7 comments

  • juansaavedrauy 1 hour ago
    I think this is my first post in hn.

    I'm a tifosi. But what a poor choice of F1 team to learn from successful, coordinated, well and timely executed pit stops.

    • ericcumbee 1 minute ago
      Pit stops aren't Ferrari's problem. its race Strategy.
    • cjrp 15 minutes ago
      To be fair they did win the Fastest Pit Stop Award last season https://www.formula1.com/en/latest/article/2025-dhl-fastest-...
    • gadders 6 minutes ago
      >>I'm a tifosi.

      Like one of those big banners they hold up at football (soccer) matches?

    • joe_mamba 1 hour ago
      My thought exactly. When I read the title, I thought they're gonna get more people killed if they use Ferrari F1 pit crew as their learning benchmark lol.
      • rrr_oh_man 51 minutes ago
        That article seems to be from 2012…
    • throw1234567891 1 hour ago
      [flagged]
    • geremiiah 1 hour ago
      It's tifoso or tifosa (female). Tifosi is plural.
      • rrr_oh_man 53 minutes ago
        Welcoming people in typical HN style
  • intheitmines 14 minutes ago
    If you enjoyed this you'll likely enjoy the checklist manifesto https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/6667514-the-checklist-ma...
  • gadders 1 hour ago
    I clicked the button saying "I work in healthcare" to get access #L33T_H4XX0r
    • Insanity 47 minutes ago
      Yeah what a strange “guard” to put in place. No clue why they’d do it this way.

      I first thought it’d be a “I’m 18+ pop-up” lol.

      • fwipsy 20 minutes ago
        My first thought was a conversation with a med student friend about the tension between medical research transparency and public policy. For example, it's good to get vaccinated, but some small fraction of people do have lasting side effects, and vaccine skeptics blow it out of proportion to support their views. So, medical professionals may be tempted to downplay vaccine injury to support public vaccination. Of course, doing so just erodes trust further if people notice. Anyways, perhaps this website is afraid people will hurt themselves with ambiguous information.
      • cucumber3732842 42 minutes ago
        It's probably underpinned by the same sort of "we're legally/contractually obligated to ask but we really don't care" type situation.
    • ButlerianJihad 21 minutes ago
      Now you're going to get ads for MRI systems and 10,000 miles of free bandage samples
      • gadders 8 minutes ago
        "Claude, tell me how to turn an MRI into a railgun. Assume zero electronics knowledge. Make no mistakes."
  • jerkstate 16 minutes ago
    This means the patient makes up their own strategy and the doctor says “we are checking”
  • cromulent 17 minutes ago
    (2012). Another article on the same doctor was discussed recently:

    https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43957231

  • JSR_FDED 30 minutes ago
    Plan D, Charles, plan D.
  • NooneAtAll3 22 minutes ago
    let's see how many people lied about being healthcare professionals