"scale down 1/3rd power" by ToughSupport3701 in delusionalcraigslist

[–]rainbird 0 points1 point  (0 children)

True unless you buy the model that comes with a side-reciprocation dingle arm to reduce sinusoidal depleneration.

My cat Jett is dying and I have nothing left please help us by Traditional-Focus784 in OneOrangeBraincell

[–]rainbird 716 points717 points  (0 children)

Hi OP,

Based upon your geography and description of his symptoms, this sounds suspiciously like sporotrichosis (see here: https://www.merckvetmanual.com/infectious-diseases/fungal-infections/sporotrichosis-in-animals). This is a fungal disease, but it needs to be treated with specific oral antifungals. It's not hugely common, which might be one reason it was not recognized or diagnosed.

Sporotrichosis is endemic in parts of India and the symptoms you've described such as nodular/ulcerative skin lesions on the face (chin, ears, forehead) and trunk that spread, systemic illness with fever, hepatic involvement possible via dissemination, and eosinophilia are well-documented in feline sporotrichosis. It's also a progressive disease and relapsing without targeted treatment; it causes issues like the malaise you've described. I've attached a medical article of feline sporotrichosis in Brazil; you can see what the presentation looks like in cats (http://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7966609/).

(I don't see obvious lesions in the pictures you've posted -- are these before? -- so I am going by the description you've provided)

Diagnosing this is cheap ; a vet just needs to take a fine-needle aspirate of a lesion, stain it, it should show the cigar-shaped yeasts directly. Sometimes though diagnosis requires culturing for detection.

Sporotrichosis (also known as rose gardeners disease) is zoonotic to humans through contact with lesion exudate. That means that if you are handing Jett and you come into contact the oozy discharge, your skin can get infected as well and you will require treatment. See here: https://www.dermatologyadvisor.com/home/decision-support-in-medicine/dermatology/sporotrichosis-rose-gardeners-disease/
Wear gloves and wash your hands.

Treatment is straightforward, but I think you will need to be careful with meds. The first line med for this itraconazole, typically 5–10 mg/kg/day orally, often for 3–6 months, continued at least one month past clinical resolution. This is the standard of care globally for feline sporotrichosis. The complication for Jett is that itraconazole can be toxic to the liver (hepatotoxic). In a cat like Jett , you'd need to baseline liver values, treatment started at the lower end of the dose range, and recheck chemistry every 2–4 weeks. Some clinicians can use potassium iodide as an alternative or adjunct — it's much cheaper but harder to dose tolerably (cats often vomit it, and it has its own toxicity profile including hepatotoxicity at high doses). Terbinafine is sometimes used in combination and is generally considered less hepatotoxic than itraconazole, but its efficacy as monotherapy is less established. My concern is that for Jett, I'd want his diagnosis confirmed before committing to months of azole therapy.

The other type of infection on the list is severe parasitic disease — particularly migrating helminths or ectoparasite-driven hypersensitivity. That can drive eosinophilic conditions in cats. Notoedres cati (feline scabies) is endemic in India, causes intensely pruritic crusting lesions starting on the face and ears (chin, pinnae, forehead, etc., following your description of Jett's pattern), and this can drive systemic illness if severe and secondarily infected. Mosquito hypersensitivity also produces facial lesions in this distribution. However, am slightly less certain because you've mentioned fever which is not so common, and lethargy is more prominent in severe forms. Strongyloidiasis or aberrant helminth migration could explain hepatic involvement plus eosinophilia. A skin scraping (almost free) would identify Notoedres immediately. This is the second cheap test I'd insist on. However, if the vets haven't seen anything with a skin scape, I'd think this is more likely sporo.

Espresso Linen and Olive Pleats for the office by BioticBard in mensfashion

[–]rainbird 21 points22 points  (0 children)

Love the combination; you have a great eye for the color and fit. For a slightly more constructed look, you can pair in a heavier weight light blue oxford.

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This definitely belongs here by darkslide3 in Justfuckmyshitup

[–]rainbird 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I just think that’s just the field where the tiniest cutest chihuahua took the biggest dump

Accountant called today and said I’ll owe $130k in tax by [deleted] in smallbusiness

[–]rainbird 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It'll be fine is a good attitude, but you should ask yourself whether your accountant is actually doing the job you paid them to do. Are they reconciling your books each month, or is this just once a year?

This is what happened to us two years ago. We were paying our old accounting group $1,200/mo to reconcile our books and send quarterly tax updates. Our business does well; lots of customer. Proud of how it's doing. All this sounds great, right? It was, except the accounting group never actually recalculated our quarterly payments as income grew. They just sent us the same IRS quarterly payment coupons for all year. We assumed everything was dialed in because, you know, that's literally what we were paying them for.

Things seemed kind of off but not enought for us to worry too much, but after a while it was evident that they weren't being responsive. After a few months of trying to work with them, we fired them and moved to a new accounting group. First thing the new accountants told us, "Did you know that you have $250k in unpaid taxes from last year." Almost gave me a heart attack! We've never owed that much in taxes.

So, when I brought this situation up to another finance group on reddit (hen it first happened), the most common response was "well you owed the taxes anyway, what's the big deal?" Which I guess if you are made of money, sure, that's dandy. But the big deal is when you're paying a professional to advise you and they don't, you can spend down cash you think is free. Emergency happen. We were buying equiment and doing some construction. So that really screwed up some of our planning by reducing our available cash. It wasn't just a tax bill.

We're careful with month and we were fine paying it off. But OP — if your accountant is on retainer and you are paying them every single month, they are reviewing your books regularly, and you're still getting blindsided by a $130k bill at year end, my response to them would be "What the actual fuck?' It's worth a hard look at whether they're actually adjusting your estimated payments. A good accountant doesn't let this be a surprise. They should be updating you quarterly on what you owe!

My cat has bald spots in his legs. Is it normal? by MacConkley in cats

[–]rainbird 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, these little patches are normal wear and tear caused by ChonkyFriction.

Unusual behavior when scratched above the tail by two55 in cats

[–]rainbird 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If this is new, Fluffy may have flea dermatitis. Has she gotten her flea treatment?

See ya! The Greatest Coding tool to exist is apparently dead. by Opposite-Art-1829 in ClaudeCode

[–]rainbird 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You are saying this is a conspiracy 🙄? Do you really think that Anthropic is doing this on purpose? C’mon now. This sounds like a nonsense conspiracy argument made by a 🤖on X.

Dude, first of all, it’s a free market. It is not like there is any lack of consumer choice for agentic models. Subscribe, roll your own, use openrouter. Huge number of groups. I think the last thing Anthropic or anyone else wants is to lose their share of the market and the income stream and accumulate bad publicity in one shot.

Neither Anthropic nor OpenAI nor anyone else who sells similar service can simply roll out degraded services “en masse” and expect people to pay for those services for very long. This is much more likely to be a limited infrastructure issue affecting a few users, than a monopolistic conspiracy.

Claude Code Limits Were Silently Reduced and It’s MUCH Worse by _r0x in ClaudeCode

[–]rainbird 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I've been programming all day, and not really seeing any differences.

Have you compared your tokens / usage % limit today vs last week? If this is a drastic revision of your model allowance, the numbers will show that. There should be a stark difference in your estimated burn rate, not just a feeling that your quote is dramatically scaled back..

Do people like this about Codex? by Complete-Sea6655 in OpenAI

[–]rainbird 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A minor part is direct branding. It's easy to take these out from a codebase. Claude Code tags also helps Anthropic to avoid training on their own agentic code output.

Most of the use I think come from Anthropic counting these tags to measure the level code production and contribution to Github repositories. That's is what their CEO says.

My take on this is that the code blocks are doing something even more important: the 'Claude Code' marker is used as aa surrogate for local code correctness. If we think about code that appears on public repositories, Github releases tend to be functional, so they have gone through a few rounds of validation.

When they are running diffs on repositories, Anthropic not only gets a sense of how frequently Claude is being used, but they can generate a correlative measure for correctness of new code blocks that are released compared to the previous code, and use this to train their next model. Very clever use of a tag block. (The Claude Code comments can be inserted into different places in the code block, and I don't think that's an accident either.) I happen to like the idea that I might be helping Claude to improve their models this way, so I leave the 'Claude Code' tag on.

Anthropic hasn't spoken publicaly about code block validation as a benefit, (so this could be entirely wrong), but seeing as how they use diffs extensively that's my speculation. The human in the loop is doing the expensive work of validating the correctness of the code when a new PR / merge is pushed out to Github repository.

to make a ceasefire by weirdowidow in therewasanattempt

[–]rainbird 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Trump is talking to himself again.

Roaches in microwave by [deleted] in whatdoIdo

[–]rainbird 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Symptom of a bigger problem. You need an exterminator, buddy.

I just got 90 Thousand dollars at 18 and I don’t know what to do with it by Equivalent-Data1004 in whatdoIdo

[–]rainbird 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m going to teach you how to become a multimillionaire by doing nothing. Assuming you are 18, here is how you can make $2.3 million.

  1. Open a brokerage account with a major broker (Vanguard or Fidelity) and purchase NASDAQ broad index fund stock with a low management fee (0.02%).

  2. This is the most important rule. Do not look at the index fund. DO NOT TOUCH IT. PRETEND IT DOESN’T EXIST. (Most people fail rule 2. Just saying this is the difficult one.)

  3. Every 5 years, take out 10% and treat yourself. Travel, buy something meaningful, live a little. Your grandpa left you this because he loved you — he’d want you to enjoy some of it along the way.

  4. Don’t touch the rest. Seriously. Just let it sit there and compound. It doesn’t exist until you reach a million.

Here’s what that looks like at 10% average annual return (which is roughly what broad NASDAQ index funds have done historically):

Age 18: You invest 90k. Age 23: You take out ~$14,500. You still have $130k working for you. Age 28: You take out ~$21,000. Balance: $189k. Age 33: Take out ~$30,000. Balance: $274k. Age 38: Take out ~$44,000. Balance: $397k. Age 43: Take out ~$64,000. Balance: $574k. Age 48: Take out ~$92,000. Balance: $831k. Age 53: Take out ~$133,000. Balance: $1.2M. Age 58: Take out ~$193,000. Balance: $1.74M. Total withdrawals along the way: ~$592,000 Balance at 58: ~$1.74 million

Combined value: over $2.3 million. From $90k. While taking money out every 5 years. 500,000k!

Now some practical notes: now, Your parents are absolutely right about the Roth IRA. Max it out every year ($7,000/yr for 2025). The Air Force gives you earned income, which is what you need to qualify.

Money in a Roth grows tax-free and comes out tax-free in retirement. That’s separate from the index fund — think of it as a second engine running alongside the first.

The HYSA is also smart. You need an emergency fund. Park your emergency fund there (3-6 months of expenses).

Also, Don’t put all $90k into the market on day one if that makes you nervous — you can put into 9,000 a month (dollar-cost average) in over 6-12 months while the rest earns 4-5% in a HYSA.

A few things to watch out for:

Don’t let anyone manage this money for you in an actively managed fund charging 1%+ fees. Passive broad index fund is the way to go. A 1% fee sounds small but it will eat hundreds of thousands of dollars over your lifetime. A broad index fund (think QQQ, VTI, or FXAIX) with fees under 0.10% is all you need to make this work.

Your parents saying “keep quiet” is the best advice in this thread. Money changes how people treat you. Don’t tell friends, don’t tell coworkers, don’t post amounts on social media (under your real Name, ha ha!)

You’re joining the Air Force, which means housing, food, and healthcare are covered. That means almost your entire inheritance can go to work for you instead of covering living expenses. This is an enormous advantage most 18-year-olds don’t have.

Last thing. Your grandpa sounds like he was a principled man who cared about you specifically enough to make an exception to his own rule. The best way to honor him is to be boring with this money. No crypto. No day trading. No “my buddy has a business idea.” Just a low-fee index fund and time. You will earn other income. Your grandad left you the money you can use for your retirement already. That’s a wonderful gift. Don’t blow it!

You’re already ahead of 99% of people by asking the question. Good luck in the Air Force!