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noonespecial
·7 lat temu·discuss
"Order Now" ->

Too Many Requests

Guru Meditation:

XID: 2262329

Props for an error page that tickled my nostalgia in a most geeky way.
noonespecial
·7 lat temu·discuss
I was kind of hoping the Tesla pickup was going to be a reality. I was thinking of a cross between A model 3 and an F150 and was legitimately excited.

If this is the "Tesla Pickup" count me as bitterly disappointed.
noonespecial
·7 lat temu·discuss
By "taken" do they maybe mean "validated"?

Ideas are executed not "owned". The proof is in the doing.
noonespecial
·7 lat temu·discuss
Child Protective Services is the thing I've most feared as a parent. Getting caught up in that system is about the worst thing that can happen to a child.
noonespecial
·7 lat temu·discuss
There are plenty of types searches where I'm now viscerally afraid to click on the results lest it result in a clusterbomb of pages I can't close without multiple dialog boxes shooting out all over. Ublock helps but muscle memory is long.
noonespecial
·7 lat temu·discuss
Is it bad that the more spent on the audit and the larger the company the less I trust the results?
noonespecial
·7 lat temu·discuss
The managers could walk over and ask them.

If you create a system to measure butt-time in a seat coding, you're going to get lots and lots of butts in seats coding. This may not necessarily result in a product.
noonespecial
·7 lat temu·discuss
they have innate understanding that being observed working is more valuable than the results of their work.

I've seen coders who knew this by heart forget this less than 5 years after entering management and become champions of forcing everybody into the office for 8:30 stand-ups and time tracking systems that enforce minute by minute "project accountability".

I don't know exactly how this happens, all I know is its like a damn force of nature. The only thing I've ever seen kill morale and tank projects faster is random periodic layoffs.
noonespecial
·7 lat temu·discuss
People invariable ask a form of this question every time an impressive project like this is posted.

For what its worth(1), I think that "learn a bunch of stuff -> go build something cool on the first try" isn't quite the right approach. I think you have to set for yourself a series of tasks and then fight like hell to figure out how to accomplish them. Start with a single blinking led. Just google "how to blink an led" and try to do it a few different ways.

In short the only "material" you might use to get started is google, by typing in "how do I..." while chasing modest goals that look like they might be in roughly the right direction. If there is a magic book out there that will "teach you electronics", I haven't found it yet. It sounds a lot like the sort of book that might "teach you astronauting".

"Electronics" is broad enough that it might be more like learning a language than learning a skill.

(1)My own meandering opinion
noonespecial
·8 lat temu·discuss
Postel's law: "an implementation should be conservative in its sending behavior, and liberal in its receiving behavior"

Hope for the best but expect the worst.
noonespecial
·9 lat temu·discuss
It seems no more or less anthropomorphic than to say a corporation is motivated by "greed".

Legal departments are like nervous little dogs who bark at everything. The CEO is the one who has to decide if the potential loss in PR is worth the upside of any given legal action (this case is a good example where it probably wasn't).

The lawyers on staff will do because they can sometimes to justify their jobs (or on retainer will do because billable hours). The CEO has to decide if they should.
noonespecial
·9 lat temu·discuss
It's because legal departments are not capitalists. They're a kind of ultra-conservative entity motivated entirely by fear/anger of any perceived change.

What we have here is a COO/CEO asleep at the wheel. One of the CEOs most important jobs is to watch the legal department for signs they're about to draw the old foot-gun and start playing "this little piggy" with company toes.
noonespecial
·9 lat temu·discuss
Really? I've found the opposite. TP-Link has managed to match recent Ubiquiti's on performance and beaten them on price, but hasn't tried to ram a bunch of useless cloud crap down my throat when all I want is a simple AP.
noonespecial
·9 lat temu·discuss
>...he represents a future where we can do things we thought were just dreams

He does more than just represent. He makes smart people believe that hard things are possible and that it's going to be worth it to try.

A little bit of reality distortion can be a good thing, especially when reality is tending to suck.
noonespecial
·9 lat temu·discuss
Rolex, more than anything, makes me optimistic about the "rise of the machines" taking everyone's jobs. There is no reason whatsoever for Rolex watches to exist besides that they make people happy. As a timekeeper, a $20 timex beats them in every way, but as art they are unmatched.

Rolex is a giant art project that employs thousands and makes millions happy. That people are willing to pay for this art and the way it is produced is profoundly hopeful.
noonespecial
·10 lat temu·discuss
>>We need to fundamentally change how humans live on this planet

Don't worry. As the climate changes, it will fundamentally change how humans live on this planet. Oh you wanted to choose how we change. Well, then, I share your pessimism.
noonespecial
·11 lat temu·discuss
I'm literally going to print that page and hang it over the cutter. Thanks.

Note: That page does say in the second paragraph: "It is not always obvious which materials will work - for example: Polycarbonate/Lexan produces flames and lethal chlorine gas which will rapidly corrode this $40,000 machine into uselessness and which is extremely hazardous to the health of people nearby." That sounds like its in shouting distance of the Epilog guy's warning.
noonespecial
·11 lat temu·discuss
The Lexan inlays are laser cut to a precise, water resistant fit (from Rideye campaign page)

A little off topic but the Epilog guy told us never cut Lexan or any polycarbonate plastic because it makes a chloride gas thats dangerous to humans and destructive to the laser. But lexan rocks as a building material... So FUD? or does it require special considerations?
noonespecial
·12 lat temu·discuss
I'm not sure Bob ever noticed. He was too busy painting.
noonespecial
·12 lat temu·discuss
I'd second what others have said and go with a micro like an avr or a pic. Tons of open source support and a small system you can totally "own" will help you understand not just the code but how computers execute code at the lowest human-legible level.