“Could cost $28,000 or $100”
Looks like we’re gonna need more Luigis.
#capitalism #healthcare mas.to/@thecontinent/114737317…
The Continent (@thecontinent@mas.to)
The US Food and Drug Administration has approved injectable lenacapavir for HIV treatment. But there is always a but. The drug could cost as much as $28,000 or as little as $100 – depending on where you get it. https://continent.substack.mas.to
WereCat
Unknown parent • • •hendrik
in reply to WereCat • • •WereCat
in reply to hendrik • • •The bacground app is Amberol btw
hendrik
in reply to WereCat • • •WereCat
in reply to hendrik • • •DecentM
in reply to WereCat • • •WereCat
in reply to DecentM • • •I've already reinstalled and set up everything 😀
I did check the history btw, it was not there at all. And there were only 16 lines as well so it's not like I've overlooked it.
WereCat
in reply to hendrik • • •By the way. AFter fresh install I've installed GSConnect directly from extensions and it immediatelly shows up in the menu by default. The GSConnect from Discover store shows as not installed. Also nowhere in the Discover store it says it's an extensions.
They really need to make this more clear tbh, it's very confusing for people who never used it.
hendrik
in reply to WereCat • • •Vincent
in reply to WereCat • • •WereCat
in reply to Vincent • • •So got GSConnect to work... I had to also enable it in Extension manager for some reason. I had no idea it's an extension since I've just i stalled it as RPM package from the discover store.
Anyhow, it's just confusing. I was installing KDE Connect on both my PC and laptop. I never even heard of GSConnect until I started troubleshooting and I thought it's just some GNOME fork of KDE-Connect, not actually a mandatory replacement for KDE-Connect on GNOME.
It may make sense in the name but the name makes it even more confusing. Since it works on Android/Windows,... Why would I not assume it will work on Linux GNOME?