
mococartin
5K posts

mococartin
@mococartin
i’m doing something


Thought I’d say goodnight by sharing this epic capture.. still don’t know how he missed😵💫

Denver’s public parking situation is so insanely ass for a city with no public transportation

Apple accidentally built the world's largest hearing aid company. AirPods Pro 2 got FDA clearance as a clinical-grade over-the-counter hearing aid in September 2024. The average American pays $4,700 for a pair of prescription hearing aids. AirPods Pro cost $249. That's a 95% price reduction for mild to moderate hearing loss, which covers roughly 30 million American adults. But the price gap isn't even the real story. The real story is the stigma math. Nearly 1 in 5 adults over 40 believe society judges people who wear hearing aids. The average person waits 4 years after noticing hearing loss before doing anything about it. A 78-year-old man threw away his hearing aids, popped in AirPods, and his niece didn't even register it as a medical device. That's the product working exactly as designed. The hearing aid industry spent decades engineering smaller, more invisible devices to reduce stigma. Apple solved the problem from the opposite direction: make everyone wear something in their ears first, then add the medical function later. By the time the FDA cleared the software update, a billion people were already wearing the hardware. The clinical study that earned the clearance enrolled 118 people. Self-fitted AirPods matched professionally fitted devices on perceived benefit, amplification, and speech comprehension scores. The audiologist appointment, the $200 fitting fee, the three follow-up visits bundled into that $4,700 price tag: optional. Every hearing aid company spent the last century trying to make their product disappear. Apple made theirs a status symbol and added hearing restoration as a software update.

A bar for “news addicts” has opened in the U.S. In Washington, a venue called The Situation Room has launched, where visitors can track global events in real time. The project was created by the betting platform Polymarket. Inside, there are around 80 screens displaying news, markets, flight data, and more. The format is similar to a sports bar — but instead of games, it’s all about global events. The creators say the idea came from the habit of constantly scrolling through the news. For now, it’s a temporary project, but the format could be expanded.

A little four month hair growth, kinda proud of it.






