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I think this summary is reductive, because it ignores the surprisingly dense layers of middle management in hospitals and clinics that are paid more than the medical professionals (and even that ignores external middle managers like PBMs etc).


I’m actually purposefully ignoring the administrative staff because:

1. They do actual, necessary work, and represent a relatively large and reasonably paid workforce (not grossly overpaid like executvies)

2. They fall under a different budget bucket than executive compensation entirely.



For some additional context, the screenshotted Rebble board member has commented here: https://www.reddit.com/r/pebble/comments/1p0huk5/pebble_rebb...

Looks like they were not consulted by Eric before this post.


Yeah thats kinda bad.

Look, I am a bit of a hypocrite on this, I had a fun time when OpenAI dropped the musk emails.

But this is not a great look for pebble.


Developer time?


As my medico wife explained it to me, you have about 1 minute after your heart stops before you start having permanent brain damage. Unless you live inside a hospital your risk of surviving a major heart attack at home is less than 20% at the best of times (and in fact seems to be about 10% or less in USA on average on some quick research).


Nowhere in this blog does it mention what the business actually does, which is always a red flag. I've seen plenty of stripe bashing posts on HN that end up with the business being in newsletter scams or adult content.


If you've ever dealt with financial institutions in a meaningful way, you'd know that the self-service variety, or the HSBC variety, will create hurdles and enforce policies arbitrarily with no recourse, care or concern for your well-being.


Looking around it seems its a small ISP / IT consultancy. It doesn't look to be anything shady at all.


ISPs that host illegal content can indeed be outside the risk tolerance of a financial services company. The blog post is very careful to say "one of our companies" and censor the name of it on screenshots so I'll be interested to see what it is.


You can look up the blog author yourself if you're interested. It looks like the typical small NZ "does several things because the local market is so small" kind of business. Local laws here are a bit more strict on hosting content so that seems unlikely, and would the minions at Wise even look into that side of things?


Yep, small is correct, the blogger's companies are all focused on South Canterbury and headquartered in Timaru (for non-Kiwis, 55K people live in South Canterbury, and 29K of them live in Timaru. Massive shit-ton of cows though).


Based on the DNS records, and the Companies Office website, the blogger owns several companies.

https://www.vetta.online/

https://aorangieftpos.nz/

https://www.reliance.net.nz/

Business networking, local ISP, card payment solutions, basically. Given the blog posts about cPanel and Outlook, it tracks.

I note that the blogger lives in a small town in the South Island, so likely is focused on the local market.


Possibly. Would be better if the company name wasn't obscured from the post.


What do you mean possibly?

I checked the DNS records, then the Companies Office register of all companies the blogger is a director and/or shareholder of.

And it's his personal blog considering it's on the domain name of <first-name>.<country-code>.

Not sure why you're so certain that it must be a dubious company.


Oh no… god forbid - adult content lol. Yes regardless of the content if the business is legal and they only changed an address that’s not a reason to have this level of shit support and no way to escalate and contact a human…


I don't agree with those policies but it's a possible reason for a financial services business to break a relationship if they discover incidentally that this guys business is breaking the law. Changes the blog post completely and the business info should have been included.

As a heuristic, using TransferWise is traditionally associated with Russian money laundering scams.


I believe the business is an ISP.


One of. Also runs card payment systems and business networking consulting. The blogger is focused on his small local market.


I will never trust OneDrive with any files after it silently deleted thousands of my files while syncing - I hit the hidden maximum number of files limit and then it permanently deleted the remaining files with no warning.


Common etiquette is to declare your conflicts of interest


Agreed, it is in my bio but I updated the post in any case


ah I just realize actually u are rover dev

I wonder why do you think we need rover? what is the use case? I got confused

before that we ask ai with a chat feature

the next we need a multiple swarm of ai why though?


The main use case why we developed Rover internally (and still is) was the ability to run agents in parallel. It allows us to go much faster but requires tooling around it.

Secondarily it makes it easier for everyone to share those best practices and tooling among us, but is less of an issue because we are a small team


Fwiw in my company there’s a lot of interest in sharing best practices but it seems the learning is not as portable as hoped. My view is that it’s a personal learning journey and smoothing that journey beyond a certain point turns into spoonfeeding and reduces learning effectiveness significantly. Give a man a fish, and so on.


I think it's more like Sam's condition did not clearly fit into a checklistable entity. Our heart rate and temperature go up when we have the flu, but we don't all go in to hospital for antibiotics or die at home. Probably they should have done more work-up the second time he came in but as the article points out that could also have been negative. He was probably just too young for checklists built for older people to pick up on his condition.


Also sounds like he was left alone which does not help either. I had similar to Sam, in early sepsis but none of markers were there until I went delirious. Wife picked up on it right away and that time, ER picked up on it.


I don't quite understand your third problem. I also don't think the shortage of ER nurses necessarily contributed, as clearly the doctors and the friend thought he was well enough to go home. Definitely agree with the first problem though. We put our kids through a lot of risk by sending them to interstate college...


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