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What are some good somewhat older smartwatches that have a heart rate sensor and work with modern versions of Android?
  • I personally use the original amazfit bip. Cannot be newthough, I sourced mine from aliexpress, and even there they are ex-demo and stuff. Heart rate sensor isn't amazing but I don't know if that's maybe my hairy arm. The main reason I got it, can be used with gadget bridge, for best privacy

    Edit: worth noting that I had to flash it with English firmware, which did mean I had to use the official app originally

  • Vaccine politics may be to blame for GOP excess deaths, study finds
  • Deaths are sad, if we consider that people can be brainwashed and it isn't entirely their fault, it's a tragedy.

    That said, this is... Evolution in action. I don't just mean darwin awards dumb, but more specifically that technologies (social or physical) are actually a part of Evolution, not aside from it. That also means that dealing with misinformation is actually becoming a part of evolution, literally for survival. Or if not critical thinking, then what group you attach yourself to, aka what network you trust. Which in some ways, is actually not all that different from before modern technologies.

  • Premier wants Uni merger to proceed
    indaily.com.au ‘Important test’: Premier's message to Upper House on uni merger vote

    Premier Peter Malinauskas says it would be “extraordinary” and a "holdback mentality" if Upper House MPs considered blocking a merger of the universities of Adelaide and South Australia if approved this weekend, while the Deputy Premier says university staff concerns about the process are "misplaced...

    ‘Important test’: Premier's message to Upper House on uni merger vote
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    SA water bills about to rise
    indaily.com.au SA water bills about to rise

    SA Water prices will be capped below inflation this financial year, but households and businesses will stay pay higher bills.

    SA water bills about to rise

    The state government says SA Water prices will rise by 4.8 per cent in 2023-24, below the inflation rate of 7.9 per cent.

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    Demolition of Adelaide Aquatic Centre
    indaily.com.au 'Unsaveable': Council to fund demolition of ‘hideous’ Adelaide Aquatic Centre

    Adelaide City Council is set to approve $20m in ratepayer funds to demolish the Adelaide Aquatic Centre and restore surrounding park lands, after the Lord Mayor labelled the existing facility “unsaveable, unrepairable and unusable” amid plans for a new facility.

    'Unsaveable': Council to fund demolition of ‘hideous’ Adelaide Aquatic Centre

    I had no idea this was on anyone's mind.

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    AGL accused of manipulating power prices (Wholesale)
    indaily.com.au AGL accused of manipulating power prices

    A class action accuses AGL Energy of using bids on the wholesale electricity market to inflate power prices and cause higher bills for consumers.

    AGL accused of manipulating power prices

    >AGL took advantage of its market power for the substantial purpose of deterring or preventing competing generators from engaging in competitive conduct

    This does affect SA to some extent, but personally I am still struck by how much SA Power Networks charges on top of the wholesale price. Well, the wholesale price has contributed to the bulk of the gains over the past year, so maybe that's not entirely fair.

    If you want to have a look at wholesale power markets, here's a good place to have a look https://opennem.org.au/energy/sa1. Just be mindful that this is not the retail price, retail price also has GST, a transmission efficiency scaling factor, and the SAPN charges on top.

    Also be mindful that people tend to use the most power at around 5pm, which is usually when the price is highest. Your retail pricing takes this into account, because by and large, power meters are not sensitive to what time power is actually used.

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    Pets in Rentals: Government posting directly to Reddit

    !

    I suppose it might be a bit much to expect government accounts to go find a Lemmy instance to post this, so I'm copying this from Reddit. Yep.

    >For the first time in South Australia, tenants will have the right to own a pet under further rental reforms proposed by the Malinauskas Labor Government.

    >As part of the reforms to the Residential Tenancies Act, the Government will consult on a bill that includes a presumption that a tenant who applies to keep a pet in a rental property cannot have their request unreasonably refused, provided the tenant agrees to comply with any reasonable conditions imposed by the landlord.

    >For many of us, our pets are family and it is heartbreaking that some South Australians have been in a position where they have had to choose between having a roof over their head and giving up a beloved pet.

    >That’s why our Government is acting decisively to make housing more accessible for all South Australians including those with pets.

    >My Government is supporting tenants while balancing the interests of landlords.

    >We have already taken steps to ban rent bidding, raise the bond threshold – saving South Australian tenants $1.3 million in the first month alone – and get private rental assistance in the hands of more people.

    >And now we are ensuring people aren’t having to sacrifice their dearly loved pets to avoid being homeless.

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    New move to keep patients out of stretched Adelaide hospital EDs - InDaily
    indaily.com.au New move to keep patients out of stretched Adelaide hospital EDs

    Two new "hospital avoidance hubs" will be built in Adelaide in a state budget announcement to further ease pressure on hospital emergency departments.

    New move to keep patients out of stretched Adelaide hospital EDs

    So the question for me is, will this effectively become a walk in bulk bill clinic? Because a lot of other ones have gone to mixed and private billing.

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    Death to the Skyscraper: Skyscraper construction, and the financial system that underpins it, is not stopping any time soon, despite its detrimental impact on the environment
  • Taking example numbers from the article, but not explicitly stated, it kind of sounds like 15 floors, about 60m tall, is the point in which density starts to sacrifice ecological concerns too much.

    According to a 2015 study commissioned by the CTBUH, the whole life emissions of both energy use and materials for a 120m concrete and steel structure are nearly five times higher than those of its 60m equivalent.

    That's still tall enough for many things, so I guess the rest should be handled by a bit more space use and better mass transit.

  • InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)DI
    Arbition @partizle.com
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