Monthly Archives: July 2021

If It’s Thursday, It Must Be . . .

Twin Peaks, of course.

Jan had an appointment to get her toesies done this afternoon, and Twin Peaks was once again her lunch of choice.

Jan went with her favorite Spicy Chipotle Chicken with potatoes and broccoli, and a cup of their Tomato Basil soup.

Twin Peaks Spicy Chipotle Chicken 2

while I got the Soup and Half Sandwich Lunch Special, with a BLT and a bowl of Green Chile Chicken soup.

Twin Peaks Soup and Sandwich 20210729

I didn’t get a photo of Millie, our server, who was very good BTW, because she looked to be between 4 and 5 months pregnant, and I thought it would be kind of tacky.

Later, after I dropped Jan off at Crystal Nails, I headed over to the office to pick up an Amazon order and look at a phone system problem.

I’ve been wondered about 4K video and how it would look on our TV system. Several of our streaming services offer 4K service for an extra cost. But I wasn’t sure that I would really be able to see the difference on our TV, and none of them offered a trial period.

So I’ve been looking for some way to see 4K and HD side by side. Well, I finally came across a YouTube video that allows me to view it in both 2160p 4K and 1440p HD.

The video details a bipedal robot that successfully ran a 5K run. Kind of interesting on its own.

Butt the video allowed me to switch between 1080p HD, 1440p HD, and 2160 4K. And the first thing I discovered was that our WiFi can’t handle streaming 4K. It will run for a few seconds, and then freeze and buffer, and then start up again.

But I could stream HD at 1440p, higher than the usual 1080p we stream. And although it was hard to get a good feel for 4K, it was easy to see the difference when I did a freeze-frame side-by-side comparison.

4K v HD

It’s pretty obvious how much sharper the 4K on the left is vs the right side’s HD version. But it looks like I’ll have to wait for our Starlink system to show to have enough bandwidth for 4K.

Finishing up, I want to remind everyone about the GoFundMe account to help bring Leighan Cortes and her father home after their deaths in Germany.

Any help will be appreciated.


Thought For The Day:


If you replace “W” with “T” in “What, Where and When”, you get the answer to each of them.

 

 

It’s OK. It’s Apple-Flavored . . .

I’ve just discovered that my blog theme is not always letting me know when someone leaves a comment. I’m supposed to get an email telling about it, but it seems often I don’t. So don’t feel ignored.

While I’m working on fixing the problem, I’ll try to make a better effort at checking them manually.

Well, with the Delta variant, and now the Colombian version, there’s talked of a 4th booster shot being needed. So while you’re contemplating that, you might find this interesting.

I’m sure you all remember the controversy about using HCQ (Hydroxychloroquine) to treat CoVid.

First we were told it was deadly, ignoring the fact that over a million people in the US take HCQ every day for lupus and rheumatoid arthritis. Plus as I’ve said I took it back in the 60’s for malaria myself.

Then we were told that HCQ didn’t work. But apparently it did work back in 2002.

Here’s what I posted back in April 2020.

And think the whole (HCQ) HydroxyChloroquine thing is some new ‘unproven’ snake oil cure that the President is pushing that is endangering people?

While back in 2005 HCQ was all the rage for its use against the SARS (Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome) virus caused by a newly-discovered coronavirus (SARS-CoV) that arrived on the scene in late 2002.

This article in Virology Journal entitled Chloroquine is a potent inhibitor of SARS coronavirus infection and spread.”

And to cut to the chase for the conclusion to this multi-page, jargon-filled, scientific article:

Conclusion

Chloroquine, a relatively safe, effective and cheap drug used for treating many human diseases including malaria, amoebiosis and human immunodeficiency virus is effective in inhibiting the infection and spread of SARS CoV in cell culture. The fact that the drug has significant inhibitory antiviral effect when the susceptible cells were treated either prior to or after infection suggests a possible prophylactic and therapeutic use.

So let me get this straight, back in 2005 HCQ was the recommended treatment for both preventing and curing the CoVid virus, but 15 years later, it’s dangerous, unproven and needs years of study.

What am I missing here?

Now the latest in simple, easy, and cheap WuFlu cures is Ivermectin. Like HCQ it’s getting a lot of use and good results in other countries, but pretty much ignored or maligned here in the U.S.

But there have been number of randomized double-blind studies done in other countries with good results. And other studies are underway. Just don’t expect to hear anything about them in the U.S. media.

Here’s one article about these studies.

Is Ivermectin effective against Covid? A Dispassionate Look at Four Reasonably Large Randomized Controlled Trials

The one additional thing that Ivermectin has going for it is that it is readily and cheaply available. At your local feed store or on Amazon.

And yes, it’s horse dewormer.

Ivermectin Paste

Ivermectin

It makes sense that if HCQ is effective against WuFlu, Ivermectin would be too, since they’re both anti-parasitic treatments. But it seems that a lot of people are using this, since it’s exactly the same as the actual human version, which is also used as ‘de-wormer, I.e., roundworms, etc.

And some of the reviews are really funny, with people dancing around what they’re actual using it for. Like this one.

My “horse” had no negative side effects, and now he tells me he feels like a million bucks and is now c0vid free. Make sure you get the dosage correct based on your “horse’s” weight.

And on another blog, someone ask about the dosage he would need for his wife. And the first question he was asked was, “How many hands high is your wife?”

I guess it helps to be a Texan to really find this funny.

But the stuff is actually dispensed from a large plunger rated in 50# increments, and it seems it’s the same dosage for people as horses.

And FWIW it’s also a standard treatment for rosacea as a topical cream. One reviewer said her doctor had prescribed for her rosacea, but her insurance wouldn’t pay for it. So she used the the ‘horsey’ version and it worked just fine.

Of course one person used it for her raccoon’s mange, and it worked for that too.

And remember, even better, it’s Apple-Flavored.

While Jan and I were having our coffee out on the patio this morning, we add a new member to Jan’s Flamingo Flamboyance. (photo is from Amazon)

New Solar Flamingo in Flight

It’s another solar light, but with a coil of LED’s inside that kind of twinkle.
 


Thought For The Day:

There are many more things that frighten us than can cause us harm.