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dgriffith

@[email protected]

I’m a technical kinda guy, doing technical kinda stuff.

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dgriffith ,
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Pretty much.

Capable employees don't raise a huge stink.

They quietly put the word out to a few people they know and play along until something interesting appears on the horizon.

Then when they're good and ready they just "suddenly" fuck off to somewhere nicer for them.

dgriffith , (edited )
@dgriffith@aussie.zone avatar

And how if you share a file in Teams and then six months later you want to share a file with the same name to ANYONE else via teams, well that's a big no-can-do. Teams just went ahead and uploaded that file to your "stuff to share" folder in OneDrive and didn't put it in a subfolder unique to the chat, or add a unique prefix or suffix or anything because hey, you'll only ever share a file with a particular name once in your life, right?

And nobody would ever want to share a file with the same name, but different data, right? So Teams can just give the end user the choice between replacing the current file with the new one, or sharing the same one again to these new guys, because there's no possible use case for actually having two files named the same with different information in the file, right?

Nobody would want to share a README.TXT, or Photo001.jpg, or contact.ics, or a zip file of a folder they just downloaded from Teams' SharePoint interface, the file that's automatically called "OneDrive.zip" without the option to change it before saving, more than once, right? Right??

Fuck teams. And fuck Teams(New) too, just for the shitty name.

dgriffith , (edited )
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Generally I bash together the one-off programs in Python and if I discover that my "one off" program is actually being run 4 times a week, that's when I look at switching to a compiled language.

Case in point: I threw together a python program that followed a trajectory in a point cloud and erased a box around the trajectory. Found a python point cloud library, swore at my code (and the library code) for a few hours, tidied up a few point clouds with it, job done.

And then other people in my company also needed to do the same thing and after a few months of occasional use, I rewrote it using C++ and Open3D. A few days of swearing this time (mainly because my C++ is a bit rusty, and Open3D's C++ interface is a sparsely-documented back end to their main python front end).

End result though is that point clouds that took 3 minutes to process before in python now take 10 seconds, and now there's a visualisation widget that shows the effects of the processing so you don't have to open the cloud in another viewer to see that it was ok.

But anyway, like you said, python is good for prototyping, and when you hash out your approach and things are fairly nailed down and now you'd like some speed, jump to a compiled language and reap the benefits.

dgriffith ,
@dgriffith@aussie.zone avatar

Assumption:

Someone crams a 300 watt solar panel onto the roof of their EV and manages to integrate it into the charging system so that it's pretty efficient to use that power.

Numbers:

One hour of good sunshine on the 300 watt panel = 300 watt-hours (Wh).

Average EV energy usage : 200Wh per kilometre these days. Maybe a little more, maybe a little less, depends on how and where you're driving.

Result:

One hour of perfect sunshine hitting the roof of your car equals 1.5 kilometres of extra range, or you can drive your car in a steady-state fashion at a 3-5 kilometres per hour because an EV is more efficient than the average usage at lower speeds.

Conclusion:

Probably better off increasing the storage capacity of the battery as a full day's sunshine will get you about 10 kilometres of range.

dgriffith ,
@dgriffith@aussie.zone avatar

Mmm I'd take Common Sense Skeptic's spaceX videos with about a ton of salt. They've got a real big bug up their ass about spaceX for some reason.

dgriffith , (edited )
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As an Australian, I've found the Fediverse to be nicer and much less repetitive when posts containing these words are blocked.

https://aussie.zone/pictrs/image/53694dcf-9bee-45bb-9790-fdf50532c1a3.jpeg

Of course, that's my choice. Funny how meta doesn't provide a generalised keyword post blocker.... it's almost like they're worried you'd accidentally block too much or something.

And I do like the phrasing. "Here's how to get control back!" Yes, yes, get back your control of an endless algorithmic feed designed to maximise engagement and profit, of course, it's simple!

dgriffith ,
@dgriffith@aussie.zone avatar

It sounds like your sync process can create files, but not rename them afterwards.

That long filename you've got now is likely the temporary name you get while the file is being transferred, once it's fully there it usually gets renamed to what you want it to be.

Go up one level and check the permissions for the directory the files are in. The permissions should be read-write, otherwise it'd not be able to create files in there at all, but check if the "sticky bit" is set. That stops processes from renaming files once they are made.

Unfortunately I'm travelling at the moment, but hopefully your file manager will have a way of showing if the "sticky bit" is set for that directory.

dgriffith ,
@dgriffith@aussie.zone avatar

Send them a letter via registered mail stating that upon receipt of said letter they waive their right to waive your rights.

dgriffith ,
@dgriffith@aussie.zone avatar

Similar things have worked in countries that aren't so under the thrall of the mighty corporation. I recall some guy in ... Russia? who struck out and reworded a bunch of penalty clauses for a credit card offer he got and mailed it back to the bank, which accepted it and issued the card. Cue much hilarity as he racked up a bunch of charges and then got it thrown out in court. (Actually, here's a link.. They eventually settled out of court for an undisclosed sum.)

Anyway, I live in Australia so my response to all these kinds of attempts at removal of my consumer rights is a drawn out "yeah, nahhhh"

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