October 03 2020, 23:47

Very sound advice and points. Social networks should really think about how to integrate this into their service. By the way, why haven’t social networks introduced something like a credit score for users yet? It would take around five years to fine-tune the mechanism and protect against manipulations, but isn’t it time to start?

October 02 2020, 10:37

An interesting lecture by Elena Sudarikova @[100001842553860:2048:Elena Sudarikova] on molecular biology – genes, the genome, cellular apoptosis, and how all this is connected with the aging process and, eventually, the death of an organism. Very interesting, well-explained, and easy to understand. Highly recommend.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=snF3AXHCPg8

September 28 2020, 23:35

For those who upgraded to iOS14, try pressing play at the top of https://firigames.com/phoenix2 These are so-called app clips – one-time use applications launched right from the browser on your phone. It’s interesting to see if various coffee shops and other non-game developers will pick this up.

Even with a locked phone, you just bring it close to an NFC tag or scan a QR code, and the application launches immediately. The applications can deliver push notifications to the phone for 8 hours after launching. Apple Pay is supported, so you can pay for your coffee with just one click.

September 23 2020, 15:18

Today at the Russian post office, my mom was turned away with dietary supplements – apparently, that’s not allowed. I found a complete list. Interestingly, here’s what you cannot send to the USA:

– printed materials on the topic of abortions

– cosmetics

– offensive shipments

– advertisements or circulars regarding lotteries

– postage stamps and vignettes of any value, as well as imitations of used and unused postage stamps

– diagnostic tools

– items of any kind violating U.S. copyright laws

– items made by prisoners

It’s forbidden to ship live and dead animals, but interestingly, there’s an exception for bees, leeches, and silkworms.

Complete list:

All alcoholic beverages and intoxicating substances; contraceptives or devices intended for abortion, as well as printed materials on this subject; fish, fruits, and vegetables that spoil quickly, as well as substances that emit foul smells; live or dead animals (except bees, leeches or silkworms); medicines, therapeutic and cosmetic products; animal products; plants and plant products; weapons, including knives with automatically opening blades; ammunition; explosives or flammable substances; matches; agricultural products (coffee, cotton, fresh fruits, vegetables, grain, seedlings, lentils, nuts, cones, acorns, chestnuts, seeds, silage, oils, sugar, cereals, tobacco and tobacco products); offensive shipments; narcotic substances (opium, morphine, cocaine, and other drugs); tickets, announcements or circulars regarding lotteries; lotteries; imitations of checks and stocks, used and unused postage stamps, coupons, bills, notes issued by the State Treasury, gold and silver certificates; postage stamps and vignettes of any value; furs and skins; bird feathers with skin; cosmetics; diagnostic tools; items of any kind violating U.S. copyright laws; items made by prisoners; radioactive substances.

September 22 2020, 21:31

An interesting hypothesis in the article linked: wearing masks increases the level of immunization from coronavirus because the mask actually reduces the infection dose and, consequently, the viral load, leading to asymptomatic or mild cases.

This method is also known as variolation. Generally, variolation is the practice of deliberately infecting people with low doses of a pathogen to elicit a protective immune response. This was once a treatment for smallpox before the invention of vaccination. In this case, masks are considered like a sieve, through which the virus passes in enough quantity for the variolation effect.

For now, this is only a theory. We shall see.

https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMp2026913

September 21 2020, 00:09

Published the second part of the article about working with the database directly from Hybris. Thanks to @[100001772111225:2048:Timofey Klyubin] for almost everything that eventually came out.

The article discusses L1 cache, features of multitenance, and mass updates – in the context of when it’s really necessary to work with the database directly, and not through ORM as “supposed”. The article is very “geeky”, aimed at experienced developers on SAP Commerce, or those who want to become one 🙂

https://hybrismart.com/2020/09/20/how-to-make-native-sql-coexist-with-sap-commerce-orm-part-2/