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You'll understand when you're older.


An interesting article about the US army's fight against malaria in the pacific theater during WW II:

https://armyhistory.org/the-other-foe-the-u-s-armys-fight-ag...

TL;DR: By spraying DDT everywhere, and coercing troops to take Atabrine (that often had nasty side effects), they reduced malaria incidence by about 70%. The Japanese, by contrast had little protection - nearly all Japanese soldiers had malaria at some time.


One caution: pesticides like DDT are more effective at first, before the local population is selected for resistance. The big anti-malaria campaigns in the 1950s tended to report resistance being a significant impediment with a decade: http://gladwell.com/the-mosquito-killer/


It would be curious to know whether the resistance was just to the killing effect of the mosquito or if it still continued to repel and stop them from biting.

One of the huge advantages of DDT over later pesticides is that it stopped them from biting, the other ones keep them biting until they're dead.

I'm of the mindset that DDT should have remained legal as a residential application to the house (screens, nets, walls). The quantities applied here were much smaller than for agricultural use, and there has never been a study that convincingly showed harm to mammals. (Even the bird egg shell thinning theory was tenuous at best, TEL in leaded fuel could have had the same effect in the targeted time period)


> I'm of the mindset that DDT should have remained legal as a residential application to the house (screens, nets, walls).

The international anti-DDT treaty allows countries to take this route, and as a result DDT is still legal for residential use in some countries where malaria is endemic. The US opted for a total ban, though.



Nice try, IBM!


I wonder if tin foil can block this :p


Please don't.



In Newport, Washington, electricity is so inexpensive ($0.05/kWh) that almost everyone uses electric baseboard heat - and it gets very cold (10 degrees Fahrenheit) in the winter. Those baseboard heaters could be swapped out with bitcoin miners with NO change in power consumption, and there are plenty of other places around the world with similar conditions.


A couple of suggestions for improvements: 1) Use quaternions instead of Euler angles for rotation 2) Show latitude and longitude grid so it's easier to identify equator and polar regions, etc...


Langitude longitude grid would definitely make it easy to map it to the flag mercaretor projection.

One can easily also correlate why things on the pole look so big when you have evenly spaced latitudes in a sphere.


For wartime use. Military convoys might need to go off-road or around road damage.


They could do brake and other inspections there too.


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