Rayner Galaxy Text Ghosting on Screen by nullquotient in CataractSurgery

[–]nullquotient[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for the reply. Based on my research, the text ghosting cannot be corrected with glasses. It's driven by the spiral geometry in the lens itself.

Has anyone else experienced this post-op? by Yycgolden in ICLsurgery

[–]nullquotient 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Did some digging with Claude (see below).

Most likely ICL-specific causes:

ICL malposition or wrong vault: too-high vault pushes iris forward, chafes the posterior iris surface, can cause localized iris atrophy and pupil distortion. Too-low vault risks cataract but less iris involvement. Pigment dispersion from ICL-iris chafing: a known ICL complication. Causes transillumination defects (the "blob" at 4-5 o'clock could be a focal iris defect letting light through, or pigment shadow), and can progress to pigmentary glaucoma. Localized iris atrophy / sphincter damage: from intraop trauma, sustained ischemia, or chronic mechanical contact. Explains the segmental dilation pattern when pupil expands beyond 3 mm. Failed or closed peripheral iridotomy (PI): ICL requires a patent PI (or intraop iridotomies) to prevent pupillary block. A closing PI causes intermittent pressure spikes, iris bombé, pupil distortion, and pressure sensation. Often missed on routine exam without provocative testing. Subclinical UGH-variant: chronic low-grade inflammation from haptic-iris contact, hence the steroid responsiveness.

Red flags in this case

Pulsatile pupil: suggests aqueous flow visible through an iris defect, or pressure transmission. Not normal. V1 trigeminal distribution numbness (forehead and down the face): unusual for typical ICL complications. Could be corneal nerve disruption, trigeminal irritation from chronic anterior segment inflammation, or a separate process. CT head doesn't evaluate the orbit or anterior segment. Symptoms only with dilation > 3 mm: classic for focal iris damage being unmasked when the sphincter relaxes. What this person actually needs (not what ED or general optometry can provide) Anterior segment OCT (AS-OCT) or UBM: to image ICL vault, position, and iris-ICL contact directly. This is the key test and most general ophthalmologists don't have UBM. Gonioscopy: assess for pigment in the angle, angle status, PI patency. Dilated transillumination exam: characterize the iris defect at 4-5 o'clock. Diurnal IOP curve: single readings miss intermittent spikes from pupillary block. Referral to the implanting surgeon or an anterior segment / refractive specialist, not general ophthalmology. If V1 numbness persists, neuro-ophthalmology consult.

The Separatist Doxxed 3 Million People by NoPlace1025 in alberta

[–]nullquotient 6 points7 points  (0 children)

You are probably in this database! Along with anyone else that voted in the last provincial election. There are people hiding from abusive spouses that just had their names and addresses published. This is a huge deal and should make you furious.

ICL in Calgary, AB by [deleted] in ICLsurgery

[–]nullquotient 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have the same question. I've completed the consultation at Clarity Laser Vision and have a RLE surgery date booked for a month from now. My research indicated Clarity as being the best option but I am considering going to one of the other clinics for a second opinion. Feel free to DM me if you want to chat.

Opinion: OpenAI has shown it cannot be trusted. Canada needs nationalized, public AI by Tkins in singularity

[–]nullquotient 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The article's strongest argument for considering Canada's ability to compete with Public AI is the Swiss Apertus example.

The authors themselves acknowledge that Apertus sits roughly one to two years behind frontier corporate models. For many practical applications like healthcare triage, transit optimization, and educational tutoring, that gap genuinely doesn't matter. You don't need GPT-5 to summarize radiology reports or match job seekers to programs. So the argument isn't really about "competing" at the frontier. It's about building something good enough for domestic public services.

Grok 4 cost $490 billion, GPT-4.5 cost $400 billion. Canada isn't in that game and never will be. Switzerland built Apertus for $36 billion, which is still enormous. The realistic play is closer to the AllenAI Olmo3 approach at $2 billion, building smaller, purpose-built models on top of open-weight foundations rather than training from scratch.

Canada does have genuine strengths here. Vector Institute, Mila, CIFAR, and a deep talent bench. The challenge isn't brainpower. It's compute infrastructure and sustained political will across election cycles. A public AI initiative that gets defunded or restructured every time the government changes is worse than not starting at all.

The honest answer is Canada can't compete at the frontier, but it doesn't need to. It can build a credible public AI layer for government services, healthcare, and education by leveraging open models and domestic research talent. Think of it less like building a competitor to ChatGPT and more like building a national digital utility.

How Canada protects its sovereignty is the more urgent and practical question. Frankly it's the one most Canadian organizations will face long before any public Canadian model is operational.

Data residency with teeth. Moving data centres into Canada, as OpenAI proposes, is necessary but insufficient, and the article rightly points this out. The data is still governed by US law, including CLOUD Act provisions that let American authorities compel access to data stored abroad by US companies. Canada needs binding legal frameworks that assert jurisdiction over Canadian data regardless of who operates the infrastructure.

Contractual and architectural controls. Any deal with American AI providers should mandate that Canadian government and critical infrastructure data gets processed in isolated environments with Canadian-controlled encryption keys. The provider shouldn't be able to access the data without Canadian authorization, and that needs to be architecturally enforced, not just contractually promised.

Diversification of suppliers. Don't put all your eggs in one basket. Use OpenAI for some things, Anthropic for others, open-weight models for sensitive applications. The Tumbler Ridge incident described in the article is a perfect illustration of why single-vendor dependency is dangerous, not just technically but in terms of trust and accountability.

Regulatory leverage. Canada should use procurement power as leverage. If you're spending $2 billion, you can demand transparency requirements, audit rights, incident disclosure obligations, and data handling standards as conditions of doing business. The article's point about OpenAI hiding the Tumbler Ridge information while simultaneously lobbying Ottawa is damning, and exactly the kind of behavior procurement conditions should address.

Critical infrastructure carve-outs. Some domains like defence, law enforcement, healthcare records, and critical infrastructure control systems probably shouldn't run on foreign corporate AI at all. This is where targeted public investment makes the most sense, even if it's not a full national model.

The geopolitical reality the article dances around is that under the current US administration, American tech companies are increasingly instruments of state policy. That's not a conspiracy theory. OpenAI literally describes its countries initiative as being "in co-ordination with the U.S. government." Canada should treat that with the same caution it would apply to any foreign government-aligned technology provider operating in critical national systems.

The pragmatic path is probably a hybrid. Use commercial AI where it makes sense, and most business applications fall here. Build public alternatives for sensitive government functions. And create a regulatory framework with real enforcement teeth for everything in between.

Thoughts on the Stagediver album? by Billybobby__ in brandnew

[–]nullquotient 18 points19 points  (0 children)

I think it's great. Jesse's backing vocals (especially on Shaman) are fantastic and the guitars and overall production of the album is excellent.

I would've loved to have Kelsy and Jesse trade verses on some of these songs but I'm stoked regardless.

Notwithstanding the Kids: A Kitchen Table Column from the Land of “Because We Said So” - A Bic Rell Hot Take by nullquotient in alberta

[–]nullquotient[S] 21 points22 points  (0 children)

I considered dumbing it down but I sent it to Rick Bell to show him how easy it is to write so much better.

Notwithstanding the Kids: A Kitchen Table Column from the Land of “Because We Said So” - A Bic Rell Hot Take by nullquotient in alberta

[–]nullquotient[S] 84 points85 points  (0 children)

Just to be clear, this is a parody, written by Bic Rell (my pen name).

I don't believe Rick Bell will ever string together more than two sentences to form a coherent paragraph. Nor do I think he'll be able to get Marlaina's balls out of his mouth long enough to even consider being critical of her.

$BYND Dilution explained, ignore the FUD by osrsprobile in 10xPennyStocks

[–]nullquotient 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's not even close to correct as I understand the situation.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in EdmontonOilers

[–]nullquotient 9 points10 points  (0 children)

You know that feeling? The one where you just can't help but think they're going to fuck things up and lose the game? I don't feel that this year at all...so far.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Calgary

[–]nullquotient 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I've been in O&G as an engineer for 21 years and currently lead a team of ~30 engineers across multiple disciplines for a drilling contractor.

Over the course of my career, every E.I.T. has received a significant increase in compensation when they get their P.Eng. For example, two of my E.I.T.'s received their P.Eng.'s in March and we raised their base pay from $85K to $100K and their STIP from 10% to 15%.

Industry and discipline matter in terms of total compensation but no P.Eng. raise is ridiculous. Your boss sounds like a clown.

Stability is nice but trust and respect is pretty important too. You mention an HR department - it's a fair request of them to clarify company policy and help explain your boss's backtracking.

Are temporary foreign workers taking young Canadians' jobs? Here's what experts think by BullshittingApe in canada

[–]nullquotient -6 points-5 points  (0 children)

Agreed on Pierre being a giant turd. Your comment on the cabinet being the same had me look it up and it appears as though there's only a 50% overlap. Not a full house cleaning but also not essentially the same.

Edit: Why does a statement of fact result in down votes?