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Safety: NVIDIA Shield Tablet Recall

Posted in computers, consumer, portable, safety by commorancy on September 25, 2023

If you have purchased an NVIDIA Shield Tablet in 2014 or 2015, it may be subject to a battery fire recall. This safety notice is very short. Let’s explore.

Which Tablets Are Vulnerable?

NVIDIA is recalling Shield tablets produced in 2014 and 2015 containing a Y01 battery type and that falls within certain models and serial numbers. To determine which battery type is in your NVIDIA Shield tablet, navigate to the following location on your in tablet’s Settings:

Settings => About tablet => Status => Battery

Under ‘Battery’, this area will display the type of battery installed. If the battery shown is type Y01, you should submit for a replacement tablet under this recall. If your tablet’s battery shows B01, then your tablet is not part of this recall.

My tablet is vulnerable! How do I submit for a replacement under this recall?

Good question.

Here is the link to NIVIDA’s web page regarding this recall. If you don’t trust clicking random links in pages, I don’t blame you. If would prefer to copy and paste the URL directly into your browser’s address bar, here’s the unclickable NVIDIA Shield Recall URL:

https://www.nvidia.com/en-us/shield/support/tabletrecall/

To submit your request for replacement, you’ll need to supply the following data to NVIDIA’s replacement form on the above NVIDIA page:

  • Tablet Serial Number
  • First Name
  • Last Name
  • Email Address
  • Phone Number
  • City
  • State
  • Zip
  • Country
  • Address 1 and/or Address 2

Then you must agree to the following:

I understand when I turn on my replacement tablet, my original tablet will be deactivated remotely and rendered unusable.

Once you have received the replacement tablet and you turn it on, your old tablet will be permanently remotely disabled. If you have personal data that you wish to keep on your affected tablet, such as photos, you should backup your tablet’s data before attempting to power on the replacement. It is also recommended to reset the affected tablet to factory default settings (which wipes all data from the tablet) before powering on the replacement tablet.

Good luck!

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A gag order won’t work on Trump

Posted in government, justice, law enforcement by commorancy on September 19, 2023

a person in orange shirt with tattooed arms

Trump is quite the chatterbox! This guy has about as much respect for the law and the judicial system as a cat has for water. Trump genuinely thinks he’s the star of his own show, that rules simply don’t apply to him.

Judges might as well be invisible, because their orders go in one ear and out the other! If you’re thinking a gag order will shut him up, you might as well try silencing a parrot with a whisper. Let’s dive into the delusional world of Trump and his disregard for legal boundaries. Grab your popcorn, folks, let’s explore!

What is a gag order?

According to wikipedia

A gag order is an order, typically a legal order by a court or government, restricting information or comment from being made public or passed onto any unauthorized third party.

In other words, a gag order is a legally binding order against an individual by a judge that if breached will cause the judge to apply penalties against the person who breached the order. The penalites could include fine and/or jail time. If the gagged person is indicted and out on bond pending trial, that bond could be rescinded and the person could be remanded into custody, then placed into jail and detained until the trial.

Donald Trump’s Mouth

The difficulty is that Donald Trump cannot shut up. He’s a voluminous talker and will not allow anyone to prevent him from speaking, least of all people who work for the agencies he believes to be corrupt.

What exactly does that mean for a gag order from the Department of Justice? It doesn’t mean a gag order will work. It does mean that that the government will have to end up making some hard choices. The only thing that issuing a gag order will do is cause Trump to breach it, thus the reason for those hard decisions.

From Trump’s so-called “raid” on Mar-A-Lago (which wasn’t a raid at all), we already know Trump doesn’t respect such legal matters and simply won’t abide. The question is not whether Trump can respect a gag order, it’s whether Jack Smith and the Justice Department are willing to rescind Trump’s bond after Trump breaches the gag order to then place him into protective custody until the Justice Department’s trial. Yeah… unlikely.

Why rescinding Trump’s bond is important!

The only way Trump can truly be gagged is to place him into protective custody until the DOJ (or any other) trial commences. Additionally, while in protective custody, Trump must be forced to surrender all of his electronic devices and have no contact with anyone until the trial begins. Unless (or until) this step is taken, Trump will not stop attempting to interfere with the trial including tampering with evidence, destroying evidence, tainting or coercing witnesses, threatening judges and threatening or tainting the jury pool.

Trump’s being under 4 indictments for many different alleged criminal activities has not cooled Trump at all in performing even more criminal activities. The average person placed under criminal indictment would stop doing whatever it was that got them there. Not Donald Trump.

Why is he continuing? Because Trump absolutely 100% wants to ensure that he will not receive a fair trial. Trump is doing everything in his power to ensure that his trial is entirely problematic and unfair from the start. That means that during trial or even after it, he will have sufficient evidence to prove that the trial wasn’t handled in a fair and equitable manner claiming that the jury judgement must be thrown out. It doesn’t mean that a judge will agree with Trump, but he’ll keep appealing all jury decision (assuming guilty) all the way to the Supreme court (where Trump has a lot of “friends” who will likely rule in his favor).

Presidential Election

As we should already know, Trump is again running for President in 2024. The difficulty is that Trump seems intent on using his campaign as a crutch to keep himself out of prison… or more specifically out of detainment before trial. That doesn’t mean he doesn’t want to be President again. He does. But… that won’t stop him from using his campaign as a means of preventing his detainment in jail pending trial.

As it is now, Trump is out on bond for all of his pending trials. Bond agreements stipulate that any further violation of laws or of court orders may result in rescinding that bond which means remanding the person into custody.

Trump’s Legal Woes

Just to be crystal clear, Trump is now facing 4 criminal trials, two of them federal. Let’s enumerate each of them now:

  1. Jack Smith’s Federal trial involving Classified Documents. This indictment contains 37 felony counts.
  2. Jack Smith’s Federal trial involving the January 6th Insurrection. This indictment contains 4 felony counts.
  3. Fani Willis’s trial involving Georgia State Election Interference. This RICO indictment contains 13 felony counts against Donald Trump, but also includes more counts against 18 other co-conspirators.
  4. Alvin Bragg’s trial involving Falsifying Business Records in New York State. This indictment contains 34 felony counts.

For more information on each of these trials, Politico has a good article on this.

Daring the Courts to Take Action

Trump is intentionally taunting the justice department, every judge and every prosecutor presiding over his court trials by inciting his cabal into action. By taunting, I mean calling out his cabal of goons to dox and death threaten these officials performing their jobs. There is also no sign of him stopping this behavior.

In fact, if Trump is given a true gag order, there is zero doubt he will breach that gag order, not once, but many, many, many times. It’s not a matter of if, it’s a matter of when… but that’s not what matters.

What matters is how each trial judge will handle the breaches and what decision they will make involving those breaches. There are 4 pending trials, but only one trial judge can put him behind bars until their trial. If that judge is the one presiding over the federal trial, how will the 3 other trials proceed if he’s stuck in federal detainment?

It’s worse than simply just detaining him. Trump is absolutely begging the judges to attempt to gag him because he knows they won’t detain him in jail pending trial. They know that these judges do not have the spine to place a Presidential candidate behind bars pending trial. If the gag orders don’t work, and they most certainly will not, then what besides protective custody? Fining Trump again is fruitless. Not only will he not pay that bill, he won’t stop talking.

Gag orders won’t work because they simply can’t work on Donald Trump. With anyone else, a breached gag order for someone indicted would instantly lead to detainment in jail pending trial. With Trump, that’s not easily possible.

Again, it’s not what Trump does after he breaches a gag order, it’s what will each of the trial judges and the indicting prosecutors do when he does… and he most definitely will.

Will they attempt to detain him? Likely not.
Will a fine work? Definitely not.
Will Trump stop talking? No.

Where do we go from here?

Clearly, the prosecuting attorneys and the judges will have some intense soul searching to do. How do you reign in a person in this situation? Either they’ll need to devise a creative new solution or they’ll have to let Donald Trump slide.

I’d love to see these judges remand Trump into custody pending trial. However, I just don’t see that happening. No judge is likely willing to put their own career on the line to jail a former President… especially when he’s the purported front runner of the GOP. I personally don’t think that makes any difference. If a person has committed an alleged crime, then they need to be treated as any other person, regardless of their present role or aspirations.

The only clear choice for penalities is to move the trial up after each breach. Just as Judge Chutkin warned Trump, so too must Jack Smith and every other trial judge. For each breach Trump makes against a gag order, the trial gets moved earlier by one month. It’s the only solution to this dilemma. If they can’t or won’t jail him and take away his voice, then they must penalize him in other ways that hurt his chances at trial.

Trump should be sitting in pretrial detainment today. He shouldn’t even have been given a bond. On the campaign trail? Too bad, so sad, not my (or anyone else’s) problem other than Trump. If Trump wanted to be on the campaign trail, he should have ensured he didn’t break any laws prior to getting there. Pretrial detainment is the only answer to get Trump to comply with a gag order. Unfortunately, it will likely never happen.

Overall, these judges must make some hard choices if they wish to retain civility in their courts. Trump is intent on turning every trial into an unfair circus. It is the judges who must determine the best way to reign in Trump, but it is also crystal clear that Trump will not abide by any traditional legal approaches.

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Fact Check: Time article claims Phenylephrine ineffective.

Posted in botch, business, fact check, news media by commorancy on September 16, 2023

Neo-SynephrineWelcome to the new Randocity Fact Check Series. With all of today’s lies, deception with intentional and wilful misleading information, Randocity is beginning this series to combat these misleading and false articles. With that said, a recent Time article blanketly claims Phenylephrine is ineffective. Let’s explore.

Time Article

The Time article in question is entitled “With the Decongestant SNAFU, the FDA Tries Something New” written by Haley Weiss and published on September 14, 2023 4:30 PM EDT. Note, the link included points to the article’s contents located at the Wayback Machine at the Internet Archive to show this article’s snapshot as it was written at the time this article was published. I offer a link to the actual Time article later in this article, but I suspect this article will be corrected soon, thus the snapshot is required. Please click the Wayback Machine link to read this article in full.

Because Time and other large media outlets have tendencies to revise, correct and sometimes delete articles at later dates, the Wayback Machine is the only safe way to maintain a consistent link to such articles from the past. Let’s move on.

Misleading Information

The trouble even with sites like Time is that they hire writers who don’t always properly investigate or clarify the information about which they are writing. In this case, Haley Weiss doesn’t properly clarify her article’s own topic.

Here is Ms. Weiss’s relevant misleading statement in her article:

…the panel of experts assigned to evaluate over-the-counter allergy medications ruled that phenylephrine was effective.

Except phenylephrine has never worked. What’s puzzling, then, is how it stayed on those shelves for 50 years without a challenge.

Note: Highlighting and text formatting added by Randocity for fact checking and clarification purposes.

This unusual blanket statement regarding Phenylephrine is entirely misleading. The article opens by not outright stating the fact that the entire article’s premise involves discussion solely around oral administered versions of Phenylephrine. Simultaneously, this article makes no mention of nasal spray versions of this drug. It is, thus, left up to the reader to understand and discern (and not conflate) this fine point. Conflation is the problem at issue here.

The reality is, either Haley is intentionally trying to mislead readers into believing that all forms of Phenylephrine don’t work or Haley is naive and doesn’t understand (or didn’t research) that multiple administration forms of Phenylephrine exist. Being a health columnist for Time, I find the latter to be extremely unlikely and improbable.

In this article, Haley seems to be intentionally trying to conflate all forms of Phenylephrine under the same “doesn’t work” umbrella, when clearly this is not true.

Nasal Spray Administration

While oral pills and oral suspensions appear to be the sole focus of Haley’s Time article, this article also conveniently ignores the fact that the drug Phenylephrine is also available in a Nasal Spray format. In fact, several known brands utilize this drug ingredient including the brand Neo-Synephrine… and, yes, this brand has been on store shelves for years. The form of Phenylephrine used in a nasal spray is Phenylephrine HCL.

When Phenylephrine HCL is administered using a nasal spray, this drug is, contrary to Haley’s misleading assertion in her Time article, quite effective and fast acting at opening up nasal passages when applied directly to nasal mucosa tissues, thus shrinking (or constricting) them. This author has used Neo-Synephrine for years for this purpose. I can also attest personally that Phenylephrine HCL is not only QUITE effective, it’s also fast acting and usually starts working within 1-3 minutes.

The downside to Neo-Synephrine (Phenylephrine HCL) is that it is short acting and requires frequent re-application. The best duration I’ve been able to get out of this nasal spray is between 1 and 3 hours of relief.

How I use this specific nasal spray is for the near instant relief it offers (1-3 minutes), opening up nasal passages rapidly. I then couple Neo-Synephrine with a second spray from the longer acting Afrin. Afrin contains Oxymetazoline HCL, which this drug lasts between 6-12 hours in duration, depending on amount of nasal discharge. The more discharge, the faster it wears off. However, Afrin’s active ingredient (Oxymetazoline HCL) takes up to 15 minutes to begin working after being sprayed… which is why I couple up Afrin with Neo-Synephrine. Waiting 15 minutes for a nasal spray to begin working takes way too long.

Neo-Synephrine gives me short and immediately relief. Afrin gives me long continuous relief long after the Neo-Synephrine has worn off.

Compare all of this to saline spray. While saline sprays are effective at washing nasal tissues, it does nothing to actively open up the nasal passages. If the saline manages to dislodge and wash away an allergen irritant, it might help reduce nasal allergies. However, I’ve never had any congestion relief from using a saline nasal spray, other than to sooth irritation and dryness.

Nasal Sprays are Drying

The one thing that drugs like Oxymetazoline HCL and Phenylephrine HCL have in common is that they are extremely drying to nasal muscosa. They are so drying, in fact, that they can sometimes cause nose bleeds. The best way to avoid this drying problem is to occasionally apply a saline spray to keep the nasal tissues hydrated while using Phenylephrine HCL and/or Oxymetazoline HCL. You can also use a facial steamer to steam the nasal passages, help hydrate them and offer relief from the dryness.

Nasal Spray Rebound

All of the current drugs that are designed to shrink nasal mucosa (vasoconstriction) by direct spray application have the possibility of a rebound effect. Nasal spray rebound is when the drug wears off and the nasal passages stay congested for long periods thereafter… sometimes for hours. This then causes the person with congestion discomfort to want to spray again to open up the nasal passages. It becomes a vicious cycle.

I workaround rebound by cessation of spraying one side at a time. I cease using the nasal spray in one nostril and wait through the rebound cycle to complete for that one side, which could take up to 24 hours. Once the rebound is over and that nostril is back to its normal state, I then cease using nasal spray in the other nostril and, again, wait through the rebound cycle. Once both nostrils are clear, I’m off of the nasal spray.

This is the only method I have found to get out from under the nasal spray rebound cycle. I go through this process with each cold I’ve had at the very end of the cold. There’s no real way to avoid nasal spray rebound, unfortunately.

Rebound is the reason that so many people get addicted to using nasal spray.

Nasal Spray Effectiveness

The final aspect of the use of any vasoconstricting nasal sprays is that they’re actually too effective. What I mean by “too effective” is that these sprays artificially open the nasal passages wider than is otherwise normal. It forces the nasal muscosa to shrink more than is normal when the nasal passages are open under normal circumstances. For me, this being “open too wide” causes several problems.

The first problem of being too open is that it allows way more allergens in, which causes me to sneeze way more often. The second problem is that I can feel that the passages are open too wide, which actually causes a slight bit of discomfort. Third, because the passages are open quite wide, this encourages way more air flow in and out, which seems to cause more drying than is otherwise normal. Thus, the need for saline sprays or steam treatments to moisturize. While the drug formulations also seem to encourage dryness via the drug chemical itself, the being open too wide seems to exacerbate this drying issue.

However, if the choice is being fully congested or using a spray to open nasal passages, I’ll choose using the spray every time. My first spray choice is always Neo-Synephrine because of its fast acting nature, even though it doesn’t last nearly as long as Afrin.

Time Article, Circling Back

The point to all of the above is that Phenylephrine is indeed effective and useful when applied in the correct way. However, when taken in an oral form, its effectiveness may be in question as Haley’s Time article suggests.

I don’t have a problem with Haley’s article if seen solely through the lens the oral drug versions. However, her article is confused and appears to intentionally conflate all versions of Phenylephrine to be one-in-the-same. They aren’t. While the oral versions may be ineffective and have no efficacy, the same absolutely cannot be said of the nasal spray version.

Debunking Haley Weiss Time Article

Haley Weiss’s article in Time (this is the actual Time article link) is strongly misleading. It intentionally attempts to lump all forms of Phenylephrine into the same bucket, claiming the overall drug is ineffective and does not work.

===> This article’s claim is absolutely false! <====

Phenylephrine HCL in a nasal spray format is quite effective as a decongestant when applied directly in the nasal passages. Phenylephrine, when taken in an oral pill or suspension format, as her article suggests, may or may not be effective for the purposes for which it was intended, as an oral decongestant. This article intentionally fails to separate the effective uses of this drug from its ineffective uses, thus making overall blanket statements to confuse readers.

I guess that Time is no longer a trustworthy enough news source to properly research its articles… nor can it now avoid making such misleading statements.

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