WFH

joined 1 year ago
[–] WFH 39 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (2 children)

I used to work IT at a company that leased electronic stuff to the general public. Oh boy were they shitty. Keep in mind, this is in a Western European country where employees and customers have actual rights.

There was a general policy of harassment and intimidation. Sexual harassment obviously. The female staff was constantly "ranked", outfits were loudly commented. By management.

Sometimes you manager came next to you at 6:25PM. You've already been doing free overtime by then but utterly stupid management means sudden, unpredictable and hard deadlines. He would lit up a cigarette in your face and keep you until 10PM. Sometimes the deadline was so short and "important" people had to work until 5AM. For free (well, pizzas). And show up the next morning at 10 (instead of 9, woo).

Managers kept threatening you to cancel your holidays the day before leaving if you didn't do this and that. Sometimes people had to connect from their vacations to do stuff because they were "critical" for something.

Money was a funny thing. We were constantly paid late. Sometimes more than 2 weeks late. Everyone who wasn't an employee wasn't paid at all. Not the rent, not the building staff (the toilets were FILTHY), not the contractors who remodeled the floor when we moved in, not the suppliers and especially not the IT contractors. I came in on day and found that I lost my entire team because their employers has never been paid.

One day, they lost a major investor because they lent money to purchase stuff to lease, not burning it in massive management salaries. As a collateral, the investor left with the customer database. So they were back to square one. So, as a get-new-customers-quick tactic, they created dozens of too-good-to-be-true promotions, like giving out electric scooters for new subscriptions and the like. With of course zero intention of honoring them out, since there was no money.

I could go on and on. Everyday there was new, shitty, borderline illegal stuff going on.

[–] WFH 6 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

From a technical point of view:

  • Appimages are like MacOS .app programs. You download a random executable from a random website, that contains everything it needs to run. It's the antithesis of the Linux way. Great for portability, awful for everything else. There are no automatic updates unless the developer explicitly bothers to implement them.
  • Snaps are like docker containers. Each snap also contains everything it needs to run, but at least there is a centralized update system.
  • Flatpaks are like another package manager layered over your OS. It manages its own dependency system isolated from your main dependency management. It updates its stuff pretty much like apt/dnf/pacman.
  • Native are managed through your distro's package manager, obviously.

From a feature/version point of view:

  • If you have a bleeding edge or quickly moving distro, native packages are fine if you want/need up to date software. Arch users shouldn't need Flatpaks for example. The downside is that those packages are made by the distro's maintainers so can be anywhere from untested pre-release software (happened in Manjaro) to extremely outdated (like in Debian oldstable).
  • Flatpaks/Snaps/Appimages are more and more maintained and packaged by their developers. It's great for them as you only need to package once, all bug reports are on versions you control, and you don't need to depend on a distro's maintainer time and will to push updates to users. For stable distros users, this is theoretically the best of both worlds: a stable, tested OS with up to date user facing applications.

From a philosophical point of view:

  • Appimages and Flatpaks are fully FOSS. Flathub is the dominant ways of distributing Flatpaks but anyone can create a competitor.
  • Snaps are distributed through Canonical's Snap Store, which is not FOSS and is vulnerable to Canonical's corporate meddling.

My personal preference:

  • Flatpaks for GUI apps, native for CLI tools
  • Appimages as a last resort if it's the only way to get a specific app.
  • Snaps never.
[–] WFH 20 points 1 year ago (4 children)

Especially if he's just been sold the wrong grade of copper.

[–] WFH 3 points 1 year ago

Ancillary Justice is so good!

[–] WFH 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Do you like beer? Is is legal to home brew in your country? If both are yes, brew beer.

It's easy, it's delicious, it gets cheap quickly especially compared to most microbreweries, you'll always have a brew to share with friends without having to run to the store.

Always brew with friends. You can drink beer and have fun on brew days. It's much easier when there are 2-3 people around to lift stuff. You can delegate responsibilities. Share the cost of ingredients and the resulting beer. You can even "associate" and buy the hardware together. Trust me, you will never run out of volunteers.

Go all grain from the start instead of going extract. Start with something simple with as few ingredients as possible like a stout or a pale ale to get the feel for it. Then brew more complicated but tried and true recipes. Then you can start and go crazy with your own recipes.

And if anything goes off plan, RDWHAHB. Relax, don't worry, have a home brew. It's hard to make a truly exceptional beer, but if you follow most basic principles it's even harder to fuck up so badly that you brew something truly undrinkable.

[–] WFH 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Film photography can still be pretty cheap compared to digital. Any prime 50mm-ish from the last 70 years will be at least decent to great, any manual camera from the last 50 years is will be good if working. A lot of East-Asian and Eastern European bodies and lenses from the 70'-90'don't hold much value but a lot are very competent workhorses. A lot of (especially Japanese) "basic" lenses like the SMC Taks, most Canons and Nikons have gotten very expensive tho because nowadays people can easily adapt them to any MILC for that "vintage" look.

Go black and white, buy a bottle of Rodinal (or any clone) and a film tank. They will both last forever.

Good b&w film like Ilford FP4+ is getting expensive tho, but you can still burn through 50 rolls before reaching the price of a decent, entry level cropped frame DSLR or MILC. Double or triple that if you want a full frame digital camera.

Plus, a full manual setup is an amazing learning tool, and having only 36 shots per roll force you to stop and think before shooting anything.

Only potential problem is that scanning negatives can be tricky without buying a film scanner.

[–] WFH 1 points 1 year ago

Oh sorry for misunderstanding 😅

I watched a lot of videos to understand the basic principles, read a lot of forums and blog posts about roasting and the gene in particular, completely fucked up my first 5 roasts, tried half a dozen "recipes" before finding something that works for me 😅

[–] WFH 2 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Because why not? "it's gonna be a fun hobby", "my local roaster is too expensive, it will pay for itself in 3 years", "I wanna try beans I can't find at my local roaster's"...

[–] WFH 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Thanks! Perfectly fine yes ;)

[–] WFH 1 points 1 year ago

Today I'm making yet another variation of my witbier, this time with kweik and lemon balm.

[–] WFH 2 points 1 year ago
[–] WFH 4 points 1 year ago

Thank you so much!

That sauce looks delicious, like a hummus without the peas. I often use the same veggie base for pitas, either sprinkled with lime and za'atar for a Levantine flavor or oregano and olive oil for a Greek one.

 

This post was originally posted on r/mk in 2020. I'm manually moving my content here before probably nuking my reddit account. Fuck that little pigboy u/spez.

A fey days ago, I showed you the very first keyboard I (my parents) ever had. It's an IBM model M2 from 1989, that came with the family's first computer an IBM PS/1.

I bought a PS/2 adapter and plugged it in my computer. Obviously, it had the dreaded "two LEDs on and nothing works" issue.

Fortunately, thanks to u/zorberema_'s great guide, I knew what happened. The capacitors were dead and I needed to replace them.

Well... Crap. Notice the Apple keyboard that... er... at least works.

Opening it was actually easy-ish. I didn't remove all the keycaps, only the ones necessary to get to the plastic clips, so a few springs went flying around, it was messy, lesson learned. I even managed to only break a single clip. Also, mark the spaces where springs are not supposed to go. You'll thank me later. I spent an hour looking for a missing spring until I realized that I put one in an empty well.

New capacitors in

Notice how bad my soldering skills are. Pro-tip : If your friendly electronics sales-person gives you a surface mount cap to replace another surface mount cap, don't. These are not made to be soldered by unskilled humans. This 2.2uF was hell. Higher voltage is fine.

All the springs are back on

This part was long and stressful. I dropped the board once because I used crappy carboard boxes to prop the plate up, springs were flying around, it was terrifying. I don't know how I managed not to lose them all. Lear from my mistake, use phone boxes as a prop.

(photo missing, sorry, I was both excited and scared) The trick to close a Model M2 keyboard is to keep said springs form flying around. The best way was is to peel the grey felt-ish mat from the membrane and to position it (upside down, obviously) over the springs, carefully aligning the clip and screw holes. From now on you can carefully snap the lower case back on the plate and screw it back in.

Here it is, in all its springy glory!

Form the sparse guides I found over the web, people seemed to say that this was the absolute worst part in restoring this type of keyboard. It went actually pretty smooth. YMMV.

Putting caps back on and testing everything

You can now put all your keycaps back on, testing them one at a time. I was fortunate enough to get a fully working keyboard, the membrane was intact. If the keys do not click or if you have to mash the key to get it to register, remove the cap and position it again.

So here I am, ready to output a massive amount of decibels while working from home during lockdown.

Stay safe my friends, keep clacking and don't let the virus get you. ___

1284
bliss (self.lemmyshitpost)
submitted 1 year ago by WFH to c/lemmyshitpost
 

Most communities on other instances (especially lemmy.ml, but most other instances seem affected) seem still desperately empty and dead when viewed from here, despite vibrant activity as seen directly from there.

Are there still big issues getting new and/or post lost during the version desynchronisation?

 

There are a lot of communities I follow there, especially the Mlem app updates.

All the posts there as seen from here are stale and several days old. If I go to Lemmy.ml directly, there is a vibrant activity.

What's going on?

 

The open source Apple Music player Cider is getting closed source and windows only.

What do you/will you use as an alternative (besides Spotify)? Is there already an active fork?

38
Setup Sunday (lemmy.world)
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by WFH to c/[email protected]
 

Can we make this a thing? I would love to see your setups ;)

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