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Here on the "Make a complaint to the European Ombudsman" page: https://www.ombudsman.europa.eu/en/make-a-complaint


They lost the private keys, and they are not brute forceable.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elliptic_Curve_Digital_Signatu...


Some other commenter pointed out they are using https://workadventu.re/


Thanks! I didn't know there was more than one of these


Coming at this late, but that is a really good price for a fully installed system, does that include some government subsidy?

Considering a similar system like that in southern Europe where installation is pretty cheap, and the prices are higher, I see A$12000 for a 10KW system of panels and a 10KW Fronius three-phase inverter.


Yes, there's some rebates from federal government in those numbers.

For the record:

33 x 370W solar panels (Jinko) - 12 year warranty

Three-phase inverter (Sungrow), battery capable down the track

Installation (labour, mounting kits, wiring, etc)

Total is A$13,000 -- less the government incentives / subsidy ($36 / STC) of A$6,600 which are intercepted by the vendor in this case.

In Australia these subsidies are taking yet another hit at the end of this year, hence there's a bit of a spike in people paying for these systems, but scheduling installation in 2021.


From the study: (TRE = time-restricted eating)

> There was a significant decrease in weight in the TRE (−0.94 kg; 95% CI, −1.68 to −0.20; P = .01)


Sorry, I was using "significant" in the non-scientific sense of the word. They proved with statistical significance that people lost weight, but the amount they lost (less than 1 kilo) is not medically or personally significant.


I believe it was actually 3 people: Phil Wilson, Craig Wright and Dave Kleiman.

Phil left the project and deleted all evidence in 2011, when the FBI was getting involved. Dave died in 2013, and in 2015 Craig started to proclaim that he is Satoshi. The problem is, Craig is the least technical and least stable of the trio, so almost no one believes him.

The source for this info is actually Phil, who comes back in 2017 to tell his story at http://vu.hn/bitcoin%20origins.html#bitcoin-origins

Of course there is no hard evidence for this, so almost no one believes him as well. But I like the story, and matches some of my priors, so I'm sticking with it.

There is also the ongoing lawsuit of the Kleiman estate vs Craig, for the Tulip Trust, a large cache of bitcoins they mined together. The jury trial is scheduled for October 13, so that might also expand on the story when it's concluded: https://coingeek.com/kleiman-v-wright-trial-delayed-until-oc...


Please don't promote these despicable scammers.


No one dies of Vitamin D overdose. Hundreds of thousands of people are dying of COVID-19. So dosing everyone with Vitamin D is extremely low risk for a very high reward...


The only reason that p value is a bit high in that second multivariate analysis is because of the uncertainty of how much all the different risk factors like hypertension, T2DM, age >= 60 etc. affect ICU admission numbers.

But even with those variables controlled, the 95% confidence interval is 0.003-0.25, which at worst is a 4-fold reduction in ICU risk.

We should also note that the Calcifediol treatment group had 14 patients ≥ 60 years old, and the non-Calcifediol group had 5. So the study looks even better with that in mind...


The study says the opposite:

> Randomization generated groups with comparable percentage of unfavorable risk factors as there was no significant difference in subjects with at least one risk factor, except for high blood pressure and diabetes mellitus, known risk factors for unfavorable disease progression, which were more frequent in patients not treated with calcifediol.

> However, even considering these factors, calcifediol significantly decreased the need for ICU admission in COVID-19 patients in a way not previously reported in this process until now.


Can you please link your portable ozone generator? Or at least what the name/brand is?

Is it something like this? https://www.boneview.com/collections/boneview/products/ozone


Hi, this is exactly the same model that I got. Mine has a different branding on but many sellers seem to have re-branded the same white-label model from China. They work well. They generate ozone for 30 min and then for 5 min every hour until the battery runs out. It has a micro USB battery charging port.

You can search for them by using the model number (ST-807A) or by searching for "ozone generator fridge" on your fav shopping sites.


Aliexpress has that exact model quite cost effectively. and a few more w/ higher outputs.


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