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I am diagnosed with EoE as a result of celiac disease. I've had a lot of success with Dupixent as a treatment--just wanted to put that out for HN should anyone be looking for new options.


It’s not hidden. It’s just on the bottle because it’s convenient for a keeper to reference.


The bottle was wrapped in a towel.


I can't say for them, but towel is good heat insulator and can keep bottle content cold. I use it often for that reason (either towel or other clothes that's already in backpack).


I have no idea what the Euros rules are, but this could have been him wanting to keep all his stuff together without the paper blowing away.


Lots of outdoor gear brands are now selling repaired or refurbished used gear and clothing. Since used gear is pretty eclectic in selection it’s hard to find what you want by browsing at a random time.

I built a pretty simple web app that tracks a bunch of vendors and emails me when items matching my filters come in stock!


I think there's a good argument for Elixir and Phoenix. It's shocking how easy it is to do just about anything with it. An excellent database wrapper, incredible async story, beautiful at real time. You can substitute in a JS SPA framework if you need to, but I think you can go really far with LiveView before that's a requirement.


Well, North Dakota is pretty close. It is indeed very large but its population is only slightly larger than Luxembourg.


That sounds like inertial navigation with nav fixes, which predates GPS. It certainly does exist.


It feels that point is undermined when the accelerationists don’t succeed and only make a new equilibrium of killing the kid and replacing him.

It feels to me more like a critique that change is impossible.


While the effectiveness of the Accelerationist is questionable, it still introduces the third option of "doing something".

I don't think the story is trying to say "change is impossible", but rather that your only options aren't "status quo" or "leave".


Are these hard to swallow? It feels like the author is pushing a particular tone when stating facts (with maybe a couple debatable points) that any software engineer would agree with.


I play flight sim games and GFS is a major factor in my hobbies now. I’m over a year into converting a real F-16 throttle grip into a video game controller, and there’s no end in sight. I’ve become immersed in 3d printing, CAD and PCB design.

I hear it’s also big in outdoor hobbies—backpackers often make their own tents and packs too.


What makes these libraries heart-pounding? Seems like clickbait. (Generally I prefer my heart rate to remain low while using libraries anyway)


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