fpslem

joined 8 months ago
[–] [email protected] 4 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) (1 children)

Like, one decent pull from any of her teammates after the crash would have been a 4 second difference.

Patrick Broe on the Lanterne Rouge compared it to if Jonas Vingegaard had a crash and Visma had Christophe Laporte there but didn't drop him back to ride for him. That would never happen, literally no one thinks that would be okay, and yet SD Worx did just that with the best stage-racer in the peloton.

As for the Alpe d'Huez climb, I think Evita Muzic was trying to get on the podium, FDJ rode so hard all week for seemingly no reason, I think they thought they coudl put Muzic on the podium on Sunday. Unfortunately for her, Rooijakkers was getting a magic carpet ride on the wheel of Vollering, and Muzic was a minute and a half back, so all she did was give Niewiadoma a free ride. By that point she and her DS in the car had to have known the gaps, and she should have attacked and broken the elastic, or if she couldn't, then wait in Niewiadoma's wheel and then snap like she did at the end.

It's crazy how much Pauliena Rooijakkers decided the ultimate outcome of this race, her presence arguably slowed Vollering's descent enough to let Lucinda Brand come back and give the chasers a train ride across the valley to the base of the Alpe. Wild, exciting racing, way more exciting than the men's races this year, to be honest.

Even more of a clown show than visma at last year’s vuelta

I don't know if SD Worx's dsyfunction rises to that level, but truly that is the standard to which all terrible team dynamics should be held. And even then, Visma patched it up before the end and at least got to stand there smiling with the win. SD Worx didn't even manage to do that.

[–] [email protected] 34 points 3 days ago

And in a swing state, too. It's almost as if he's motivated by personal ego rather than strategy. /s

[–] [email protected] 3 points 3 days ago

Yeah, it's gutting for her. The race was SD Worx's to lose, but since she's leaving, I don't think they cared about her result. And they proceeded to screw her over 5 different ways. They didn't ride for her until the last stage, blithely assuming they'd pull out the win anyway, and ignoring how much better the competition had become. (And on the last stage, none of the team ended up being to help her anyway and she had to do it all on her own.) I'm sorry for Vollering, who seemed to have poured everything into the race, and deeply unimpressed with the team, which spent more efforts trying to get intermediate sprint points for Wiebes after she already lost the green jersey. Vollering is probably counting the days until she can leave that team.

I'm quite happy for Niewiadoma, though, she's stepped up in a huge way. Just a few months ago we talked about how she hadn't won a race in four years, and then she just really came into form after her Gravel Worlds win, Fleche Wallone, etc. And unlike SD Worx, her team RODE for her. Canyon-SRAM was all-in on Kasia, and they made it possible. It's nice to have a different team win, too, it's probably good for the sport in general.

I was really impressed by Rooijakkers, I under-estimated her even a few days ago, I really didn't see her as a podium threat, and boy, was I wrong. It was incredibly exciting to have a three-woman race for the win on the last stage, coming down to a handful of seconds! That's so rare and so wild.

While we're shouting out performances, I was really impressed with AG Insurance-Soudal, that polka-dot jersey for Justine Ghekiere was a true team effort, and the stage win on Stage 6 was icing on the cake. Take notes, SD Worx, that's what it looks like when the team is working together.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 3 days ago (1 children)

Thanks, much easier! (I like that username, btw!)

[–] [email protected] 3 points 3 days ago (1 children)

Written article if you don't want to have to watch a video, courtesy of u/Guy_Threepwood in the original post on c/FuckCars.

https://www.sydneymetro.info/article/welcome-aboard-sydney-metro-city-now-open

[–] [email protected] 4 points 3 days ago

That's what the first reviews of the Ioniq 5 all said, it's proportioned like a hatchback but it's quite a bit bigger in person. Which is a shame, I don't need or want bigger. The VW Golf or Polo presents a nice niche that no one wants to fill in the North American market.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 3 days ago

I agree that I'd prefer to see it disabled in c/News, it adds nothing to the conversation.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago)

I know, part of me thinks I'm still 20 years old and I think, "hey, maybe I could train up and do that!" And then my back aches from just doing housework and I snap painfully back to reality!

[–] [email protected] 1 points 5 days ago

I really like Niewiadoma, I love to see her in yellow. But if Vollering comes from behind to win on the Alp d'Huez, that would be nothing short of legendary!

 

AMNÉVILLE, France (Velo) – Demi Vollering and the Tour de France Femmes avec Zwift peloton won’t forget the race’s return to its native land in a hurry.

After avoiding a huge pile-up during four days of Benelux road furniture, a left hand bend after a roundabout outside Amnéville led to carnage at the end of stage 5.

A crash 20 riders from the front of a speeding peloton with 6km to go took down fifteen riders in a tangle of bodies and bikes and changed the course of the 2024 race.

Race leader Demi Vollering (Team SD Worx-Protime) and second-placed Puck Pieterse (Fenix-Deceuninck) both hit the deck. Pieterse was up quickly, despite cuts to her hip, knee, elbow, chin and back, only losing 28 seconds come the finish.

...

[–] [email protected] 23 points 1 week ago

Plastic recycling, definitely. Aluminum/aluminum recycling is very effective. Approximately 75% of aluminum that has ever been mined and processed is still in use, and it can be re-used and recycled a functionally infinite number of times. But you're totally right about greenwashing in plastics. Even the easiest plastics to "recycle" (like PET or PETE) can only be reprocessed once or twice before the polymers break down too much for re-use.

 

After a doctor suffered a fatal allergic reaction at a Disney World restaurant, Disney is trying to get her widower's wrongful death lawsuit tossed by pointing to the fine print of a Disney+ trial he signed up for years earlier.

Jeffrey Piccolo is representing the estate of his late wife, Kanokporn Tangsuan, a doctor at New York's NYU Langone hospital who died of an allergic reaction while visiting the Florida resort in October.

The couple, along with Piccolo's mother, went to dinner on the night of Oct. 5 at Raglan Road Irish Pub, a restaurant located within a shopping and dining complex called Disney Springs.

Tangsuan was "highly allergic" to dairy and nuts, and they chose that particular restaurant in part because of its promises about accommodating patrons with food allergies, according to the lawsuit filed in a Florida circuit court.

The complaint details the family's repeated conversations with their waiter about Tangsuan's allergies. The family allegedly raised the issue upfront, inquired about the safety of specific menu items, had the server confirm with the chef that they could be made allergen-free and asked for confirmation "several more times" after that.

"When the waiter returned with [Tangsuan's] food, some of the items did not have allergen free flags in them and [Tangsuan] and [Piccolo] once again questioned the waiter who, once again, guaranteed the food being delivered to [Tangsuan] was allergen free," the lawsuit reads.

The three of them ate and then went their separate ways: Piccolo brought the leftovers to their room, while his wife and mother headed for the stores. After about 45 minutes, Tangsuan "began having severe difficulty breathing and collapsed to the floor." Bimbo bread is displayed on a shelf at a market in Anaheim, Calif., in 2003. On Tuesday, U.S. federal food safety regulators warned Bimbo Bakeries USA - which includes brands such as Sara Lee, Oroweat, Thomas', Entenmann's and Ball Park buns and rolls - to stop using labels that say its products contain potentially dangerous allergens when they don't.

She self-administered an epi-pen, and an observer called 911. The Piccolos, who had tried calling her multiple times, were eventually told she had been rushed to the hospital. They went to meet her and, after a period of waiting, were told that she had died.

...

 

The days of the perfect-looking yard -- often lawns that guzzle copious amounts of water to stay green -- may soon be gone.

Homeowners are increasingly opting to "re-wilding" their homes, incorporating native plants and decreasing the amount of lawn care to make their properties more sustainable and encourage natural ecosystems to recover, according to Plan It Wild, a New York-based native landscape design company. ...

 

Is there anything more pathetic than a used plastic bag?

They rip and tear. They float away in the slightest breeze. Left in the wild, their mangled remains entangle birds and choke sea turtles that mistake them for edible jellyfish. It takes 1,000 years for the bags to disintegrate, shedding hormone-disrupting chemicals as they do. And that outcome is all but inevitable, because no system exists to routinely recycle them. It’s no wonder some states have banned them and stores give discounts to customers with reusable bags.

But the plastics industry is working to make the public feel OK about using them again.

Companies whose futures depend on plastic production, including oil and gas giant ExxonMobil, are trying to persuade the federal government to allow them to put the label “recyclable” on bags and other plastic items virtually guaranteed to end up in landfills and incinerators.

...

[–] [email protected] 40 points 1 week ago (3 children)

Extremely hardcore.

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/18671978

If you have noticed a sudden accumulation of wrinkles, aches and pains or a general sensation of having grown older almost overnight, there may be a scientific explanation. Research suggests that rather than being a slow and steady process, aging occurs in at least two accelerated bursts.

The study, which tracked thousands of different molecules in people aged 25 to 75, detected two major waves of age-related changes at around ages 44 and again at 60. The findings could explain why spikes in certain health issues including musculoskeletal problems and cardiovascular disease occur at certain ages.

“We’re not just changing gradually over time. There are some really dramatic changes,” said Prof Michael Snyder, a geneticist and director of the Center for Genomics and Personalized Medicine at Stanford University and senior author of the study.

“It turns out the mid-40s is a time of dramatic change, as is the early 60s – and that’s true no matter what class of molecules you look at.”

...

 

If you have noticed a sudden accumulation of wrinkles, aches and pains or a general sensation of having grown older almost overnight, there may be a scientific explanation. Research suggests that rather than being a slow and steady process, aging occurs in at least two accelerated bursts.

The study, which tracked thousands of different molecules in people aged 25 to 75, detected two major waves of age-related changes at around ages 44 and again at 60. The findings could explain why spikes in certain health issues including musculoskeletal problems and cardiovascular disease occur at certain ages.

“We’re not just changing gradually over time. There are some really dramatic changes,” said Prof Michael Snyder, a geneticist and director of the Center for Genomics and Personalized Medicine at Stanford University and senior author of the study.

“It turns out the mid-40s is a time of dramatic change, as is the early 60s – and that’s true no matter what class of molecules you look at.”

...

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/18561678

For Roderick Givens, a radiation oncologist, the expansion of Medicaid isn’t just a policy issue. He practices medicine in a rural area in the Mississippi Delta and he sees daily how Medicaid coverage could help his uninsured patients.

“I can’t tell you the number of patients who I see who come in with advanced disease, who have full-time jobs,” Givens said. “They haven’t seen a physician in years. They can’t afford it. They don’t have coverage.”

This spring, the Mississippi Legislature considered but ultimately failed to expand Medicaid, which would have extended coverage to around 200,000 low-income residents. Mississippi is one of 10 states that haven’t expanded Medicaid, the state and federal health insurance program for people with low incomes or disabilities.

Seven of those states are in the South. But as more conservative-leaning states like North Carolina adopt it, the drumbeat of support, as one Southern state lawmaker put it, grows louder.

Advocates for expanding Medicaid say opposition is largely being driven by political polarization, rather than cost concerns.

 

Back in July 2022, when mobile app metrics firm Branch acquired the popular and well-regarded Nova Launcher for Android, the app's site put up one of those self-directed FAQ posts about it. Under the question heading "What does Branch want with Nova?," Nova founder and creator Kevin Barry started his response with, "Not to mess it up, don't worry!"

Branch (formerly/sometimes Branch Metrics) is a firm concerned with helping businesses track the links that lead into their apps, whether from SMS, email, marketing, or inside other apps. Nova, with its Sesame Search tool that helped users find and access deeper links—like heading straight to calling a car, rather than just opening a rideshare app—seemed like a reasonable fit.

Barry wrote that he had received a number of acquisition offers over the years, but he didn't want to be swallowed by a giant corporation, an OEM, or a volatile startup. "Branch is different," he wrote then, because they wanted to add staff to Nova, keep it available to the public, and mostly leave it alone.

Two years later, Branch has left Nova Launcher a bit too alone. As documented on Nova's official X (formerly Twitter) account, and transcripts from its Discord, as of Thursday Nova had "gone from a team of around a dozen people" to just Barry, the founder, working alone. The Nova cuts were part of "a massive layoff" of purportedly more than 100 people across all of Branch, according to now-former Nova workers.

...

 

U.S. Republican nominee Donald Trump commended Russian President Vladimir Putin over a historic prisoner swap deal struck last week, suggesting the Russian leader got the better end of the agreement.

“I’d like to congratulate Vladimir Putin for having made yet another great deal. Did you see the deal we made?” Trump told a crowd of supporters at a campaign rally in Atlanta on Saturday as he criticized the Biden administration for its handling of the swap.

The former U.S. president, who is bidding for a second term in the White House amid a string of court cases against him, said the prisoner exchange led to the release of “some of the greatest killers” in the world.

...

 

Google violated antitrust laws as it built an internet search empire, a federal judge ruled on Monday in a decision that could have major implications for the way people interact with the internet.

Judge Amit Mehta found that Google violated section 2 of the Sherman Act, a US antitrust law. His decision states that Google maintained a monopoly over search services and advertising.

“After having carefully considered and weighed the witness testimony and evidence, the court reaches the following conclusion: Google is a monopolist, and it has acted as one to maintain its monopoly,” the ruling states.

The ruling is one of the largest antitrust decisions in decades, capping off a case that pitted the justice department against one of the world’s most valuable companies. It was also part of a broader push in recent years from the Department of Justice and Federal Trade Commission, as well as European regulators, to scrutinize big tech companies for allegedly monopolistic practices.There was no jury in the trial, which began in September of last year before taking a long hiatus for Mehta to consider a ruling. Closing arguments wrapped up in the first week of May, with Mehta concluding the trial by stating that he was aware of the gravity of the case for both Google and the public.

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