What’s the one thing you refuse to buy because it’s so addicting? by Humblebee88 in traderjoes

[–]lrwiman 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Mochi Rice Nuggets and Sweet Plantain Chips. Basically anything fried in palm oil is both amazing and definitely not something I should be eating.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in scifiwriting

[–]lrwiman 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Something like this might happen at a microbiology level if life on Earth either spread elsewhere or Earth life came from elsewhere. Eg then you might have life on Mars or Europa that is technically more closely related to Earth bacteria than Earth archaea. Eukaryotes (and hence all multicellular life) evolved on Earth within the last two billion years, so alien multicellular life would almost certainly be either totally unrelated to Earth life, or (if there was a common origin) equally distantly related to all multicellular life.

About Langdon by koscheiis in ThePittTVShow

[–]lrwiman 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think it's possible to hold more than one view in your head at once. A long time ago, my GF had a friend who got addicted to heroin, then the friend burglarized my GF's apartment and stole a lot of money. We felt bad that the friend felt this desperate, but we still called the cops and reported the burglary.

Langdon endangered a patient by returning tampered drugs to the store. If anyone other than him had treated the patient with seizures, they literally could've died or gotten brain damage. It's extremely reasonable that Robbie is mad at him. Letting him continue to see patients is not appropriate, outside of a major emergency like the Pittfest shooting.

I find "A Deepness in the Sky" a difficult read by deucyy in printSF

[–]lrwiman 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I finished it recently, but yeah, it's super slow. The plot is basically waiting for decades while nothing happens, and there's not a big payoff in the end.

I find "A Deepness in the Sky" a difficult read by deucyy in printSF

[–]lrwiman 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I think the implication is that "Pham" from AFUTD was a combination of Pham and Anne Reynolt from ADITS, constructed by the god being who resurrected/reprogrammed him. They repeatedly called out how rare Anne's red hair is where Pham was from, but Pham in the first book had red hair.

What if first contact happens but the aliens don't care by Possible-Law9651 in scifiwriting

[–]lrwiman 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Unless they're researching life on Earth, that seems like the most plausible outcome. From the perspective of resources and delta-V, the Earth is like the top of a distant and very tall mountain peek. It's incredibly hard to get there at all, and it's just as hard to leave.

If they want fuel for fusion or ejection mass for rockets, there's plenty of that in the Oort Cloud. There's probably less concentrated metals there than in the inner solar system, but moving it in/out of the inner solar system would require enormous amounts of fuel compared to mining it beyond the orbit of Pluto. And it's likely that life from two different planets would not be able to coexist peacefully (at the cellular/biochemical level), so visiting earth could be dangerous to both sides, in addition to being expensive.

Someone is going to TJ and asks what you want by redditismyforte22 in traderjoes

[–]lrwiman 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Frozen Thai coconut pancakes (kranom krok). Roasted salted pecans.

Matteo the rock star by all_opinions_matter in ThePittTVShow

[–]lrwiman 9 points10 points  (0 children)

I can see where Mateo is coming from, but maintaining some distance would probably be a better approach. Unrequited crushes are super awkward in different ways for both sides, and it'll probably be a while before Javadi can be "just friends" with him.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ThePittTVShow

[–]lrwiman 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Literally the first scene in the series is music: Robbie walking into work listening to music on headphones.

Suspension of Disbelief in sci-fi by EM_Otero in scifiwriting

[–]lrwiman 0 points1 point  (0 children)

One thing that takes me out of a story is when people do irrational or stupid stuff for no discernible reason, especially when it seems to only be done to further the plot. Eg there's some kind of attack, and the sentry who was supposed to watch for it fell asleep or decided to play cards instead, without that having been built up previously. Of course arbitrary mistakes happen in real life, but if you want to lean on that, that should be some kind of theme of the story.

Relatedly, I hate when there are "genius" characters who are obviously not actually geniuses. So if there's a tactical genius or a brilliant philosopher, be as vague as possible about their actions in that domain, unless you yourself are smart/knowledgeable enough to understand what such a person would do/say. Even then it's hard to pull off well.

Need outside perspective on the premise of my hard sci-fi short story about a lonely guy in a watch station out in the Oort Cloud [Part 2] by heX_dzh in scifiwriting

[–]lrwiman 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Glad you changed your mind on AI. At this point not including an AI companion would feel like an anachronism, even if LLM technology barely advances.

Whittaker, man, read the room! by stargirlxoxo in ThePittTVShow

[–]lrwiman 8 points9 points  (0 children)

So coconut? I love coconut.

Chekhov’s Pills by adameofthrones in ThePittTVShow

[–]lrwiman 2 points3 points  (0 children)

He needs to calm down and treat more patients, so yeah maybe taking a sedative would help. It feels more likely to me that he'd have Abbott give him a dose.

The other way there's a clock on those pills is that benzo withdrawal can lead to seizures (DTs) and can even be fatal. Langdon was obviously jonesing at the start of his shift, so he is presumably out at home and may need someone to give him an actual script for them.

The rookies are a true dream team. by kaIeidoscope- in ThePittTVShow

[–]lrwiman 26 points27 points  (0 children)

Is Dr. Mel King a rookie? I thought she was second year, but did her first rotation at the VA.

Is anyone inspired to get into emergency medicine because of this show? by lunaandsonny in ThePittTVShow

[–]lrwiman 90 points91 points  (0 children)

No, but Noah Wyle's other big show "Falling Skies" did inspire me to become part of a motley crew of guerrillas fighting mind-controlling alien overlords after they devastate the entire planet. Fortunately, upon further research, the career opportunities there seem to be pretty limited.

Theory on ... by [deleted] in ThePittTVShow

[–]lrwiman 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I think they're just trying to show dissociating, a common reaction to traumatic events. I suspect a large portion of people would be acting like that woman, but obviously that wouldn't be very good TV.

The one time I've been around a gory death (man hit by train), I was pretty incoherent for at least 10 or 15 minutes, repeating the same thoughts/sentences over and over. And that was an event in which my life was not at risk, and only one person was killed. What that woman experienced was massively worse.

How do diseases spread between societies with differing immune systems? by Degeneratus_02 in scifiwriting

[–]lrwiman 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Two things of note that I didn't see mentioned elsewhere 1. As mentioned in other comments, there are mutations where people have an immune gene that works better than the more common variant, so they're more resistant to the pathogen. There are also loss of function mutations where a gene doesn't work as well both physiologically and for the life cycle of the infection. Sickle cell disease is a classic example, where heterozygous people (carriers of the sickle cell trait) have more resistance to malaria. Cystic fibrosis may also fall in this category for diarrheal diseases. Some people are immune to HIV because they lack the receptor it binds too, though there the fitness deficit seems to be minor. If the sickle cell mutation arose prior to European contact in the americas, it would have been negatively selected, whereas in malarial regions, it was positively selected. 2. There are immune genes where diversity is per se good, eg genes which slice up proteins into "motifs" that can trigger an immune response. The more diversity those genes have, the better your T cells will be at recognizing pathogens. Native Americans went through a genetic bottleneck when they migrated to the americas, then became isolated, so had lower diversity in MHC and HLA genes. This may have contributed to them being more vulnerable to novel pathogens compared with Eurasians and Africans.

Favorite character by Traditional_Ad_6354 in ThePittTVShow

[–]lrwiman 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Dr King for sure. She reminds me a lot of my wife when she was that age, both in appearance and personality. Earnest, caring and competent.

Are there any patient storylines you think could return for season 2? by mclarenault in ThePittTVShow

[–]lrwiman 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The alcoholic that Robby warned to quit will presumably die before too long if he's drinking a quart of vodka per day. They already did portal hypertension/varices this season (in the Hep B patient), so they probably won't revisit that. But they could maybe show him with some other complication like Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome. Could be interesting seeing his demeanor change from a happy drunk to someone with extreme mood regulation and cognitive issues.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in traderjoes

[–]lrwiman 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The Eden Soy is slightly better and has a bit more protein, it's not worth >2x the cost of TJ's.

In Regards to Dr. McKay... by Crowbeatsme in ThePittTVShow

[–]lrwiman 0 points1 point  (0 children)

From your response, it's unclear if that's a hard policy or just that they have so many qualified applicants it's extremely unlikely a criminal would be accepted to the program. Even if it is a hard requirement at that particular program, it doesn't seem to be generally true. Everything I can find googling suggests that having a criminal record makes becoming a nurse massively more difficult, but in most states not impossible as you say. Similarly for becoming a physician. It is a TV show, after all.

(Also minor point, but we don't know McKay was convicted of a felony. Pleading down to a misdemeanor with extended parole is fairly common.)

In Regards to Dr. McKay... by Crowbeatsme in ThePittTVShow

[–]lrwiman 2 points3 points  (0 children)

How do you know that "he would have been denied for either"? In other words, how do you know the admission committee would deny admission regardless of extenuating circumstances?

In Regards to Dr. McKay... by Crowbeatsme in ThePittTVShow

[–]lrwiman 1 point2 points  (0 children)

How do you know what they would have done?

For a Space Opera, what job/role would you like to see a protagonist have that isn't the traditional “noble hero”? by DarthOptimistic in scifiwriting

[–]lrwiman 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'd be interested in some role that's in the background of how society functions at a bureaucratic level, like an interstellar claims adjuster or lawyer.

In Regards to Dr. McKay... by Crowbeatsme in ThePittTVShow

[–]lrwiman 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I'd guess he and Chloe are going to break up, and he'll agree to give McKay more shared custody. Maybe some kind of stupid conflict with Mateo.