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Submission + - Fluoride At Twice the Recommended Limit Is Linked To Lower IQ In Kids (apnews.com)

An anonymous reader writes: A U.S. government report expected to stir debate concluded that fluoride in drinking water at twice the recommended limit is linked with lower IQ in children. The report, based on an analysis of previously published research, marks the first time a federal agency has determined — “with moderate confidence” — that there is a link between higher levels of fluoride exposure and lower IQ in kids. While the report was not designed to evaluate the health effects of fluoride in drinking water alone, it is a striking acknowledgment of a potential neurological risk from high levels of fluoride. Fluoride strengthens teeth and reduces cavities by replacing minerals lost during normal wear and tear, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The addition of low levels of fluoride to drinking water has long been considered one of the greatest public health achievements of the last century.

The long-awaited report released Wednesday comes from the National Toxicology Program, part of the Department of Health and Human Services. It summarizes a review of studies, conducted in Canada, China, India, Iran, Pakistan, and Mexico, that concludes that drinking water containing more than 1.5 milligrams of fluoride per liter is consistently associated with lower IQs in kids. The report did not try to quantify exactly how many IQ points might be lost at different levels of fluoride exposure. But some of the studies reviewed in the report suggested IQ was 2 to 5 points lower in children who’d had higher exposures.

Since 2015, federal health officials have recommended a fluoridation level of 0.7 milligrams per liter of water, and for five decades before the recommended upper range was 1.2. The World Health Organization has set a safe limit for fluoride in drinking water of 1.5. The report said that about 0.6% of the U.S. population — about 1.9 million people — are on water systems with naturally occurring fluoride levels of 1.5 milligrams or higher. The 324-page report did not reach a conclusion about the risks of lower levels of fluoride, saying more study is needed. It also did not answer what high levels of fluoride might do to adults.

Comment Haze forecast: PM2.5 and PM10 interactive maps (Score 4, Informative) 77

If you want to interactively view the surface PM2.5 which comes from the RAQDPS-FireWork model from Environment Canada, here you go: https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Feccc-msc.github.io%2Fmsc...

The same but for PM10: https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Feccc-msc.github.io%2Fmsc...

This tool enables you to interactively view the associated forecast across for North America, and create video animations . There's actually a lot more content suitable for plenty of different weather events (over 8,000 weather & climate layers in there). Enjoy!

Comment Moria, Angband & TOME.. good old memories! (Score 2) 45

While I never played NetHack, I have lots of nostalgia and good memories for having played so much Moria and its successor Angband and TOME. That story on Slashdot made me find out Tales of Maj’ Eyal (successor of TOME) https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fte4.org%2F Is still pretty active, nice!

However, with over 30 years that has passed since when I started playing Moria and roguelikes, I unfortunately don’t want to play on a computer anymore (I already spend my workday in front of it) and there doesn’t seem to be a mobile version.

Those games might not have the best graphics (hey, they were 100% ASCII for so long), but I don’t mind, they were a lot of fun, and this is was a game should be about :-)

Comment No restrictions on Canada's free weather data APIs (Score 1) 111

Meanwhile, there's no restrictions on Canada's free weather and climate data access: https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Feccc-msc.github.io%2Fope...

And yup, the Canadian weather radar layers include all of North America... see it for yourself: https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Feccc-msc.github.io%2Fope...

Hope this is useful to some of you :-)

Comment Add affordable automated audio mastering to it... (Score 1) 137

I wonâ(TM)t claim algorithmic audio mastering is equal to a seasoned professional one, but itâ(TM)s very affordable, about 10-20$ per track, and the result is actually not so bad at all (and itâ(TM)s not just me saying this).

The two main online audio mastering tools Iâ(TM)m aware of are landr.com and cloudbounce.com . I personally prefer Cloudbounce because you can choose amongst several mastering settings. With such mastering, you end up with an more enjoyable listening experience. Though it wonâ(TM)t turn crap into a masterpiece obviously.

You can skip the following shameless plug, in which I used those services in my latest bestof album âstarsâ(TM) and compare the exact same tracks from my first albums which didnâ(TM)t get any mastering, the difference is stunning to me; satri.bandcamp.com

Comment Anyone can play classic Moog synths today (Score 2) 49

Well, if you have an iOS device and a few bucks!

There's iPhone and iPad versions of the 1970 iconic Minimoog Model D and also a Model 15 app. Both are great and even improvements over the hardware ones (but you can't replace the fun of turning real knobs, that said, you can simply connect any external MIDI controller). Simply look for them in the app store.

Moog Music also launched an iOS-only synth named Animoog. Go to Animoog.org for thousands of free presets and timbres. Those apps won multiple awards, they're very well done. They support the modern stuff such as MPE MIDI (part of upcoming MIDI 2.0).

Thanks Bob for the ladder filter and all your contributions to sound synthesizing :-)

Comment weather models actually impacted (Score 2) 76

Not true, not "just websites" were impacted. I work for a non-US national meteorological center. Those recent hacks meant for us that important satellite data that was usually provided by the NOAA suddenly stopped being accessible, having real impacts on weather forecasting quality. It took a few days to find alternatives. We learned and are in the process of making certain that such a situation does not happen once again. In other words, for some major 'foreign' weather forecasting operations, the impacts were real and important, not overblown as you state.

Unrelated, Slashdot's commenting system sucks in mobile devices... We can't quote or even see the original comments while replying... And the comment box doesn't resize while replying, we can't even review our own replies! Lots of room for improvement...

Comment Drupal vs WordPress (Score 2) 192

What Dries say in this article:

"The "sweet spot" for Drupal is larger sites rather than smaller ones. "I think when people think big websites, they usually think Drupal, and when they think small blogs or limited small websites in complexity then they think WordPress," Buytaert said.

"At Acquia we never compete with WordPress. We don't see them ever. I'm sure the smaller Drupal shops run into them, but in the enterprise we never run into WordPress."

"I think with small sites I'm not willing to give up on them but I think we just need to say we're more about big sites and less about small sites, but then the small sites are still very useful to get people into the community," Buytaert said."

I would have liked to know that before... I moved from Slashcode to Drupal years ago on the advice of a few. While I can appreciate how Drupal is flexible and powerful, now I understand that what I really needed, as a non-expert and for my small website, was just WordPress. But too late, won't do another painful migration anytime soon...

What annoys me most with Drupal: no straightforward way to update major versions (e.g. from 6.x to 7.x), especially since a lot of user-contributed modules doesn't exist in the new version or require a lot of work to do so. The admin interface is pretty bad. The user community is much much smaller than WordPress (thinking of mature/maintained user-contributed modules here). Etc.

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