• Agent641@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    The internet works this way too. Blow up one undersea cable and traffic rerouted somewhere else, but slower.

  • IGuessThisIsMyName@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    I’ve always used escalators as a great example of this. If they lose power or break they elegantly degrade back into stairs.

    • 𝕲𝖑𝖎𝖙𝖈𝖍🔻𝕯𝖃 (he/him)@lemmy.world
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      11 hours ago

      escalators are actually a bad example of this. What you describe is what is supposed to happen, and they’re supposed to be built with mechanisms to ensure that’s what happens, but there’s been examples of escalators failing in such a way that the weight of too many people on it makes it go faster and faster and people get crushed and deadified.

      I watched a youtube video about a famous example a while back, don’t remember the channel that did it though or I’d find and link it.

      edit: I’ve been proven wrong but I’m leaving my comment because it’s a learning experience for anyone who reads this thread.

      • ParadoxSeahorse@lemmy.world
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        19 hours ago

        I think that specific example was shown to be sabotaged at the behest of management to try to save on maintenance costs so no that doesn’t count

      • Railing5132@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        Out of the tens of thousands of installed systems, there are bound to be failures of the mechanical safeties (or human-performed installation/maintenence) that can lead to a Swiss cheese path to failure. I wouldn’t necessarily dismiss the whole category as a bad example because of that however.

        Is it perfectly fail-safe? Well, in those cases, it wasn’t. But what were the contributing factors?

      • harambe69@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        1 day ago

        At least someone with some sense can observe the amount of people on an elevator and nope out of that collective act of stupidity. I say that qualifies as graceful degradation.

  • Etterra@discuss.online
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    1 day ago

    The corporations can’t sell you an overpriced newer model of your old one doesn’t completely die from the slightest issue.

    • cobysev@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      I turn 42 next month, but my body is beat up from 2 decades of military service. I’m definitely experiencing some “catastrophic functionality” myself.

      • N0t_5ure@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        I will say that you don’t have to lie down and take it. Over the past few years I’ve been on a journey to restore and rejuvenate my body, and the results have been miraculous. I went from morbidly obese with metabolic syndrome, including uncontrolled high blood pressure, to literally the best physical condition of my life. 60 year old me could kick 30 year old me’s ass any day of the week. All of my health issues have been resolved, and all of my old man aches and pains have gone away. I did a deep dive on the state of the art of longevity science, which is reasonably summarized in Peter Attia’s book Outlive. (It’s a free audiobook on spotify premium.) I’ve basically optimized sleep, exercise, nutrition, supplements, and the use of prescription drugs, including the drug rapamycin. Rapamycin has extended lifespan of every organism it’s been tested in, including budding yeast, fruit flies, mice, rats, and non-human primates. While there are ethical and time considerations that make such placebo controlled lifespan studies in humans difficult, there is data to suggest that rapamycin has a similar therapeutic effect in humans. Joan Mannick’s 2014 study using Everolimus, a slightly tweaked analog of rapamycin, demonstrated that pulsed mTOR suppression in elderly humans greatly ameliorated immunosenescence, the decline in immune function during aging, and the ongoing trials of rapamycin with respect to ovarian aging have shown impressive effects. I’ve been on rapamycin for almost 3 years now, and while I can’t isolate its effects from my other interventions, I’m pretty much never sick and I’ve had significant grey hair reversal, which was unexpected. TLDR: there is a lot you can to mitigate the effects of aging and implement “graceful degradation” in your life.

  • Hegar@fedia.io
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    2 days ago

    Tabletop rpg design uses the term “fail gracefully” to describe being able to still function when you forget the rules.

    Older games used to regularly stop amd collapse into boring chart-reading and index-looking-up. A lot of modern games are entirely playable if you forget everything except the core mechanic.

  • m4xie@lemmy.ca
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    2 days ago

    That’s interesting, but I need two types of batteries to use it at full power.