Do people really use the term “hosting” when saying you’re having someone over for the weekend? Because I’m getting sex worker vibes otherwise.
Been using that forever, even in the internet. Ever heard of LAN hosting?
Sure. In my mind, hosting is either for larger get-together that takes organizing and preparation or if someone is traveling to the area to stay with you for a few days.
Hosting generally carries the weight of planning, organization and preparation that probably doesn’t go into just having someone over to hang out.
How could an adult actually be confused about this?
idk, doesn’t seem that crazy to me. if you don’t drink or are a small person with a small tolerance, you might have no idea how many beers a person who drinks more might get through per night. don’t want to underdo it and have them run out, don’t want to overdo it and make them feel like you think they’re a crazy alcoholic. and then obviously add a little d r a m a
to it cause it’s a tweet :)
I mean if I wouldn’t drink, I just wouldn’t buy no alcohol at all. And if I would, I’d just buy twice the amount I drink if I don’t know any better about the person.
I don’t drink coffee, but I still have it in case my guests want some. It’s just nice.
I don’t drink, I’m always confused when hosting about the amount and type of beer I should buy. And then I’m stuck with beer afterwards the inevitably goes bad. Now I just let people BYOB because they typically did that regardless.
We really seem to don’t. Saw a screenshot of a tweet the other day about someone’s dad wanting to take a vacation to the spot where JFK was killed and look around, “just in case the FBI missed something,” and people were calling that dude all kinds of awful things instead of just. Laughing. At the joke he was obviously telling
I grew up Mormon, and am only now figuring this all out. I have no idea about any of this
It’s fairly well answered by basic information about alcohol serving sizes, DUI limits, and just the amount of fluids someone can take in over an evening. 1 can of beer = 1 basic dose of alcohol. 2 in an hour puts you over the legal limit for blood alcohol for driving. Someone could typically drink maybe a gallon of fluids in an evening regardless of what it is. Beer is sold in packs of 4-12, which are usually shared. So a normal amount of beer to get for someone who isn’t a regular alcoholic would be 2-6 for a night. It also varies with their weight and the strength of the beer (most is about 5% now but some is higher).
I tried too long to figure out what this has to do with the Lemmy app.
*lemme
Fuck it’s actually real. Nasa engineers really suggested 100 tampons for 6 days
https://www.poynter.org/tfcn/2021/did-nasa-send-a-woman-to-space-with-100-tampons/
I’d say 4 tampons a day for 7 days (so 28) would be plenty for most people. If you need 100, I’m concerned you would be dead of blood loss.
Yup.
Quick math and being paranoid about redundancy:
A typical period lasts 3-5 days, with 7 being the high end. Round to 10.
Heavy flow might require a change every 4 hours, or 6 a day. 12 a day is in the realm of reality, albeit medically concerning.
Bring extra in case return has to be delayed for whatever reason.
They’re extremely light and small, so a conservative weight allowance holds a lot of them. About 1g each, or 100 per 4oz.
So some quick math and padding your numbers to account for the unknown gets you 100, which considering they then asked isn’t an unreasonable way to start.
Wasn’t the 100 tampons thing because they didn’t know how weightlessness would affect bleeding?
NASA is obsessed with redundancy, especially when the weight allowance lets them run away with it.
Add that to the fact that most of the engineers were men, and had literally no clue about how many tampons are needed for a normal woman on earth, and you end up with 100 being sent up for a two-week mission.
Apparently someone did, and then the response was that tampons are low enough weight that the packaging to send them was the majority of the weight, even when sending 100, so they sent 100.
They also developed a zero-g makeup kit because they thought that female astronauts would want that. It had eyeliner, lip gloss, foundation, and blush. All specially selected to not generate dust.
The makeup kit never actually flew, likely because someone asked an actual woman if she would ever want that shit in space.
That and NASA is a very safety conscious organization. So they want to overestimate everything and include way more than they need. So when she said a couple per day you can round that to 5 for safety, then considering it’s a 6 day mission they want to include triple the amount of needed supplies which means 18 days worth. 18*5=90 which is pretty close to 100 so let’s round up again. Plus tampons are a useful first aid tool, especially in zero gravity. You shove some into an open wound and it’ll prevent blood from spilling all over the very sensitive equipment. Does a woman need 100 tampons for 6 days? Of course not, but she wasn’t going to spend a week in the mountains, she was going to space, so the safety precautions were much more stringent
NASA also does everything they can to save weight though.
On later Apollo missions, they cut the number of band-aids in the lunar lander’s first aid kit from 6 to 12 to save weight.
they cut the number of band-aids in the lunar lander’s first aid kit from 6 to 12 to save weight.
I see here is the problem. The guy doesn’t know how to reduce weight, you don’t add more stuff to cut on weight. That explains the extra tampons.
Doubled the bandaids to save weight. I can see why the tampon thing was a struggle for them.
I learned recently that in space you might not need to piss as the piss floats in your bladder.
normally you get 3/4s full and really need a slash, but in space it can fill up totally without you feeling anything and then just bust out your urethra without notice.
honestly, it was probably a fair point.
Just a word of advice, the tampon in a wound thing, as much as the Russian military might advise it, is not good medical technique. Do not use a tampon to plug a wound. It’ll likely do more harm than good. Just apply pressure to it from the outside with your hand if you have literally no other option.
Can the same be said about doing that in zero gravity with specialised sensitive equipment all around you that are essentially keeping you alive?
I’ll take an infection over crashing down in the ISS any day.
Agree in general. The problem would be debris trapping, fluid compartmenting, sterility, etc.
But if you need a dressing and that’s all you have, unpacking them into gauze pad like things would be great.
All of this assuming you are literally flying 7.5km/s towards a trauma center
It’s also a weight thing. Tampons are pretty light, it’s like one hundred per pound, so they probably said “we can budget x pounds for this” and didn’t think much about the reasoning behind why they’re sending several hundred tampons into space, but we’re entirely focused on how.
Less than that I think, and I’d suspect NASA would do load calculations in metric.
According to this reputable (first result on Google) High School Science Fair Project ^PDF, the average tampon is about 1g. I wouldn’t be surprised if they just budgeted 100g for it.
Not that I disagree that NASA isn’t safety conscious, but I’ve recently watched a video about the challenge disaster which seemingly could easily have been avoided if they had listened to the weather concerns or redesigned their solid boosters after issues were observed in the first place. I guess in that case they just got too complacent.