I was gonna say, the outlay of capital for a building-wide hydronic system and an evaporative tower, versus each owner be responsible for their AC, I can see why that would be possible.
Particularly if the building is older.
Also, I am curious why there are multiple single condensor units in lieu of multizone units...I guess it is financially easier to purchase one unit at a time.
So, my most recent success has been using pyenv and pipenv.
I install pyenv first, then install any specific point releases I need, then switch to the python version I want to use, and then use pipenv to install dependencies or run commands in the virtual environment.
Anecdotally, I disagree with this, for both lawyers and doctors.
I know several doctors my age and younger that cannot stand using any computer or laptop, while my best friend’s father, a surgeon, had one of the first HP color flatbed scanners (SCSI) and the only person I knew to have an ISDN line.
My cousin is about a decade older than me, and I remember spending the night at his house with his TRS-80 and Apple II computers. He is an attorney.
So, HN doctors here, how ‘computer literate’ are
your colleagues?
I have worked with doctors of varying age groups, including family, and it really just depends. Age is not a factor, it seems some people are averse, and others passionate.
Once you use it with a decent amount of people for work, things just get ‘lost’, because the frequency of messages in a channel is so high, info is missed, or employees working on different shifts need to spend a decent amount of time at the beginning of their day to review all the missed messages, some are relevant, most are not.
As you mentioned, there is also an inclination to send alerts or tasks to a channel, and similarly, the alert gets buried w additional messages, or you want up creating a bunch of ‘alert’ channels that you mute, or become hijacked and people start convos in those channels.
Also, the threading sucks. It is very difficult to get users to use threads.
It took me a bit of time to realize you can make money “out of the money” with options.