[-] [email protected] 0 points 2 months ago

Also they clearly didn't take this guy seriously since he was yelling, "They want to kill me!" before they even touched him. They probably thought he was crying wolf. Better training would mean they wouldn't have used an illegal hold and killed him, they'd probably have taken him seriously if they knew the dangers at that particular moment in time...plus with better training over a long enough period of time people wouldn't be as scared of the cops in the first place so there wouldn't be any miscommunication. It's still clearly the fault of modern policing but you can understand why it happened at least. Super tragic.

[-] [email protected] 19 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

I just got one of these the other day. I picked up an Nvidia Shield because I was tired of my shitty Samsung TV not being able to stream Plex correctly and Google is the only data devil I've made a deal with. I hadn't watched much YouTube on it I guess until last night and I couldn't believe how many ads I saw.

Holy. Shit. YouTube has ads in the middle of fucking videos now? And then I paused and saw another ad and about lost my shit. Immediately looked up how to adblock on Android TV. Jesus it's invasive.

[-] [email protected] -1 points 2 months ago

SAS so I could get more work. Plus it's crazy fast and great for statistics and economics, which is my field. It's also easier to learn for non programmers than Python. It's a great language, and its only real fault is terrible naming constraints. It sucks to be the guy pushing for more C# and Python because no one knows SAS, but at this point the cost is just prohibitive.

[-] [email protected] 3 points 2 months ago

This but FreeCAD!

[-] [email protected] 1 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

YAML might be more readable than JSON, but it's absolutely not easier to work with, either to write from scratch or troubleshoot. And honestly, for my purposes that doesn't even make it easier to read. It's easier to read if I'm showing it to my wife because there are fewer semicolons. As soon as you want to do anything with the information you've read, it's garbage. YAML sucks, and I'll just link to a much better rant than I can ever come up with: https://ruudvanasseldonk.com/2023/01/11/the-yaml-document-from-hell

Second off, if you'd been using Zwave in Home Assistant for many years, you'd know they've changed their integration (no wait! It's an add-on now! No wait, it's also an integration still too!) multiple times, including breaking changes. That's what I'm talking about. Of course I know Zwave is a protocol - it's a protocol that Hubitat supports better. They also support Zigbee better (yes I use both). Admittedly part of that is built in hardware, but also it's a better UI, a consistent UI, and not just... changing how things work so old hardware doesn't work anymore.

I dunno man, we can disagree on HA's choices but maybe make sure you even know what you're talking about before being a dick for no reason. Then again, you opened with being a dick about me being the problem because I "can't grasp YAML" when I said I don't like it so I don't even know why I'm engaging. Just piss off.

[-] [email protected] 4 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

I'd argue it's a bear and I still use it. YAML is just fucking awful and I'm glad they've been hiding it more and more over the years but it's still there. Zwave is still wildly confusing compared to something like a Hubitat which is just plug and play (guess who has to just rebuild his Zwave stuff from scratch). It's also insanely organized where add ons are different than integrations, and are hidden in different menus, as are system functions and just... It's a mess from UX POV. It's also a nightmare to try to interact with the codebase or documentation or even ask questions, much less make a suggestion. As an aside to address the point of the article, I have absolutely zero worry that they will ever forget about power users, because I, and many other power users who have interacted with Paulus on boards before agree he is kind of an asshole who absolutely does not understand why anyone would want to do anything different than how he imagines it - including documentation or UX or whatever. Home Assistant is totally safe for power users.

Now of course I'm not trying to say it's bad, just that it is kind of a bear even for the tech savvy. You can't beat HA for being able to interface with absolutely anything. There's almost always already an integration written. It can do anything, and if you're persistent enough you can kludge together a solution that works in exactly the way you need. You might even be able to hide all the kludge from your spouse. It's also all free, because Paulus and a hundred other devs contribute their time for free and they're amazing for it. Absolutely awesome for power users. But being simple or easy just isn't one of its many, many pros.

[-] [email protected] 4 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

I fell backwards into programming and did it for years before ever needing or encountering a mod operator. It never really came up in statistical programming (SAS) and since I wasn't a CS major I don't think I even learned about it until taking online programming classes for fun. But I know I was a pretty damn good SAS programmer. I never had any issues solving any problems in my field programmatically, but I took a few leet code tests and was completely puzzled before taking said CS classes. The algorithms and common problems just never remotely came up. I never found fizzbuzz particularly relevant in statistics and data CRUD.

Now maybe since SAS is procedural and not OO you'd say it doesn't have typical "programming language features", but I could easily see that experience being common in all kinda of business side programming like R, VBA, maybe JavaScript or Python, etc.

...but anyway obviously I'm not saying its not a good thing for a dev shop to interview on, and if they want someone classically trained then it's probably a perfect question. My quibble is just that you might need to widen your definition of who programs.

[-] [email protected] 2 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

I replaced the washer line on my 2016 Outback. It looked way more complicated than it was, and I think I took the bumper off when I didn't have to. You should look at YouTube. I recall thinking how easy it would be to do it a second time.

[-] [email protected] 2 points 3 months ago

For weird shaped waves like this you can also visit Lake Erie any time of year. Shallows and shore shape and wind combine and you get some absolutely wild waves.

[-] [email protected] 11 points 3 months ago

Have you tried being sexier?

[-] [email protected] 41 points 3 months ago

I was mad at you for calling me a boomer but then I saw my wife's boobs so I feel better.

[-] [email protected] 3 points 3 months ago

I'm unironically interested in trying it, but the ratios seem off at first glance. Too much crunch, not enough chew. Also the hot dog is already salty, so adding a salty pickle means you might need a sweet batter, and certainly more of it.

I think, much like a Chicago style dog, this could be amazing.

view more: ‹ prev next ›

drphungky

joined 1 year ago