bluesquared | 4 months ago | on: EVs are depreciating faster than gas-powered cars
bluesquared's comments
bluesquared | 1 year ago | on: Tesla created secret team to suppress driving range complaints (2023)
I have a 150 mile round-trip commute when I need to go in to the office. My "summer range" (really more "not-winter range") is 240+ miles. I stick to posted speed limits for efficiency, 60-65 MPH. This winter I've been getting back home with 30 miles of range to spare. I haven't done the math or recall what power draw my gauge cluster reports when I toggle heat on/off, but I do remember it reduces my range estimate by ~5 miles when I turn the heat on.
bluesquared | 1 year ago | on: Texas sues GM for unlawfully collecting and selling drivers' private data [pdf]
bluesquared | 1 year ago | on: 00Key a 75% Keyboard
bluesquared | 1 year ago | on: 00Key a 75% Keyboard
bluesquared | 2 years ago | on: Does gear matter?
Compact, lightweight, the built-in 23mm lens is good for most travel and nature shots you'd be taking as an amateur (from a fellow amateur, no insult intended)
If you're looking for something "aesthetic" and "ergonomic" Fuji is #1
bluesquared | 2 years ago | on: Half-Life 25th Anniversary Update
bluesquared | 2 years ago | on: Effect of perceptual load on performance within IDE in people with ADHD symptoms
I wonder if it has to do with the mental burden we start to accumulate in transitioning to adulthood. Much easier to hyperfocus on books when we don't have the weight of finances, careers, complex relationships, etc.
bluesquared | 2 years ago | on: Sorry Mont Blanc, I will not be purchasing any product from you in the future
bluesquared | 3 years ago | on: ERs are hiring fewer doctors to save money
At least my reaction wasn't as bad the first time. That time was pre-covid and they had somebody with experience and functioning brain cells at the check-in and they brought me right in and started taking vitals and did an IV literally right on the other side of the check-in desk. On that visit they had the payment person come around hours later while I was recovering in a bed on a different unit for monitoring while I was coming down off of the meds they pumped me full of.
bluesquared | 3 years ago | on: Companies are hacking their way around the chip shortage
It was a lesson to be learned, I was unaware when starting treatment that you could buy one outright. Being a 60601 medical device I thought I had to just go along for the ride...
bluesquared | 3 years ago | on: Companies are hacking their way around the chip shortage
And then you have to pay small fees when you go visit a doctor ($25-ish each time), pay for medications (expensive). Emergency room swipes your credit card before a doctor even sees you ($150 co-pay for my plan). Pay thousands for an MRI (that the insurance company has graciously negotiated down 95%!)
bluesquared | 3 years ago | on: Companies are hacking their way around the chip shortage
Though not massively overweight (26.5 BMI), better eating and fitness habits seemed to have helped. Still working on getting to a healthier shape. Depending on the type of apnea, this can help a good deal.
Less electronics/screens in the evening. No more streaming tv/video games until right before bed. Jury's still out on the effects of blue light etc but I really try to limit my electronics to a Kindle (Oasis with the warm color temp feature) before bed.
I admit I didn't try too hard with different masks/setups, that could help. Though I was mostly using one of the most comfortable "nasal pillow" interfaces already.
I will second another commenter's suggestion of a more elevated pillow setup. I use a regular pillow with a buckwheat hull pillow on top. Bad for my neck but I've slept that way for awhile and have adjusted, it's hard to go back to a "more optimal pillow height".
bluesquared | 3 years ago | on: Companies are hacking their way around the chip shortage
Insurance also seems to have access to this data in one way or another (not sure if direct with ResMed or via your doctor). If you don't hit your "compliance target" for treatment, insurance will cease paying 'their share' of the cost.
So I found myself in a downward spiral of 0. Struggling to sleep with sleep apnea. Tons of ramifications of not getting good sleep that I don't need to get into. 1. Struggling to adapt to sleeping with this device strapped to my face. I would take it off unconsciously.. I would often find the hose laying next to me in the morning still "pumping", or be told by my wife of belligerent (unconscious) responses to her prompting me to put it back on in the middle of the night. 2. Losing sleep from constantly waking up throughout the night because of the CPAP/from anxiety 3. Anxiety over not meeting my compliance target of 4 hours of use per night (as interpreted by the CPAP knowing the proper amount of back-pressure when in use i.e. not just turned on and not worn). 4. Getting charged more because I did not meet my targets for enough time 5. Eventually owning the CPAP outright 6. Eventually discontinuing therapy and somehow having slightly improved levels of sleep that I've never bothered to attempt to restart therapy
bluesquared | 3 years ago | on: Our screwdriver took three years [video]
bluesquared | 3 years ago | on: Plex: Important notice of a potential data breach
bluesquared | 3 years ago | on: Fishing gear accounts for an alarming amount of plastic in oceans (2021)
bluesquared | 3 years ago | on: Asus put out like 40 models of a laptop called the “Eee PC” (2021)
bluesquared | 3 years ago | on: Ask HN: What has melted your brain recently?
bluesquared | 3 years ago | on: I disabled WiFi on the new Samsung fridge
Lots of manufacturers probably do it, but I'll name and shame anyway... it's a ResMed AirSense 10.