FIA and clarity? You havent been following the Ferrari PU story have you?
FIA and clarity? You havent been following the Ferrari PU story have you?
Looking at the numbers it is obvious, that the counting is wrong, but I do not understand the sentence about Iran. What do you mean with it?Shrieker wrote: ↑05 Mar 2020, 17:00Exactly.. We have a grand total of zero confirmed cases as of now The twisted logic behind that is, "you don't get any positives if you don't test". With that kind of a mind set, it's inevitable we'll end up like iran or worse...hollus wrote: ↑03 Mar 2020, 08:23Until people with the virus start glowing in funny colors, we simply don't know how many people is infected. Think about it: what constitutes, in the eyes of your country's health system, an infected person? This makes infection rates massively dependent on the counting an testing an diagnosing systems used, and changeable with time, as it is extremely unlikely that anyone is counted in the first week of his or her infection. (Chicken pox kind of meets this criterium, kind of).
This image is outdated already. South Africa has a case and it's still hot there.Phil wrote:I have my doubts, given countries with warm climate are also affected. And we've been having an above average warm winter so far in Europe.
Yes I saw the circus happening at that side as well, however what I meant was FIA being too insensitive towards the difficulties for fans, drivers and team personnel when it comes to taking hard decisions on whether to stop racing events due to the coronavirus calamity.
We are all responsible for our own well being. Some decisions we need to make ourselves.wickedz50 wrote: ↑07 Mar 2020, 06:41Yes I saw the circus happening at that side as well, however what I meant was FIA being too insensitive towards the difficulties for fans, drivers and team personnel when it comes to taking hard decisions on whether to stop racing events due to the coronavirus calamity.
They are so money crazy and greedy that no concern for human well being. It makes me sad.
Same in Belgium. It is practically now doubling every day.
Realistically, I'd be more trustful of the data from South Korea and Italy.While 448 new cases remains a sizeable jump, it marked a third straight day of declines in the number of new cases for South Korea.
The problem is that how China did it won’t work elsewhere. I can’t as example see the UK government getting away with dragging their citizens into quarantine kicking and screaming.Fulcrum wrote: ↑07 Mar 2020, 18:51It was exponential in China to begin with as well. Their containment strategies have worked pretty well; alternatively, they are under-reporting cases.
The countries to watch are South Korea, then Iran, then Italy. They have exhibited similar exponentiation in the early stage of infection, but will be reaching the stage (based on China's evolution anyway), where we'd potentially start to see declines in absolute case numbers per day.
South Korea seems to be following this pattern.
https://www.nst.com.my/world/world/2020 ... above-7000
Realistically, I'd be more trustful of the data from South Korea and Italy.While 448 new cases remains a sizeable jump, it marked a third straight day of declines in the number of new cases for South Korea.
Outside of China, SK, Italy and Iran, the infections will likely be in the exponential phase for at least a week or two, but this is highly subject to how, or if, containment strategies are used.
Its a bit morbid, but this has been an interesting case study in who is most connected to China by:
- Geography.
- Economy.
- Fraternity (travel outside of business motives).
Clearly Africa doesn't score highly on the above factors, relatively speaking anyway.
- Affluence (i.e. money to be able to travel).
We're also seeing a practical demonstration of the population distribution of the world. 90% being in the Northern Hemisphere.
I bieve that is part of the reason some people are panicking. Before you would not have seen 1 picture of a shelf empty in 1 supermarket and then be told the world is panic buying.Fulcrum wrote: ↑07 Mar 2020, 14:17More data feeds.
https://gisanddata.maps.arcgis.com/apps ... 7b48e9ecf6
https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/
https://www.worldometers.info/coronavir ... ographics/
Looking at the logarithmic scale plots shows that cases are not increasing exponentially, so that is some small comfort. This is the first pandemic of the internet age, it is a new experience for everyone. I am hopeful the situation will not be as dire as the media suggests.
That said, I do worry about sub-Saharan Africa.
Im not so sure. I am personally worried about how few cases from Africa, India and South America are being discovered. I do hope there isn’t a hidden pandemic in poorer parts of the world that due to lack a good medical health (which is a disgrace to our species) that is going totally unnoticed.
Yes, they are simply not testing. The test is expensive and difficult.Restomaniac wrote: ↑07 Mar 2020, 19:42Im not so sure. I am personally worried about how few cases from Africa, India and South America are being discovered. I do hope there isn’t a hidden pandemic in poorer parts of the world that due to lack a good medical health (which is a disgrace to our species) that is going totally unnoticed.