voluble

joined 1 year ago
[–] voluble 2 points 1 year ago

Fair point. However, we still run in the same professional circles & there would be blow back. The fraud thing offends my core values on fairness, but its easier for me to leave it weighing on my conscience, than report it and stay up at night wondering if it will come back to bite me in my professional life and make it harder to keep a roof over my head and food on my table. It's a shitty situation.

[–] voluble 1 points 1 year ago
[–] voluble 7 points 1 year ago

Uncarbonated liquids are dead simple to titrate, it's true. For a carbonated product like beer, it's actually a much more complicated problem than it seems. The amount of foam you get on a keg pour of beer is effected by a lot of variables - how clean the lines are, how cold the lines are, how long the lines are, the diameter of the lines, whether you're using beergas or co2, how old the beer is, if it's keg conditioned or force carbonated, how recently the keg was moved into refrigeration, how cold the beer itself is, if it's the first pour of the day or if the tap has been running frequently, the mechanical design of the faucet, the temperature, cleanliness, shape, and size of the glass it's going into, and more. It's really fiddly business, I can't see how a push button system could take everything into account and render less wastage than a human operator with a feel for the system. Draft systems are voodoo, ask me how I know.

Anyway companies typically have an unrealistic expectation of what draft wastage ought to be. I would advise any bar to expect something like 15% wastage at minimum on professional draft equipment, more if they're using bargain grade hardware anywhere in the system, but ownership doesn't want to hear that.

[–] voluble 11 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Managed a shop for over 10 years and took on duties to the point that the owner was only there for a few hours a week in the morning to check emails. The store did record business during the early covid days, and never closed the doors for a single day. The staff was stretched thin, stressed, and everyone was working like crazy and a bit nervous about health because we had a couple older guys working with us and nobody knew the harm profile of covid at that time. The owner bought expensive store improvements (with profits, and fraudulently claimed federal covid benefits) instead of paying the staff, or even saying thanks in any way. See ya!

I want to report them for the fraud thing, but I'm the only one who knows about it aside from the owner, so they'd know it was me who reported it.

[–] voluble 3 points 1 year ago

I would visit but my waifu body pillow scolds me when I suggest we travel.

[–] voluble 10 points 1 year ago

we’d need to make our society one that’s less hostile to having kids

You allude to some of this, but in addition, and as a precondition, we need to make our society one that's less hostile to the people that currently exist in it.

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

Black lights

Nice.

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

It took until the year 2000 for Toronto to finally give up being dry

Uh, what?! Can you point me to some further reading on that? Ontario is far stranger than I thought.

[–] voluble 9 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

"An essential part of life in Canada, is living in Canada. Having a place to live cannot become a luxury and economic bargaining chip for the wealthy. It's a necessity and a cornerstone of the dignity and pride we have in the prosperity of our nation - that when we aspire to our highest ideals, everybody in this country has a seat at the table. This inclusiveness is what makes us who we are. That's why my government has an extensive action plan for housing, which includes comprehensive liaison projects with all the provinces and cities of this country to make sure that the federal government is doing everything it can to secure the basic human need of housing, and that it is something that is never out of reach for any of our citizens."

-No Canadian politician ever

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

Primary mass transit would be expanded to increase the feasible housing areas

Downtown cores would increase pedestrian-only areas

My city politicians are really excited and animated about these exact topics, however I'll be dead by the time they're completed.

[–] voluble 6 points 1 year ago (4 children)

In Ontario, you have to be separated (defined as living apart) for a year before you can get a divorce

What the fuck? Actually? What's the reasoning there? That seems unusual to me.

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

Speaking specifically about the 'Podcast Playlist' show - while I don't disagree that it can be an interesting nexus for new information, I don't think it needs to be on the air at all. If the objective is curation, that could easily and more effectively be done via an online feed where the shows are actually hyperlinked, tagged, & made accessible. I'm not a radio producer so, grain of salt. But from my armchair, seems to me that the CBC should aspire to something higher than 'content aggregation' or rebroadcasting material from other stations. I expect that sort of thing from a donation funded campus & community radio station where maybe someone isn't in the booth at 2am, but not from a national broadcaster that receives funding from Canadian taxpayers.

With Writers & Company, I was referring to the host stepping down. I don't know about you, but in my opinion, she kind of was the show in a sense. AFAIK there won't be any new episodes, and that's a loss.

More broadly, I like that Canada has a national broadcaster, I just think it could be better.

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