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  • 45 Comments
Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 9th, 2023

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  • What are you working as? No need to answer. Everyone knows for themselves. Now imagine if you’re constantly being recorded while on duty, every single critical step you make in your job. Even knowing nobody is gonna watch the footage unless there’s an accident.

    In my opinion it adds a stress factor, and as someone who had terrible health consequences of growing up under constant stress, I’d most likely refuse to work somewhere, where I’m being recorded.

    MentourPilot has outlined some possibilities though. Out of all ideas of applications in the cockpit, probably the best is when the interaction with instruments are recorded, not the entire cockpit. But then I’m not sure how useful that is. Yes, in this particular accident involving AI171 it would be absolutely crucial. But in other accidents? Every accident is different. The FDR already records the state of instruments. It’s highly unlikely that in other accidents such a footage would be useful. On the other hand, I find it likely that in other accidents other camera angles would be needed, which aren’t recorded.

    It’s a really tough choice. Yes, safety first, but… pilots are humans too. We should rather do everything we can for them to not have any reason to do anything malicious, no matter if it’s accidental or deliberate. Prefer their mental health, their well being, their training, their work-life balance.



  • Actually, in Hungary (at least when I was a kid) they thought us, pedestrians, to use the left side, although this was more important when there was no sidewalk. The reason is, drivers might not see pedestrians very well, especially at night, but pedestrians do have a higher chance to see cars, as cars are usually illuminated. The pedestrian is facing forward, so it’s easy to see and react when a car is coming. But from behind? They’ll pass on the right side of the road, so there should be plenty of clearance.

    And I was legit surprised when I moved to Germany, pedestrians here are using the right side.






  • Don’t use your phone at night. If you absolutely have to, enable adaptive warm light (if there’s such a feature on your phone), which gradually turns the white balance to warm in the evening. This is because staring at the screen will send the signals to your brain to wake up, especially the blue-ish spectrum of light, plus whatever content you’re engaging with (news, social media, texts from friends) will make your mind occupied.

    But again, best is to not use your phone at all.

    Read a book. Pick a topic you’re interested in, buy a book and just read before you sleep. Yes, I see the contradiction - an interesting book will make your mind occupied too. Yet I find that a book relaxes me in my own world, while on your phone you’ll meet many different topics, lots of quick stimuli, maybe that’s why. I don’t know.

    These strategies work for me.


  • Thank you for showing me this valuable piece of information. No, I haven’t seen these before.

    Until now, I’m 100% confident that it’s impossible to convince someone on the far-right of anything that’s against their views, because I’m from a country that is 15 years ahead of the US on this tragic path into the dark future far away from common sense, thus I have a somewhat clear prediction for the general mental state of the people in the coming decades, which likely cannot be reversed in a century.

    Yet, I’m thinking quite often, what I could do as an individual to at least somewhat better the situation in this miserable world. And so far all my ideas are based on withdrawal of content (much like how you take drugs away from a junkie) instead of adding arguments, which is obviously hard to pull off on a large scale.

    Not that I could do anything though. Today you need to be rich to achieve something.

    Nonetheless, maybe this is the missing piece to the puzzle. I’m considering to pay those extra bucks for that publication, also Welzel’s book; they look promising. So thanks again for sharing.


  • Possible, but better not make it. When an algorithm has to promote something, there’s bias behind it, whether it’s a good intent or not. Even if it’s all good content, some other, also good content might be missed, because the algorithm or the authority behind the algorithm misses it.

    In my opinion, Mastodon is perfect as it is. You see what you’re following. Or on the home page you see everything.

    People should really really really learn to seek for quality content and develop a sense for quality and also to exercise critical thinking while trying to separate quality content from garbage. Pick what you wanna see and don’t let yourself be influenced by a stupid algorithm.

    Just consuming whatever an app pushes into your face makes you a brainless zombie in the long term.


  • I got the joke right away, I don’t think there’s any problem with it.

    The thing is, no matter how obvious a contradiction is, far-right folks won’t understand any of it, because they’re so dumb. You cannot give them even the most basic, easily digestible facts and explanations, because even that requires a brain, which they don’t have.

    So I think, these kind of jokes are perfectly fine for our entertainment, and no amount of facts and information will ever convince the dumbest of the people.