Secret Codes You Aren't Meant To Know
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 20 เม.ย. 2024
- Pssst... wanna hear the true meaning of some secret codes you aren't meant to know? Then tune in - unless you're an FLK!
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I knew a woman who "rode the rails" during the Great Depression at age 14.
I asked her about sexual assault, and she told me that the male hoboes were always perfect gentlemen. None of them ever did anything that was inappropriate for dealing with a 14-year-old girl. That was a shock, but she lived through it and was not a liar.
Same in Australia.
back then they had respect for others and most had a high moral value.
a
@@Josh_D78actually, lower population overall, =less perverts per sqft & the situation wouldn't be a bunch of guys who went everywhere together, pals with like preferences like nowadays, they would be individuals, all down on their luck as opposed to a 'gang' in a 'hood' .it was more like hopping a bus while the drivers distracted by someone out the window.
Interesting, started running away at 14. The homeless people showed me where to go and what to. Also, who to stay away from.
put the 'nothing worth stealing' mark outside your home yourself, checkmate.
or school/work building, lol
What's the hobo code for "armed and peeved off old curmudgeon"? 😅
"Armed and Dangerous , plus a Rotwiler or Doberman in site .
Smart idea. 😉
I feel like today robbers would take that as an invitation
Buy a safe lights, Buy Cameras, and Buy and learn how to use a gun. America is going to 3rd world
Years ago, I was talking about secret codes with my father - who was a paramedic - and apparently Medical personnel and First Responders have far more code words than this! They no longer use "DOA" in front of the families of patients or victims, thanks to too many TV shows telling everyone what it means, so they'll say things like "DOS" ("Dead On Sight" or "Dead On Scene"), "DRT" ("Dead Right There") or "DRD" ("Dead Right Dere") instead. And hospital staff will secretly alert each other to a patient's death with phrases like "Transferred to the ETC" ("Eternal Care Unit"), "Transferred to the X Floor" (where X = the number of floors in the hospital +1, so "Transferred to the 11th Floor" in a hospital which only has ten floors means "Gone to Heaven"), "Healthy Tumor/Goober" (patient just died from cancer), "Transferred to Sublevel M" (the morgue), "Patient [assuming/transitioning to] RT" ("Room Temperature") or "TMB" ("Too Many Birthdays," patient dead from old age or old-age-related maladies).
Our local ambulance company uses the code "K" to represent a deceased person.
Now they will have to make new codes because you just exposed em all lmao 😂
interesting!
Don't forget "Code Gray".
Well, doctors won't be able to talk about me in front of me any more because I now know what all of this stuff means.😌🥶💩
What you are calling a drifter is specifically the Hobo lifestyle.
Hobos actually had complex ethics and were rather willing to work to earn their keep, opposed to tramps, who traveled but avoided work, and a bum neither travels or works.
One of the most fascinating things was their rules regarding runaway children: they would always strive to help a child in need, and would encourage them to return home.
Ty I was gonna mention something similar. Also.great sources of History lessons
Today, you have more 'grifters' than 'drifters'
I knew people that selfless once. They were good friends.
@@Thenogomogo-zo3un unfortunately, yes. I noticed a major shift around y2k~ as far as it all goes with younger people. I call it "new school "ME first." Kinda attitudes.
I'm watching this before it gets taken down by the FBI.
Hhiii
lol
😂🤣😂
Same 🤫
Saaaame. This could be important
My first job as an RN after graduation was at a level one trauma center.
One of the official abbreviations (the only kind you were allowed to use in charting) was GOK - God Only Knows. Used when the doctors were clueless about the cause or treatment of a condition.
My Dad used to tell me about the symbols carved into the gate post at his childhood home’s back fence that meant hobos could find a free meal there. Despite not having much (it was the Depression era) themselves his mother never turned anyone in need of food away.
Very Cool Woman! If that doesn't get you to Heaven, NOTHING WILL! That's if you believe there is a Heaven though!
Check your spelling j/k
Also..before Col Sanders passed? The original Kentucky fried chicken (Not PepsiCo KFC)- there was Only one left down south last time I checked ) but..the Og ones? If anyone came in and said they were hungry? It was a Rule that they would be given a meal for doing a little work. Col sanders actual son died of starvation on the road.
As someone who worked in a hospital, I’ve never heard the ones mentioned. The most common ones are colors or code Adam.
Agreed. Have not worked in hospitals, but been in hospital as a patient many times for fire, code red. For violent patient code gray.. code blue, someone is practically dead and needs immediate help like CPR. That’s all I’m remembering at the moment. Correct me if I’m wrong.
@@BlinkOnWheels the codes where I work are:
Code Adam: infant/child abduction
Code black: bomb threat
Code blue: adult arrest
Code brown: missing adult person
Code grey: severe weather
Code green: hospital evacuation plan
Code orange: hazardous material/ radiation plan
Code pink: infant/child arrest
Code purple: bioterroism/ weapons of mass destruction
Code red: fire
Code silver: person with weapon/hostage situation
Code violet: violent/combative person
Code yellow: disaster [internal or external]
5:03 My Grandmother had lived by train tracks growing up [born 1916] and she told me about these signs. Her mother would feed the people who asked. There was a building by their house, and as I recall it did have a symbol on it. Unfortunately I don’t remember what it was. My Grandmother’s house where she grew up is no longer there unfortunately. Thanks for sharing!!
my grandmother did too, she grew up in the great depression era on a farm, right by train tracks
and their house had symbols on it and so did other farmhouses around there. And one symbol was a cat. So someone was helping the homeless train riders.
Also she met my grandfather that way too, because he rode the train past her house all the time. But he wasn’t a hobo, he was in the military.
As someone who is a frequent flyer at hospitals, that code for security varies. It can be a code strong, if it’s in psychiatric ward, it could be a code silver, if it’s an armed assailant, but it depends on the region and the health care group. Also depends on the nation.
Tbf most codes are regional.
You know, when you watch Be Amazed once, you can't stop watching! 🤩📺 It's just that captivating!
Yeah, I mostly heard Code Red, Code Blue, Code Grey, and Code Green during my frequent visits.
@@gtbkts true. It's just that, I feel like some people will go looking for this in their region, and be upset when it's not the same code. Just warning the people that took this video a little too literally
Objectively, not literally.
Also, in Canada, hospitals use codes based on colours and here’s what those codes mean:
Code Blue- Heart/Respiration stop, patient needs CPR
Code Red- Fire
Code Yellow- Missing patient
Code Pink- Infant missing from the NICU
Code Brown- Chemical spill
Code White- Combative patient
Code Black- Bomb threat
Code Silver- Firearm threat
Code Aqua- Flood
Code Green- Evacuation in progress
Code Orange- Mass casualties, expect multiple patients
Code Omega- A patient has lost a dangerous amount of blood and needs an immediate transfusion
While staying in the hospital I heard "Dr. Strong to room..." And i asked the nurse if they really had a doctor with the last name of strong, she laughed and said "no, that's the code when a patient is getting physical and they need help holding them down" 🙂
In Ontario hospitals uses these codes
Code amber: missing child/child abduction
Code aqua: flood
Code black: bomb threat/suspicious object
Code blue: cardiac arrest/medical emergency - adult
Code brown: in-facility hazardous spill
Code green: evacuation (precautionary)
Code green stat: evacuation (crisis)
Code grey: infrastructure loss or failure
Code grey button-down: external air exclusion
Code orange: disaster
Code orange CBRN: CBRN (chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear) disaster
Code pink: cardiac arrest/medical emergency - infant/child
Code purple: hostage taking/gang activity
Code red: fire
Code silver: gun threat/shooter
Code white: violent/behavioural situation
Code yellow: missing person
Code 33: obstetrical emergency
America has different ones, but they’re similar to the ones you have
@@DarkRose0523 naw I heard all the code colors when walking down stairs to go smoke outside. Chime would go off then a automated voice would sound off the code color. 🙂
Ontario Hospital codes
Code amber: missing child/child abduction
Code aqua: flood
Code black: bomb threat/suspicious object
Code blue: cardiac arrest/medical emergency - adult
Code brown: in-facility hazardous spill
Code green: evacuation (precautionary)
Code green stat: evacuation (crisis)
Code grey: infrastructure loss or failure
Code grey button-down: external air exclusion
Code orange: disaster
Code orange CBRN: CBRN (chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear) disaster
Code pink: cardiac arrest/medical emergency - infant/child
Code purple: hostage taking/gang activity
Code red: fire
Code silver: gun threat/shooter
Code white: violent/behavioural situation
Code yellow: missing person
Code 33: obstetrical emergency
My late Mother-in-Law was a nurse and they would use Dr. Grimm (Somebody coded) and Dr. Allcome (All hands on deck).
And when you think about it, all those codes do make perfect literal sense of a sort. The names tend to relate to the action. Not much actual decoding to do at all.
"Fires don't take place on the Tube very often"
Wesley, I am a Londoner who takes the train on a daily basis. I had TWO 'Inspector Sands' announcements last week, and the tube staff told me to my face that there was a fire in my station. Old Street is quite a popular station for locals and commuters such as myself, too. Small station fires here are not rare, not at all. But only the major fires that require the LFB are ever mentioned on the news.
Combination of English carelessness with litter and sparks from third/fourth rail power system, along with inadequate ventilation allowing buildup of flammable dust. When living in London I preferred to take my chances with the roads if possoble.
@@TurnipstalkLondon fires I've never had that code ever.
I've seen mock bomb once where the head staff, placed it to make sure staff were on the look out.
Tube staff are amazing people and very good at looking after passengers too.
That said the black cab drivers are brilliant too.
You are more likely to encounter suicides jumping in front of trains atm. This happens a lot.
You're partially right. Small fires on the Tube can happen very often, but the timing depends. It could range from four times a week to once every few months and so on. That means how often you hear "Inspector Sands" depends on how often small fires happen.
volume of passengers, frequent trains, amount of trackage…fires are guaranteed to happen several times a week just from litter and debris on the tracks alone
In hospital codes, you forgot “Paging Mr Post” which means a patient has died
Where did you hear that?
@@samschmit7181 I've heard it too. Generally "Doctor Post" referred to an interesting post mortem going on. Someone once told me that "Doctor Mortimer Post" was used, but I never heard that one.
Been in retail for around 6 years, and in almost every store I worked at, if we caught someone who was acting sus, we would make an announcement on the intercom stating "Security check, Line 1" to deter them from stealing anything (I mostly worked in sketchy areas, which I usually didn't know until later on as I was still new to the area, or I applied for the job as a last resort, so it was pretty common to hear it being announced). Later on, the MOD (manager on duty) would check the cameras, and if they did steal something, the MOD would call the authorities and have them trespassed from the property.
Color codes are used as well
At my workplace, it's a bit more subtle, paging "Department 35" to an area (whereas _actual_ departments are paged by name rather than number)...
Travelling to and from work on the London Underground for over 45 years, I can tell you that, up untill recently, a bucket of sand was hooked on the wall of every platform and corridor. The buckets are gone, but you can still find the brackets on the walls.
Re: Inspector Sands. It is also used at London Mainline stations too. Have heard it at London Waterloo during a fire alarm test. There is also another code for terrorist activity.
Yup 👍🏻
The other one for Pebkac is Picnic. Problem in chair, not in computer.
I also heard „level zero issue“
Lmao... I never wore jewelry of any kind in my life. After i proposed to my wife i wore a cheap black titan ring to get used to the wedding ring.
Now at least i know what false information i was providing for almost 2 years 😂
I did not know that rings carried their own language like flowers.
Except we wear our wedding bands on our left hand, and these coded black rings are worn on the right hand.
@@R.F.9847well, here in Germany we wear wedding bands on our right hand.. so 🤷♂
@@o_g_re_as a left handed American I approve
Doctors & nurses say, "Patient made the O sign ." for a peaceful death, and,
"Patient made the Q sign." for a hard death.
O sign mouth open
Q sign mouth open tongue hanging out
Generally a Q indicates deceased
From a dr
During my Airforce days as an avionics tech on jet aircraft, we had some codes. "CND" meant "could not duplicate", if the tech couldn't get the reported problem to appear. A "Short Between The Headsets" indicated the pilot was the problem. "Midnight Acquisition" meant we visited another maintenance unit's turf at night, to "liberate" some part that we needed and didn't want to have to await delivery through the supply system. 😅
Not my area, but I've come across 'problem with flight stick actuator' as another way to say 'short between the headsets'.
Nicely said👍🙊
We “tactically acquired” some items in the Marines. Sometimes from the PRQ-E4’s.
1187-B
Loose nut behind control.
There was also another one for "bird strike damage" that we would use as well, but I don't remember the number, 979, or something like that.
US Navy.
Another code used on the London Underground is ‘one under’. This means that unfortunately someone has fallen on the tracks and has been run over by a train
Holy shoot!!! 😱
Lots doing the train thing atm.
24:15 Imagine if it's literally just a random sequence of letters and the designers just wanted to troll everyone.
My thought as well. Having three hidden codes to decrypt and watching all those specialist going nuts over not finding a solution to the fourth one would be one of the funniest way to troll an inteligence agency; they wouldn't be able to atop trying.
I'm sure no one will believe this, but yours truly is among the best codebreakers in human history.
It's a troll. There is no code.
Idk, i disagree with the people in these comments saying revealing the codes is a mistake. Coz knowing the codes isnt the problem. its how you, as a person, react to them. If you hear "inspector sands" and start screaming "omg that means fiirreee everyone get out!!" Then ofc thats gonna be bad and cause panic. But if you hear it but still ignore it and act normal then there wont be any issues. So yeah, knowing the codes isnt bad. Its how you react to them if you hear them irl.
Now, you know them ... but what about in 10 minutes? do you still know it then? what about tomorrow or in a week, or next year when you actually go to London?
@@NEEEEEEEEEEEEEEJ exactly that too! People are too sassy over codes in a youtube video, like, chill 😂 like I said, knowing them or not isn't an issue 😂
It’s crazy how I know about the criminals marking houses to hit 😭. Thank god I came along way
I have seen Bill W's friends in action. It works.
When I lived in Milwaukee I worked for Miller, and we would respond to those pages so we could introduce those people to a crisp refreshing frosty golden Miller Genuine Draft.
Working at a pet store, if a pet is loose and running around freely, we say "Code Fluffy" so we don't alarm any customers. It is used fairly often. Another one we use is "Code Timmy", which means a child is missing in the store. This one, thankfully, i've never heard or used.
Code fluffy?! That is to cute.
The FLK designation usually means there is probably a neurological problem with the child that may indicate a problem that will affect learning and/or motor or cognitive issues. Often these problems aren’t real obvious, but show up as something just being off
I have seen a video about kryptos and as it turns out, five codes are hidden within, only four of which been solved. So interesting!
I'm a friend of Bill W as well. Otherwise known as AA or alcoholics anonymous. Thanks for the mention :) .😊
I had a gentleman ask me if I was in the rooms, I had no clue what he was talking about and then he apologized and told me it was aa/na meetings. I never heard anyone else ever say that again and I don’t ever remember anyone asking if I/someone knew bill w. Either. I have been around numerous people who are or were in meetings.
What if they actually have a Dr. Brown on staff?
I guess they would call for Dr. Martin Brown or Dr. M. Brown 🤷
They use the doctor's first name as well. "Paging Dr. Adam Brown to Pediatrics."
Then they're gonna get that patient up to 88mph.
just remember your on a planet thats e olving revolvi g at 900 miles a hour....etc etc
@@cl844"Paging Dr. Emmett Brown"
I've worked in IT for almost 20 years, and I don't know that I've ever actually seen a help desk person use pebcak or id-10-t, or similar, with an actual user. It's fun to talk or joke about sometimes, but a huge majority of folks are just decent people and treat others with respect and a lot of patience.
I've been tech support or support-adjacent most of my working life (more than 30 years at this point), and I've also never heard anyone use PEBCAK or ID-10T to a user. I've heard them use it to EACH OTHER as shorthand for "user error, not worth going into detail" many times. "That guy I transferred to you, what did his problem turn out to be?" "Oh, ID-10T error." I've also heard a borrowing from aviation terminology used: "Controlled flight into terrain" for problems like a user putting the command to open a terminal window in their .profile or .cshrc file.
I've seen it a couple times but it's such a risk to do it's rare. One got a person that was very unpleasant so had him enter a code in one of the advance settings that was the correct code then # to tell it to ignore everything after that then F1_1ck1ngID10T and he called back to let a supervisor know he is not. The other was an agent describing what the person was experiencing and another rep jokingly said it sounded like an ID10T error which the agent relayed to the caller not knowing what it meant but the caller did. Apparently that became a very spirited sup call.
19:54 "This gives the staff the all clear while allowing the customers to go back in and enjoy their meatballs blissfully unaware that they where briefly at risk of blowing up" i know what you actually meant but the first thought that came to mind was that the meatballs where the ones at risk of blowing up lol
I know about a few of the code phrases used by medical personnel since my dad is a paramedic and my older sister is a nurse. They have no shortage of stories from their jobs, and some were really funny 😅
I’m an old retired nurse myself and definitely have many stories 🤦🏻♀️🤦🏻♀️ definitely never knew what your shift would be like
Just go ahead and mark your house with "nothing worth steeling"😅
Until you find out that the "thieves' cant dialect" in your area is nonstandard, and you just marked your house as "rich person lives here".
Be amazed uploads everytime when we are bored
Fr like I’m just sitting here in my room
@@KmP12 i just ate and had nothing else to do lol
Trueeee
rather the other way
While in the hospital with family visiting my grandmother, the skies started getting really dark and there were tornado watches starting in the area. In this wing, all the patient rooms had one side entirely of glass so we had a great view of the darkening skies. We asked a nurse about where we'd go if there was a tornado. She said there's no tornado danger right now, if there were a tornado warning they'd have announced a "CODE WHITE" over the intercom. Not 30 seconds later, we hear Code White! Code White! over the intercom. Instantly the staff scramble to roll all the patients into the hallway and close the room doors, to protect us from flying glass if windows start to get broken. Nobody was told what was happening, and we may have been the only patients/visitors that knew what was going on. I don't know if that's a universal hospital code but it fits in with their other "color codes" like Code Blue etc.
No it's not a universal code. I believe each hospital/medical facility has their own sets of codes. Google some different medical facilities if you're that interested. 🏥
FLK: Oh look whos talking FLD/FLN
EDIT: There is also Irish rings where it shows men if the women is single or not
Claddagh rings is the name of them. They are specifically designed with a heart held within two hands. They are worn with the point of the heart facing you, meaning that you are spoken for, or with the point of the heart facing away from you indicating that you are available. The rings are from a place in Ireland called Co Galway. I hope that makes sense, Google the Claddagh ring for an image.
Called a claggagh ring. A heart withtwo hands around it, heart pointed towards you means your taken, poi ted out means single.
@tracycameron2580 Yeah I just could not remember the name of the ring lol
9:46 the most British accent ever
The FBI doesn't investigate currency crimes that's the Secret Service
True, but they’ll employ the FBI to do the raid of your place when they find out!!
Nice Coding but the Deaf Patient💀💀💀
No need to Code
Still need codes for those who hear , and have a brain .
I also don't need code words because everybody is going to die one day and everybody gets ill at some point. So please don't use code words, just talk about me and accept that words are just words. We put meaning into words if we want to put meaning into them.
@@davidarundel6187 do you actually know what "deaf" is
I used to work for Simplex (later Tyco, not the toy company) who made fire alarm systems. I worked on the audio portion of the system and there were two fire alarm announcements for a hospital. Doctor Firestone was one and the other was Doctor Blaze. It's up to the hospital to determine which one means what.
Pebkac and ID-10-T made me laugh. I have to use theses on people!
ive always seen those too as a filter I.E. if the user knows what your saying they are probably smart enough to understand some other questions or instructions you might have to fix the system
FLK is the short form of funny looking kid.
Everyone.... I don't think we're meant to know this.
Meh.... I think most of us will forget all these in a couple of weeks.
😭🤣
Got one for ya. If you hear "Mr. Leo to (location)" over the airport intercom, they're calling a cop to that location. Had one funny situation where a passenger by the name Leo was being paged like this.
One of the hospitals I was at used "Dr. Armstrong come to X location" if one of the patients got out of control. All free strong male staff would go running to that location. All hospitals in general use codes.
What if there was an actual Dr. Armstrong working there?
@@robertabarnhart6240 They would use something else.
@@robertabarnhart6240 Then they'd come up with another code. Healthcare codes aren't universal. In a behavioral facility I used to work in, code green was used for violent residents, code white for escape, etc. Code red and code blue are the only two that are truly universal.
I worked at ikea, and the store I was at would say 'code 1000' to signify a possible store evacuation. Shortly followed by a robotic voice saying 'your attention please, we're experiencing technical difficulties and need you to make an immediate exit from the store. Our staff will guide you to the nearest exit.'
…and the labyrinthine nature of Ikea stores means you might be out within a couple of hours. 😁
@@GeoffRiley I wouldve been out 2 seconds flat, seeing as I worked in the parking lot.
At the mental rehab facility I was in in Florida, a code green meant there was a patient being disorderly, a code yellow meant a physical fight, and a code red meant a full on patient uprising, basically a riot. If they said "little" before the color it meant it was in the underage section of the building. I heard all of them at least once...
I was an armorer in the army. I would get a soldier saying their weapon was malfunctioning. After inspecting and firing it, most of the time it was an “operator head spacing issue”. 😂
22:37 Yes. Yes they will. Ask my cousin. 😂😂😂😂
I worked in retail stores and also Authorizations/Fraud Detection for over a decade. If you hear a cashier call for authorization on your credit card for a purchase and they say "Code 10" to the authorizer it means they think the card is stolen or counterfeit. Start running because the cops or security will be there soon!
Or "Department 10" please call...
It's a nice tip😁👍🏼 imma run real fast if that happen
@@Dogeeeee Heck, I don't work for them anymore. Not my circus, not my monkeys. Another tip would be that if you are using a stolen card and stolen ID to make a purchase, don't just memorize the date of birth on the ID. Make sure you know how old that person is too. They're going to ask the date of birth, then a few more questions and then "And, how old are you today?" I lost count of the number of folks I have caught using that one simple trick!
@@Dogeeeee I left another tip but it looks like yt got rid of it so I'm gonna try again. If you happen to be in possession of a piece of plastic belonging to another and you wish to use it make sure to know both the date of birth and the AGE of the owner. Everyone memorizes the dob but they always forget to figure out the age!
Good to know
My dad had a secret code with his friend when they were kids. They'd whistle to each other to communicate if they could visit or not. My dad showed the whistle. It was REALLY REALLY LOUD.
my dad used whistle really really loud to tell us when to come home at sundown as kids, even if we were a mile away we could hear it, it was crazy, I can't even whistle at all.
Watching this on a friends phone. I don’t want them to know “I know”
She said “do you rizz me”
I tell her only Skibidi
I only love my gyatt Ohio I’m sorry :(
I work at a Walmart. Everyone probably knows about Code Adam, missing child. But most of the rest of the codes are colors. Code White, for example, is a customer accident. And if you hear a cashier talk about Bob and Lisa, it's a reminder to check the bottom of the basket and look inside all.😊
Damn , life sucks when you think it sucks , but when you look at the bright and positive side you will be amazed on how happy you can actually be
As an EMT, I can tell you different hospitals use different codes. I've heard code silver or also "Dr. Armstrong" for a security alert
As the child of 2 doctors, I must say this. Most doctors don’t talk about patients like that in front of them. (At least in the hospitals I’ve worked in and my parents have worked in) And the term FLK is usually referring to people with fetal alcohol syndrome. Which is a syndrome that occurs if a mother drinks alcohol while pregnant. It is different the amount of alcohol consumption required to cause FAS in every woman. Some it takes 50 rounds, others it could just be a single cup. Best just to say away from alcohol all together when pregnant. Yes FLK does still mean funny looking kid, but if you look up what FAS does to the facial structure you can see why
My understanding of fetal alcohol syndrome is that it is caused by when the mother drink's alcohol, which is why one "timely" drink may cause it or one of fifty drinks over time may cause it. Just my 2 cents!
Yes that is correct, it is more common in women who have children in their 30s and older. Having children in the at time also just increases the likelihood of developmental disorders in general. Mainly Down syndrome
Nah. The ultimate secret code is what the Unabomber left behind. Try to solve THAT one! If you can, you may very well solve Kryptos plate 4
Dude voice over is the best
Gathering of your Facts is amazing ❤❤
I worked in a hospital for almost forty years. Various codes were called, or doctors were paged, that all mean different things. The area I worked in had some extra terms, like HPM or HPF (highly perfumed male/female) to warn staff of patients who were nauseatingly drenched in scent. (This can be overwhelming if you take a patient into a small treatment room.)
The lil' Be Amazed dude is too adorable for words..... I just want to hug him!!!! 😊❤
I'm from Glasgow.. If I'm ever in the theatre and hear that I know there will be a fire lmaooo thanks Be Amazed for teaching me a part of my homes history ❤️
Where I work if you hear on the radio Red flag. Usually means person of high interest of risk. Either by harm or theft.
The hobo code wasn't secret. I actually read all about it in a reading book in 4th grade. That sparked my interest in secret codes. That same book told about other similar codes, such as ones used in the wilderness to mark trails.
Edgar Allen Poe wrote about codes. Sherlock Holmes had a case about the code of the dancing men, which was a simple substitution cipher.
On the police scanner, alcohol would be referred to as "ETOH" for ethyl alcohol (drinking alcohol). If there was a drunk driver, they would sometimes say that there was a short circuit between the steering wheel and the gas pedal. All of us older people learned "10-4" from the TV show "Highway Patrol" with Broderick Crawford. In the 1970s, one of the bread companies had a date code consisting of colored twist ties. Bread delivered on Monday had a blue twist tie, green was Tuesday, etc. The local sandwich company had a single letter on each sandwich telling the day it was made for. The code was the word "BREAD" spelled backward, so Monday's sandwiches had "D" stamped on the label. We learned about Morse code in school also.
Suggesting that the issue is not with the computer but with the person isn't an insult. Next time that user calls the other members would be aware and handle them accordingly. Even so, it isn't any more of an insult than calling a baby FLK
I've heard PEBKAC = "Problem Exists Between Keyboard And Chair".
Hospital codes can vary drastically. An urgent call for security at my first job was a code orange. At my current job you dial their number or press the button on the security device we all wear. Code red at my 1st job meant there was a trauma coming in where the patient may need a large amount of blood. It signaled the blood bank to get it prepared. Code red at my current job means there’s a fire or smoke. Hospital alert codes are definitely not one size fits all.
And there’s no widely used acronym for ugly kids 🤦🏽♀️ Nor would any smart physician say it in front of the parents. Not only is it rude, but it’s unethical and could get them fired.
RHM and FLK got me cracking up XD XD
Flk I know (retired RN)
Once a Dr accidentally charted it! Thankfully I was able to stop him and that was the first orders on the page so he was able to rewrite it. It just means the baby has a syndrome that isn't known.
Inspector sans ? Man, undertale sure is multifaceted.
Be Amazed is truly AWESOME. Keep these videos coming 😊❤
Be amazed is the best factual TH-camr
Bro on the watch list 💀
Bro on the google fbi
Bro on the apple fbi
PEBCAK and ID10T Error are both just humorous IT jokes
I was a "Code Blue" during a hospital stay in 2002. Four nurses with a "Crash Cart" flew into my room.
My oh my did I get attention!! At least I'm still alive...
The squawk of 7700 isn’t a secret. You can set FlightRadar24 to alert you when an aircraft squawks that.
What if there's actually a Dr. Brown and Dr. Firestone that's needed in certain hospital area?
Then they would say “PAGING Dr. So-and-so” instead of “CODE Brown or Code Firestone”.
OR, just use the Doctor’s first name or initial in their PA call
A long time ago one of the local radio stations I listened to (I think it was Piccadilly Radio in Manchester, UK) used to play 'Flowers In The Rain' to signal that there was a fire in the studio.
I've read a few tales from Cast Members, their code system is quite comprehensive but doesn't, and can't, cover _every_ possible scenario. They have to make up appropriately in-character ones when things have gone _really_ off-script... like if there's a kid running around without pants, "Piglet's on the loose" is the phrase one CM came up with on the fly for it.
Also another tech support one to add to the list: "Layer 8 Problem", based on the OSI networking stack, Layer 1 is physical wires, up to Layer 7 being the user-facing app. Layer 8... is _the user_ (so like PEBKAC or ID-10-T, but fancier). Sometimes it's extrapolated further, if Layer 8 is the user, Layer 9 is the user's boss, or HR, and so on.
I use to work at lowes and we hand a simple code that want anything important but code 50 means they want help loading a product
16:00 Regarding Herpes, the numbers SHOULD be ‘44, 33, 777, 7, 33, 7777’ using a cell that had only a numeric keypad. Correct?
Well, there's something called T9.
@@some1-1038😲🥹The predictive feature! I remember that now.
I've read that FLK is no longer used in records. Now that patients have access to their medical records on-line such slang expressions may be frowned on. That doesn't mean they're completely gone. It's just that if you see the same expression used in records by several doctors you can usually find out if they have a special meaning. For example, "pleasant lady" means a patient was communicative and responded to social cues,
OMG I tested positive for genital warst after having a horrible outbreak, and feel the same way you described in your interview. Listening to you sharebyour overcome experience gave me the glim of hope I needed to hear. I am glad that there is people like you out there who just want to help other people who are struggling with the same issues. Your words gave me the courage I needed to hear today to know that it's ok. I can still be myself and now I'm enjoy my life the way I am supposed to. it is a blessing i came arcsso you dr odija on TH-cam !!.
11:45 Remote health monitoring (RHM) refers to using remote devices and telehealth technology to monitor a patient's health status.
In the 90s I had copied some money to send to a sweepstakes that kept dragging on the prize announcement and I had no problem. It turned out just fine. So it's probably just newer bills and newer copiers.
I thought the same thing. If you have an older printer/scanner/copier that still works, BEFORE it could recognize the lines and circles on currency, then it should be able to make copies or print it out
Age matters as anti copy tech gets added to stop people from doing what they do.
Similarly it used to be easy to copy rented VHS tapes but later VCRs added anti-copy systems so official tapes would produce unwatchable copies.
I read an anecdote from a Disney World employee. They'd seen a naked toddler take a dump in public and run off. Not remembering the proper code, they reported, "We have a Code Pooh, and Piglet is on the loose."
I love watching your videos they are always amazing and I love learning about new things ❤
That tech support one reminded me of the time a friend of mine had to call tech support on a problem with his old computer that he was having a problem he never encountered before, and the tech support employee said the term PEBKAC over the phone. So, he actually said ID-10-T over the phone. The tech support employee was actually more helpful and respectful after that.
Great content keep it up
At 22:33 FBI is stated but it's the Secret Service that handle counterfeiting.
You know, when you watch Be Amazed once, you can't stop watching! 🤩📺 It's just that captivating!
I swear I heard " time check, time check"... " all clocks have been reset" , shopping at Walmart a few years ago
woah, thankfully sounds like a false alarm!
11:49 upper left message - Thanks, now I need to find this image somehow and find out who the F is pregnant 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
In star wars code : "Execute order 66" means, kill all the jedi !
Just so you know... The codes you mentioned for cruies ships are only with some American companies. I've worked on cruise ships for many years as a musician and although I'm american I've mainly worked with European companies. And although these things happened. The codes were different. For instance on one of the Thomson (Now Marella) ships which was British and the ship was regestered in Greece. The code for a medical Emergency was code Alpha. AND... unless something has changed. If a passenger dies they have to bring the body back to the port of origin.
The " flowers " on the Australian bank note you show is actually The Wattle . A native flower of Australia that koalas 🐨 sometimes eat ( a koala's version of dessert 🍨 ) . ♑️✍️🇳🇴🇦🇺
Love your video. Be Amazed and keep up the great work you are awesome
LOL "Secret Codes You Aren't Meant to Know" and the commercial was AFK Journey... not really a code that you aren't meant to know, but a code that many people these days may not understand as we are never truly AFK anymore.
Traveling folks still Mark locations with information about whether it's possible to get food at places whether it's possible to get work at certain places. Whether it's possible to panhandle where it's legally and handled all kinds of shit.
3:43 you get D E A T H bė æmāžẽð
DOCTOR = Declaration of Conformity to Omit Responsibility.
Thanks for the upload!
I need to go back and have a long talk with the doctor. Because i have certainly heard RHM before in my presence i thought i had something. Not knowing these creeps where... I have unsettled business to attend to. Code 1 is about to get damn nasty. Thanks for the heads up be amazed.
But do you have an FLK?? I’d be more concerned about that than worrying about whether you’re a MILF
:o !
Yeah for real those codes are super disrespectful and have me now disliking doctors 100x more. Already had little respect for them but those codes are downright disgusting. 😥