I mean, good idea but terminal execution. The hand just has to move opposite to the rotation or even just move to where you’re going to be.
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tooclose104@lemmy.cato
Map Enthusiasts@sopuli.xyz•What Percentage of Salary Is Spent on Renting a One-Bedroom Apartment in European Cities?
3·30 days agoAround 7% for a 5 bedroom house, including property taxes. I got lucky, landing a $106k purchase and then getting a $110k salary a few years later.
I hate my house, but it’s mine and it’s 7% of my base salary. It’s lower than mine and my employers combined contributions to my rpp and rrsp.
I dread my renewal next summer…
tooclose104@lemmy.cato
News@lemmy.world•Republicans push to strip Zohran Mamdani of US citizenship. Is it possible?
2·1 month agoI didn’t even notice that, amazing!
tooclose104@lemmy.cato
News@lemmy.world•Republicans push to strip Zohran Mamdani of US citizenship. Is it possible?
289·1 month agoThis took so long to modify via Gemini but I FTFY, all credit to someone else but it’s a glorious edit.

I’m at one of the latter, so I feel this in my bones. I’ve watched what should have been an innocent config change snowball into a pair of VM clusters shitting back and forth for 2 hours. Implemented strict change control that day. Kind of a pain, but the team learned a lot that day!
A typo in software development or other shell based work could completely ass womp a system in ways that could lose a company lots of money.
Oopsies on prod systems, even with an outage window, can really fuck shit up. Seemingly small mistakes can quickly snowball into systemwide outages.
tooclose104@lemmy.cato
Technology@lemmy.world•Controversial startup's plan to 'sell sunlight' using giant mirrors in space would be 'catastrophic' and 'horrifying,' astronomers warnEnglish
8·2 months agoIt’s the opposite of that plot. In that episode, Mr Burns blocks out the sun in order to force everyone to use more electricity to increase revenue for his nuclear power plant.
Probably not this route lol but I’m picturing a plate of roasted potatoes, a garden salad, a bean salad, surrounding a chicken leg that’s going untouched.
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tooclose104@lemmy.cato
Lemmy Shitpost@lemmy.world•Don't fix the problem just change the parameters
11·2 months agoI just found out my 10yo has been lagging behind in spelling because he’s been using speech-to-text on his school issued iPad for class work. He doesn’t have to think about it or try sounding it out, so of course an unpracticed in-development skill is waning. It’s going to be an interesting parent-teacher meeting coming up.
Right? 2025 on Earth still existed in Star Trek. There’s a non-zero chance you press the button and nothing happens… So you think it didn’t work and push it again only to end up with the BDSM elves…
No it’s not.
From the Oxford dictionary:
obstinate or unreasonable attachment to a belief, opinion, or faction, in particular prejudice against a person or people on the basis of their membership of a particular group.
From the Collins dictionary:
Bigotry is the possession or expression of strong, unreasonable prejudices or opinions.
From vocabulary.com:
A bigot is someone who doesn’t tolerate people of different backgrounds or opinions. Someone who tells a racist joke might be labeled a bigot. A bigot can also be someone who refuses to accept other ideas, as in politics.
Absolutely! Part of my team carpools so this is a very real concern for me lol
I remind my team about their vacation and floater days on a quarterly basis and all them to be used. All I ask for is time for me to pivot as needed and if you have ongoing projects that you reschedule planned meetings, document as you go, and ensure access is available to the rest of the team if needed.
I’ve had employees in the past who I’ve sat down and directly asked them to take time off (paid) because they were burning out and would otherwise push through it. I’ve even reminded some of available leaves of absence for situations in their personal lives.
If the business can’t continue without any one person, then the business isn’t sustainable as-is and that’s not fair to anyone. Hire more people if it’s coverage or train your people if there’s skill gaps. Documentation of systems and processes is also crucial.
tooclose104@lemmy.cato
Privacy@lemmy.ml•Can my school spy on my desktop during an at-home quiz?
11·3 months agoBack in 2006, mine did. My entire program was issued a laptop and it included all the software we needed, including AutoCAD. At the end of the 3-year program we bought it for a dollar.
As 9blb says, this is a networking issue. Considering both your Linux and Windows machines cannot print over LAN or WAN, you should start at the switch.
Does the printer’s port config match that of the Linux and Windows machines? For simplicity, they need to all be on the same VLAN and be access. For accessing machines within the same network, don’t worry about routing traffic to the firewalls or dumping it to the router, that introduces needless complexity on a home network.
If that is true, then check the printer’s network settings. The subnet and IP range need to match that of the Linux and Windows machines, allowing access over the same VLAN. While here, also check for duplicate IPs. If the IP range or subnet is wrong, your traffic will either drop at the switch or get dumped to the router/firewall depending on how you set the routes. If you have duplicated IPs, your network is gonna be confused on where to send the packets and kill whichever route it deems to be an imposter.
If that’s all matching and you’re still getting nowhere, double check your Linux and Windows machines to ensure you have the proper driver’s installed.
tooclose104@lemmy.cato
[Dormant] moved to [email protected]@lemmy.world•Coal miners stuffed in a tiny elevator after a day's work, Belgium, 1920sEnglish
2·4 months agoFresh heading? Gotta scale that to get rid of loose rocks and beware moving machinery. Established area? Already scaled, metal screening installed, and possibly shotcrete added which makes it pretty safe. There’s offices down there, with AC and whatnot. Just no plumbing in the traditional sense. It’s pretty neat, but I definitely still prefer surface.
tooclose104@lemmy.cato
[Dormant] moved to [email protected]@lemmy.world•Coal miners stuffed in a tiny elevator after a day's work, Belgium, 1920sEnglish
4·4 months agoNo praise needed, it’s gold and I’m not doing the hard work. I’m in a support role and work on surface. But thank you anyways!
tooclose104@lemmy.cato
[Dormant] moved to [email protected]@lemmy.world•Coal miners stuffed in a tiny elevator after a day's work, Belgium, 1920sEnglish
13·4 months agoI think the bottom station is around 6400 feet, I’ve only gotten off around 5000 feet but that’s about 2-3 minutes down and probably 4 up. It’s fast enough down that my ears don’t adjust on their own and I have to manually pop my ears about 2-3 times on the way.






This only serves to justify my secret low key paranoia that my like is like The Truman Show… I wish my parents were better about limiting some of the movies I was allowed to watch growing up… Arachnophobia was another lasting damage banger…