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tbrownaw

7,255 karmajoined 17 anni fa
Also [email protected] on email. (Or @tbrownaw on Twitter, but I'm more likely to actually see an email.)

Whenever possible, teach the computer to do your work for you.

comments

tbrownaw
·5 giorni fa·discuss
> just make even cheapest CPUs support 8/16 DDR4 channels

Isn't adding pins kind of expensive?
tbrownaw
·9 giorni fa·discuss
> Also, the manufacturers can never be held responsible, because they have legal immunity for the COVID vaccines.

Since there was basically a soft mandate for it, especially on top of some of the usual official red tape being cut, the manufacturers really wouldn't be the appropriate party to hold responsibility. That'd be the government.
tbrownaw
·9 giorni fa·discuss
I suspect that those other groups are largely not trying to generate fiction.
tbrownaw
·9 giorni fa·discuss
I've heard that word used to refer to (still) pictures, and in more casual/offhand use to refer to text. I don't understand it as being quite so restricted by media-type as you seem to.
tbrownaw
·12 giorni fa·discuss
> The unit needs to be tied to the relative usefulness for its time.

That requires baking in assumptions, and makes the data less general.

You can go from $/gb to $/usefulness fairly trivially by adding assumptions, but you can't go the other way.
tbrownaw
·12 giorni fa·discuss
It could also be that business conditions provided a convenient opportunity to run some experiments.
tbrownaw
·12 giorni fa·discuss
> If you've ever worked in hospitality or retail, you'll know that managers will call/contact you at all hours to make sure they have coverage. It's irritating.

I vaguely remember a few years ago there was some news pushing new scheduling software that was supposed to help make schedules more predictable, and how it wasn't working to full potential because store managers wouldn't trust it.

But I don't think the bill in question here would actually do anything to affect that issue?
tbrownaw
·12 giorni fa·discuss
I don't really see any other interpretation of saying that if someone says you're wrong you should update your worldview. There isn't much that could be other than a call for unquestioning belief.
tbrownaw
·12 giorni fa·discuss
The comment I was replying to appears to be a call for unquestioning belief. Which is the far extreme in the opposite direction.
tbrownaw
·12 giorni fa·discuss
> Someone is telling you the world works differently for them than it does for you, which means you've got an opportunity to learn something new about the world and expand your model.

...than it does for you, which means there's an opportunity for someone to expend resources verifying and characterizing the claimed difference.
tbrownaw
·13 giorni fa·discuss
> a lot of people who are victims of

Are there statistics somewhere about what percent of people in various roles get asked but know they're safe declining, or mistakenly think they can't decline, or correctly think they'd get in trouble for declining, or don't get asked but think they have to anyway?
tbrownaw
·13 giorni fa·discuss
> Indeed. If $job is not willing to buy and hand me a "work phone" then they are out of luck

My employer has a BYOD program with a monthly stipend that is somewhat more than my phone provider (Fi) charges for an extra line. I think doing this with a non-flagship phone would probably pay for itself in a year or two.
tbrownaw
·13 giorni fa·discuss
> Maybe I just have abnormal leverage

It could also be a personality thing or a worldview thing.

Some people just have a hard time saying "no" in general, or are constantly looking for reasons to jump at shadows.

Or there's people teaching that the world runs on class warfare and anyone with any amount of power is always looking for an excuse to abuse that power.
tbrownaw
·13 giorni fa·discuss
How would this interact with existing rules around exempt / non-exempt (roughly, salaried vs hourly) employees?

I would think it would already be expensive to make someone paid by the hour do extra work stuff during time they're not already being paid for.
tbrownaw
·13 giorni fa·discuss
> I’m unsure what you mean by gated free speech zones. Sometimes specific areas are closed to vehicle traffic for a protest, but that doesn’t mean those locations are exclusively for protesting. In general protest is allowed wherever, provided it’s not on private property.

There are occasionally attempts to keep protestors away from wahtever's being protested. They tend to not do well when challenged in court.

Here's a couple (opinionated, obviously) articles:

https://www.fire.org/research-learn/free-speech-zones

https://firstamendment.mtsu.edu/article/free-speech-zones/
tbrownaw
·15 giorni fa·discuss
Still doing what, flagging attempts to derail threads into off-topic flamefests?
tbrownaw
·15 giorni fa·discuss
How so? I would think that "whose fault is it" and "what can be done about it" are independent questions.
tbrownaw
·16 giorni fa·discuss
Are you implying that leaning on standard tooling is more arrogant than "hold my beer"?
tbrownaw
·16 giorni fa·discuss
> The reason people reach for Kubernetes (and similar) is because they need to scale past that single host dependency.

I have some stuff on single-node k3s. Because it's standard so I don't have to care.
tbrownaw
·17 giorni fa·discuss
Here's an older article, talking about how the reason the authorities found this person was because one of the other defendants called him from jail to ask him to remove things: https://www.foxnews.com/us/man-busted-anti-government-anti-t...

I would expect that at that point it ought to stop mattering whether the evidence being hidden actually would have been useful evidence.