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The PHB24 Dance Bard is fantastic
  • I think it would be just as viable as Monk up in the front lines. As a lvl 4 monk, you’ve probably got 18 Dex and 14ish Wis. That’s AC 16. Dance Bard will have 14ish Dex and 18 Cha, so also AC 16. Same d8 hit die as Monk, too.

  • The PHB24 Dance Bard is fantastic

    The new College of Dance Bard subclass looks like it will be really fun. Unarmed strikes whose damage scales with Bardic Inspiration dice and uses Dex. Unarmored Defense that adds Charisma. Bonus action unarmed strikes when you use Bardic Inspiration.

    You get to be 3/4 of a Monk, but also be a Face, and also be a full caster, and also get half proficiency in everything. And then the level six stuff buffs your party’s initiative and movement to the point it’ll be very hard to get the drop on you.

    A fantastic new subclass all around.

    6
    FAA fines SpaceX for launch license violations
  • If the punishment is a fine, they’ll just incorporate that into the price of doing business. Not a great look.

    I think their rockets are cool. But if they can violate a launch license without getting grounded, what’s the point of launch licenses?

  • Dolphins placing QB Tua Tagovailoa (concussion) on injured reserve
  • I’m a Colts fan who was supremely bummed out when Luck retired. And really, we haven’t been very good since. It sucks.

    But he’s a good guy, and he was getting absolutely obliterated out there. I don’t begrudge his decision for a second. I’m glad he’s going to be able to live the rest of his life with intact ribs and ankles and stuff.

    I think Tua should do the same. It’s one thing to have your bones hurt forever. It’s another to have your brain turned to scrambled eggs and either eat from a straw for the rest of your life or end up going all Hernandez and killing someone and then yourself. It’s not worth it.

  • ‘Right to Repair for Your Body’: The Rise of DIY, Pirated Medicine
  • The industry standard is HPLC (high performance liquid chromatography). Those things go for tens of thousands of dollars up front, plus maintenance and consumables.

    If there was a less costly way of doing it, you bet companies would have settled on that by now.

  • ‘Right to Repair for Your Body’: The Rise of DIY, Pirated Medicine
  • This has been posted to a bunch of different communities, and I’m gonna be a stick in the mud each time.

    I’m a process chemist. I do this for a living. I’ve made kilo-scale batches of pharmaceuticals at work that have gone through the regulatory process and made it into people. I went to school for ten years to do this.

    This is a colossally dangerous thing.

    Every time you run a chemical synthesis, you generate impurities. Slightly different temperatures, concentrations, reagent quality, and a million other things will vary the identities and concentrations of those impurities in your product.

    The nature of biochemistry is that most compounds, even at very small concentrations, can have effects. Usually bad ones. So drugs have tight specs on how much of each potential impurity can be present. Usually it’s in the 0.1% range, but sometimes a lot lower.

    Detection of impurities at that level cannot be done with ‘hacker’ gear in your garage. So if you do this, you’re going to be taking unknown quantities of unknown impurities.

    There are trade-offs. If you’re definitely gonna die without the medicine, then the worst that can happen is you die faster, or more painfully. If it’s medicine to maintain quality of life, then you might die fast and painfully.

    I’m not saying the current system is good at all. Medicine is too expensive. It shouldn’t be limited by right wing nutjobs. Those things are true. Those things require a solution.

    This is not a good solution.

  • How to get police to enforce traffic laws?
  • I’d love to see cops start enforcing the no-right-on-red signs, especially when drivers cut off pedestrians to do it. But half the time they’ve got blue line or other pseudo fascist stickers all over their gigantic trucks when they do it, so I’m not holding my breath.

  • ‘Right to Repair for Your Body’: The Rise of DIY, Pirated Medicine
  • There is exactly one easiest option: be like the rest of the civilized world and ban consumer marketing of medicine. HUGE amounts of the prices of drugs are just down to TV ads. “Ask your doctor about…” is horse shit, let your doctor decide what prescription drugs you need. And fire the cocaine-riddled, law-breaking marketing departments that soak up so much money.

  • ‘Right to Repair for Your Body’: The Rise of DIY, Pirated Medicine
  • People make illicit drugs chock full of impurities all the time too, and it fucks people up.

    There are standards for purity on pharmaceuticals. Impurities have to be ridiculously low. Lower than you can measure in your garage.

    These dudes either don’t know you need to even measure purity or have decided that it’s inconvenient and are ignoring it.

  • For the first time in more than three years, SpaceX misses a booster landing
  • Unless our ability to cram delta-V into a spacecraft goes way beyond what seems possible now with chemical rockets, a trip to the moon is always gonna involve a few days of coasting through space. That’s always going to take more preparation than a transatlantic flight.

  • How dense would the atmosphere need to be to result in a cataclysmic chain reaction during a nuclear explosion?

    Famously, Oppenheimer and co worked out how close a nuclear bomb test would be to causing a chain reaction of nitrogen fusion in the atmosphere. They made a lot of worst-case-scenario assumptions and still came to the conclusion that no, a nuclear bomb test wouldn’t scour the surface of the world.

    But let’s say the atmosphere was twice as dense as it is. Or ten times as dense. At what point would that calculation turn very, very scary?

    Obligatory xkcd

    Edit: man, seriously, most of the people ‘answering’ this question didn’t even read it.

    11
    Pretty Bummed to Lose Minshew
    www.nfl.com Raiders agree to terms with QB Gardner Minshew on two-year, $25M contract

    The Las Vegas Raiders have agreed to terms with quarterback Gardner Minshew on a two-year, $25 million deal with $15 million full guaranteed, NFL Network Insiders Ian Rapoport and Tom Pelissero reported Monday.

    Raiders agree to terms with QB Gardner Minshew on two-year, $25M contract

    Clearly, AR is the way forward. And Minshew played as well as he could last year and has been rewarded with a likely starting role.

    But man, I’m gonna miss that guy. And if AR gets hurt again it’s hard to imagine a backup who will step up like Minshew did.

    1
    Request: Comment and Post Filters by Domain

    Not everyone wants to defederate with trolls, which is fine. But I’d like to hide posts and comments from instances that never seem to make Lemmy a nicer place.

    For instance, it would be cool to configure Avalon such that any comment by a user from hexbear be hidden until tapped. (And I’d probably never tap it.)

    2
    InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)BE
    becausechemistry @lemm.ee
    Posts 5
    Comments 174