade the house (along with a frozen raw beef steak where I was also too slow to consume). I now have enough rat bait to take on 100+ rats. And what I’ll probably find is that the rats are smart enough to avoid it.
plantteacher@mander.xyzOPto
Public Health@mander.xyz•salvaging a cooked turkey that was in the fridge 7 days -- possible?
01·10 months agoI don’t have bacteria phobia, but any sound science on food poisoning risks would be useful.
I just found this article which lists Clostridium perfringens as producing a harmful exotoxin. From there, it would be interesting to know if Clostridium perfringens likes cooked turkey (as opposed to just raw). But without a solid answer on that, I guess I will toss the turkey.






I did, but I may be wrong. Wikipedia says tea trees are used.