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ansgri

1,326 karmajoined 17 anni fa

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ansgri
·3 giorni fa·discuss
Those are not as good as they seem to be. I once had a g-shock mudmaster, seemingly an absolutely overbuilt thing, and it was resetting randomly in wet conditions. Maybe that could be fixed on warranty and it would work next 50 years flawlessly, but it didn’t inspire any confidence in that brand. They re-positioned themselves as a loud fashion brand, not a tool watch manufacturer.
ansgri
·mese scorso·discuss
Thanks, I was hoping for this sort of a response. Ordered a Miyoo Mini Plus.
ansgri
·2 mesi fa·discuss
PS3 was one of my favorite games, maybe it's time to get myself one of those pocket emulators and play PS4 finally.
ansgri
·2 mesi fa·discuss
[dead]
ansgri
·2 mesi fa·discuss
You underestimate the non-computerized part of humanity. Even with automated plants building other automated plants the propagation speed will be highly constrained by natural factors, plain unavailability of resources, and xenophobic nature of humanity of course.
ansgri
·2 mesi fa·discuss
That is good if you can count on your cost of living being predictable. It's not for many people, even for relatively well-off ones: you may earn a lot for your area but being an immigrant without a permanent enough status in your current country, and your home country which you always have a right to return to may be unsafe or highly undesirable for whatever reason. So you need to consider the emergency of moving somewhere in a political and legal climate not known in advance.

Thus it becomes a more difficult choice what proportion to bet on stability of the current living situation, and what on long-term savings for emergencies which look quite probable but still unmeasurable. And the latter is complicated by absence of reliable and relatively liquid investment opportunities. All in all, fun to be from a sanctioned country.
ansgri
·3 mesi fa·discuss
One of the reasons I can see is it’s much easier to say “we don’t play this game” than get a lot of negative press for selective openness and breaking compatibility of non-public interfaces. Maybe it’s even more important internally, as it enables new kind of internal discussions distracting from priority work.
ansgri
·3 mesi fa·discuss
It's likely easier to publish genuine research if you have knowledge and rigor to properly synthesize the data. It's not as common as you'd think, and a good simulator is easily publishable, at least was some years ago in domains I'm familiar with.
ansgri
·3 mesi fa·discuss
Which one? The classic QtWidgets, which implements consistent controls but sometimes talked about as deprecated (same as WinForms), or QML, which is "modern" and "actively developed" but does not provide native look and feel and requires (or at least used to require) a lot of manual work to support proper keyboard control and accessibility?
ansgri
·4 mesi fa·discuss
Would be more practical to have a single 50-300W AC-DC 24V PSU per room or group of rooms, then pull relatively short DC cables to each light. A multichannel light controller could also be placed nearby, and then if you need fully-featured brightness and color control, only a small PWM amplifier could be placed at each light if distance from controller to each light is too long to transmit PWM power directly.
ansgri
·4 mesi fa·discuss
Good illustration that a seemingly simple feature could require a ton of functionality under the hood. Would be nice to have this in Python.
ansgri
·4 mesi fa·discuss
Isn’t it the only common variant of 4.4mm? Since portable balanced audio is audiophile-adjacent, no wonder it includes the common ground of dubious utility.
ansgri
·4 mesi fa·discuss
What’s 1.44 mm connector in this context? Common sizes for headphones are 2.5, 3.5 and (lately) 4.4 mm
ansgri
·4 mesi fa·discuss
Rechecked now, PEX became way more accessible it seems. Rehau-style toolkits used to cost several hundreds.
ansgri
·4 mesi fa·discuss
No, PEX is different. PEX is flexible, sometimes more convenient but requires more specialized and expensive tools to install properly.
ansgri
·4 mesi fa·discuss
Polypropylene is great: it revolutionized residential plumbing, at least in countries that adopted it (apparently not the US). With PP tubes you can weld any complex plumbing with like $50 worth of tools and minimum skills. The only drawback is significant thermal expansion, but they’re flexible enough that they won’t break even if you forget to design around that.
ansgri
·4 mesi fa·discuss
I feel like half of junior programmers are susceptible to this.
ansgri
·4 mesi fa·discuss
Unfortunately yes. Some mobile games are 30+ GB (and this is probably the major reason for increasing minimum storage), high-res videos take any amount of space and are slow to sync with cloud, in-app downloaded data caches are routinely 2-5 GB each in addition to apps themselves.
ansgri
·5 mesi fa·discuss
Absolutely. Design parametric families of patterns, 3d-scan the person, let customer adjust with live preview, laser cut, then fully automated or low-skill assembly. Probably not currently economical like many things involving physical world manipulation, but without obvious roadblocks.
ansgri
·5 mesi fa·discuss
Russian infra doesn’t suck that much, I guess it was overbuilt in soviet times. Armenian, on the oner hand… But they’re “societally prepared” in the sense that repairs are quick usually, and there are even some upgrades recently.