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eysquared

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A cup of coffee for depression treatment has better results than microdosing

wired.com
3 points·by eysquared·5 เดือนที่ผ่านมา·0 comments

Trump suspends trade loophole for cheap online retailers globally

arstechnica.com
3 points·by eysquared·12 เดือนที่ผ่านมา·0 comments

US recommends encrypted messaging as Chinese hackers linger in telecom networks

arstechnica.com
13 points·by eysquared·2 ปีที่แล้ว·1 comments

Pop Culture

wheresyoured.at
2 points·by eysquared·2 ปีที่แล้ว·0 comments

Apple, SpaceX, Microsoft return-to-office mandates drove senior talent away

arstechnica.com
34 points·by eysquared·2 ปีที่แล้ว·54 comments

US government’s reliance on Microsoft means the company gets a free pass

wired.com
67 points·by eysquared·2 ปีที่แล้ว·32 comments

Apple wouldn't let Jon Stewart interview FTC Chair Lina Khan, TV host claims

arstechnica.com
48 points·by eysquared·2 ปีที่แล้ว·2 comments

Google lays off "hundreds" more as ad division switches to AI-powered sales

arstechnica.com
34 points·by eysquared·2 ปีที่แล้ว·3 comments

Google to pay Canada's "link tax," drops threat of removing news from search

arstechnica.com
112 points·by eysquared·3 ปีที่แล้ว·3 comments

Google’s head of AR software quits, citing “unstable commitment and vision”

arstechnica.com
78 points·by eysquared·3 ปีที่แล้ว·21 comments

comments

eysquared
·9 เดือนที่ผ่านมา·discuss
My information is largely out of date, but Vega is aimed squarely at Fire devices. I expect LG devices largely use the web based Prime Video app that runs on most living room devices.

LG TVs capabilities and performance from an app developer perspective is... not great.
eysquared
·3 ปีที่แล้ว·discuss
This is near and dear to my own lived experience, having dealt with what should have been a minor fix for Hunter Douglas blinds.

The cord that was attached to the clutch broke and got caught in the mechanism itself. When I disassembled the clutch to retrieve the cord, an internal spring came dislodged and twisted causing the clutch to never function correctly again.

Understanding exactly which part I needed replaced, I contacted Hunter Douglas, who told me to talk to a local rep. My local rep told me they couldn't repair this issue, and I would need to box up my entire window shade and sent it in. The cost was something around $200 for a repair.

I spent a lot of time scouring the internet and came across this site where I purchased the entire clutch for around $30. 5 minutes of swapping a good part for bad and I was back in action.
eysquared
·3 ปีที่แล้ว·discuss
I think this is highly dependent on what your beliefs are pre-trip and how you define what makes you you. I've had many psychedelic experiences and while I often feel greater connection to living things around me, I've never been left with the feeling that my "soul" or anything I'd define as me will exist when I'm gone.
eysquared
·3 ปีที่แล้ว·discuss
I’m a convert to physical buttons for this reason (though I’m not a swimmer).

A Garmin watch that allows for all interactions to be done via easy to find physical buttons and well thought out data screens was a huge improvement for my own use cases.
eysquared
·3 ปีที่แล้ว·discuss
I’m seeing a lot of comments that seem to point to first line management as the problem here. In my own anecdotal experience, I’ve seen a lot more “fake work” come from listless leadership that lacks a true vision for the product. That rolls down to Product Managers that can’t prioritize features and don’t really understand what they’re building or why. Ultimately this leads to engineers and members of the team working on things they don’t believe in or that don’t actually move the needle and are scrapped.

In places like this the engineers and managers closest to the product and customers tend to have a better feel for what to work on, but in a large enough org it’s impossible to align those priorities across teams to get things done. This leads engineers to either POC ideas that aren’t possible in production yet or to focus on smaller features that don’t have dependencies.

The blame there lies solely in upper level leadership who often care more about org size than output.

I’m tired of the messaging around “lazy workers” pointing the finger where it doesn’t belong. Gut from the top if you want to get rid of the problem. It’s not the L5 engineer or the first line manager that’s holding any product back. These people tend to be the most invested in building something in my experience.