My brother was diagnosed in his first year at school, didn't help prevent his criminal career later on. Diagnosis, even a self-diagnosis like I did at 42, is just the first step but for kids the right actions and help could indeed prevent so much suffering. Self-medication, drug abuse to calm down the mind, can be prevented quite easily with proper ADHD medication that shows a great rate of success.
A few things I noticed though:
* I'd love to add a task to a future date.
* A flag on (future) tasks to notify when I ought to start them
* Please pre-fill the minutes with 00
* The icons selection for the profiles is a bit boring. Why not just a search across whatever icon font (unicode?) you use?
* Is there a dedicated view for just the profile without the noise around it?
* There's a little animation that moves a task up when I hover it on desktop, is that by design?
Before posting your comments, please can you read the article first and do a little more research including what people with ADHD experienced in their life before they got their diagnosis and help?
Many get (mis-)diagnosed with depression where the meds are much less easy and effective compared to ADHD. Un-diagnosed ADHD often leads to self-medication with alcohol or drugs, two things with very adverse side-effects even though one of them is legal. Studies show that treating ADHD with medication does lower the risk of substance abuse: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4147667/
Btw, there are no indications that ADHD medication has a positive long-term effect in non-medical use. If you can already focus your mind at the things before you without ADHD medication then you'd only waste your money if you took meds.
Fact? Far from and if only in a small minority. I know Gabor Maté likes to push trauma as a cause (as far as his ridiculous remote diagnosis of Prince Harry), if not main cause for ADHD but the vast majority of ADHD is due to genetics, 70-80% as the article states. Don't forget siblings and parents when looking at an ADHD person. When the parent has ADHD there's a higher risk for the child to have adverse experiences as this study describes: https://www.academicpedsjnl.net/article/S1876-2859(16)30416-...
In the study's Limitations sections it says what Russell Barkley always points out[1] as the missing key component in ADHD and autism studies: "Fourth, because of our observational study design, we were unable to exclude the potential residual confounders because of unmeasured genetic and environmental factors."
Both ADHD and autism have genetic causes in 80% of cases and run in families, not measuring genetic factors makes this whole study a waste of time.
In the limitations it says what Russell Barkley always points out[1] as the missing key component in ADHD and autism studies: "Fourth, because of our observational study design, we were unable to exclude the potential residual confounders because of unmeasured genetic and environmental factors."
Both ADHD and autism have genetic causes in 80% of cases and run in families, not measuring genetic factors makes this whole study a waste of time.
Russ Barkley did a video three weeks ago on I guess that study (or meta study) and it's not just the likely increased pain in mothers with ADHS but as soon as you take in a control group like siblings the correlation just vanishes https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RJGn4j6QTiw
Russ Barkley explains what is missing in studies that try to show correlation between the mother's medication and ADHD in offspring. As soon as a study takes on a control mechanism like siblings the correlation disappears https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RJGn4j6QTiw
Early MongoDB adapter here who still likes it. If your internal services are accessible from outside you are doing it wrong. Neither MongoDB nor ES or ollama are services that my applications would access through a public IP and whenever a dev asks me for access to the DB from the comfort of their home office I tell them what VPN to log into.
Even if those services had some access protection, I simply must assume that the service has some security leak that allows unauthorized access and the first line of defense against that is not having it on the public internet.
Decide what? Slapping a simple, naive login screen on top of a service that was never designed to fend off attacks from untrusted networks doesn't fix the actual issue, which is the fact that an administrator exercised bad judgement and made it accessible to untrusted networks.
On the flipside, you can also argue that if you are relying on network access to protect your internal services, you are doing it wrong. If the only thing you need to take over a service is access to its internal network, you are setting yourself up to be owned.
Yes but nobody is stopping you from adding your own proxy which enforces any type of authentication you like, and in my opinion that's the more sensible approach here anyway.
I don't think it's sensible to expect every project like Ollama to ship their own half-broken authentication and especially anything resembling a "zero trust" implementation. You can easily front Ollama with a reverse proxy which does those things if you'd like. Each component should do one thing well.
I trust Nginx to verify client certificates correctly so I can be confident that only traffic from trusted users is able to reach whatever insecure POS is hiding behind it.
Studies from Norway and the US show results fitting this one https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12888-021-03223-0 https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC2581455/
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