Is this in regards to a specific recent event or article? Or just purely hypothetical?
In practice, an AI that’s trained on drug-drug interactions, duplicate therapies, and common dosings would be beneficial. We already have specialized models that are helping scientists discover groundbreaking technologies, such as recent advancements in discovering cancers years before we are used to with more traditional methods.
Let’s look at your hypothetical. Prescriber sends in an order to their in-house pharmacy for amoxicillin and the patient has a recorded penicillin allergy. Under ideal circumstances, the pharmacist would review the patients chart, note the potential for a reaction (While they are different antibiotics, there is still potential for a reaction due to the drugs being related), and contact the prescriber to verify therapy and discuss if a change to another antibiotic is in order. (This is all ignoring the fact that for an ear infection you’d likely get an otic ear drop, not an oral suspension. Something like Neo-Poly-Dex or ofloxacin).
Unfortunately the pharmacy hellscape we’re in today leads to rushed verifications, where therapies aren’t being checked too closely and many things get missed. Pharmacies already have systems in place to warn techs and pharmacists of any interactions with recorded allergies, but if you’re traveling or need to go to a new pharmacy or doctor, things get missed.
An AI that is trained on these specific things would help alleviate some of the pressure of the already overworked pharmacy staff, while giving consise and consistent information. If a pharmacist misses an allergy or interaction, the AI could send a warning to them and the prescriber.
Note that I’m referring to job specific AI, that are trained for specific purposes. A general LLM, which it sounds like you’re referring to, would not be able to work in these environments.
Source: I audit pharmacy claims, with training in retail, LTC, and PBM pharmacy settings. It’s literally my job to catch the errors (both billing and clinical) that pharmacies make.
I’d give Teaching Tech’s calibrations a try. His website has a great guide for tuning every part of your printer. Teaching Tech 3D Printer Calibration
The only thing I can think of with the extruder is thermal runaway, but Klipper would tell you if that was the case. Have you tried with no camera plugged in? If new USB cables aren’t working, it might be worth starting from scratch and rebuilding your Klipper instances. If a clean Klipper install (with no webcams or anything) is breaking, then it’s likely going to be a hardware issue.
How old is your Pi? I had the same issues on a generic board (Le Potato) but upgrading to a Pi 4 Model B fixed it for me. I have both my Neptune 2S (modded) and Neptune 3 Pro (stock) running on the same Pi with no issues.
Definitely change your USB cable. If you’ve got some complex files, maybe the cable can’t handle the bandwidth (experienced this back when I was first starting out)
Article title seems AI generated. Makes it sound like the whole of Alaska Airlines was barred.
Due to this, Alaska Airlines opted to limit the aircraft from extended flights over water to ensure that the plane “could return very quickly to an airport” if the warning light reappeared, according to Jennifer Homendy, National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) chair.
Looks like Alaska knew about the previous warnings and voluntarily pulled it from international flights.
That’ll be your retraction settings that need to be tuned. The pressure inside the nozzle isn’t getting high enough when starting a new layer. Took me a couple minutes to see the issue since it’s black and shiny. I’ve used http://retractioncalibration.com/ before to help get my retractions tuned
You can play any games you want, though? Throw an emulator on there and play all your old games. Install non-steam games, add them to Steam using its very easy to use “Add a non-Steam game” button, and play as normal.
Heck, if you don’t like Linux you can just install Windows on the thing.
Steam takes a lot of money and then turns around and invests it into the gaming community.