AnarchoGravyBoat

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago (3 children)

@Col3814444

What a garbage person.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 year ago (2 children)

@Jackolantern

Is there somewhere to put this pitchfork? I was all ready to use it, then I immediately calmed down when I read further.

I'll start the pile I guess.

------------------E

@okbuddyretard @Confuzzeled

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

@RickRussell_CA

They're trying again with Red Hat. Probably the second biggest implosion in the last few weeks.

@revampeduser @Skyler @dsemy

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

@Lenguador

Code reviews are only bad until you realize you can just say "cool story bro" and move on.

No change is always an acceptable response to review comments imo, unless it's one of mine.

If you can't defend that turd of a code unit, why the hell do you think it deserves to go into production?

[–] [email protected] 19 points 1 year ago (3 children)

@PoodleDoodle

  • when dicing onions cut radially first, then slice across, it saves you that weird half slice that's traditionally used for dicing onions.

  • I use cast iron for nearly everything, it survives a hundred years because it's bulletproof not because it's gingerly handled every time it's removed from it's velvet case. People dragged them around on Chuck wagons, you will not kill it with soap. Worst case it gets a little sticky and now you need to cook some bacon in it.

  • A splash of acid in your soup or stew at the end really wakes it up.

  • Never cook rice without at least a couple bay leaves. Ideally you'll cook it in chicken stock as well, add flavour where you can.

  • The best chicken stock in a jar is Better Than Bullion. Hands down. No contest.

  • With a splash of oil you can cook eggs even in a sticky cast iron pan.

  • Always use hand protection of some kind with a mandolin. I've never seen a non-pro chef go without and not fuck up their hand. Even pros lose the tips of their fingers sometimes too.

  • If you want to recreate movie theater popcorn at home you need the following things:
    A whirlypop or other stovetop cooker
    Coconut oil, refined
    Popcorn kernels, quality varies, find a good brand
    Fine salt
    "Popcorn oil" - this is butter flavored oil sold next to the kernels

Here's what you do, set up a bowl to dump your popcorn in, throw some salt in the whirlypop with a spoon of coconut oil, and just a tiny glug of the popcorn oil, not much just a tad. Add your kernels, crank the heat to high and start cranking. Do. Not. Stop. The popcorn will begin to pop after an interminable wait. Keep cranking until it either gets hard to crank or the popping slows down significantly. Then quickly dump your popcorn into the waiting bowl. Do not add salt, you already did this, the fine salt will be well distributed this way. Add a bit of popcorn oil. Shake the bowl a bit to distribute, add more if desired etc. Then enjoy your movie theater popcorn.

It took me years to work out how to do it without the Naks oil, which I bought from a local popcorn shop for awhile.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 year ago (1 children)

@GizmoLion The swishy smooth lines you guys make with the squeegee on the giant plate glass windows were my one of my favorite parts of the day when I worked at gas stations.

@ADHDefy

[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 year ago (1 children)

@xtremeownage

I think that one of the most difficult things to deal with more common bots, spamming, reposting, etc.

Is that parsing all the commentary and dealing with it on a service wide level is really hard to do, in terms of computing power and sheer volume of content. Seems to me that do this on an instance level with user numbers in the 10's of thousands is a heck of a lot more reasonable than doing it on a 10's of millions of users service.

What I'm getting at is that this really seems like something that could (maybe even should) be built into the instance moderation tools, at least some method of marking user activity as suspicious for further investigation by human admins/mods.

We're really operating on the assumption that people spinning up instances are acting in good faith, until they prove that they aren't, I think the first step is giving good faith actors the tools to moderate effectively, then worrying about bad faith admins.

[–] [email protected] 9 points 1 year ago

@Jezebelley
I'm really impressed with kbin so far. I'm still learning how to navigate it and all, it's missing the polish of something like Mastodon that is further along its development path. But it looks really promising.

Ultimately, I'm kind of hoping to end up on a much smaller instance possibly even self hosted after things settle down and mature further. The fediverse integration is wild and kind of strange to wrap your head around at first. At least it was for me.

To me, kbin feels the most like old reddit. I liked old reddit, but I'm definitely missing some QoL features.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

It's an old Game of Thrones reference. Just being cheeky.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago (2 children)

@RosalynKirk Cold rolled steel didn't help the Night's Watch too much.

@DrGiltspur

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

@Calcharger

That's funny, I'm ADHD as well, the context helps me feel a little more in control and helps me sort things out a little better. ADHD is weird.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago (2 children)

I actually like to use different environments depending on what I'm doing. I tend to use SublimeText with custom build systems for embedded dev. I use VS when I need to use it, for stuff like Marlin firmware, it's much better than it was when I started. I find that I really like PyCharm for python work. It makes a lot of things just really nice and easy for debugging and the like.

All that said, if you want one environment to rule them all, you could do worse than something like VS or VS Code, especially if you're interested in primarily MS oriented apps.

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