@marktyndall @anon_opin I'd take that for a fortnight of solid (ab)use between charges. ideally it'd be at least a partially-replacable battery pack to allow off-phone charging too (yay Moto-mods battery packs)
- Hah, @forestfjord submitted a starfish for silly summer hatting.
- How will you know where to put the hat?
- Ah, I'll work something out.
- Isn't that a bit silly?
- Clues in the hashtag innit? 😁
Reminder: Just because someone is posting on social media a lot, visibly doing projects, and otherwise looks like they're living their best life
1) Does not mean they are ok - social media is often a distraction and an escape valve
2) Does not mean they are ignoring you - they may be overwhelmed and incapable of handling messages
I have a few schematics I use on interviews to see if people can troubleshoot. Twenty years ago, people could. Nobody can now. Nobody teaches electronics for technicians. Engineers, yes. Technicians, no.
So I'm rewriting the test and changing it into training. I'm doing all the work in my private wiki and have found "reveal-js" is perfect for interactive training!
Just in case you ever need something like that 🤔.
Love this comment on https://github.com/dotnet/runtime/pull/115762#issuecomment-2898635945
Announcing: https://justaqrcode.com.
Tired of "free" QR code generators that are full of ads and trackers, that share your data, and that want to sell you something? Me too. Here's my act of resistance: I made a one-page site that works entirely in your browser to generate a simple QR code. And that's all it does. You can download the HTML page and run it locally, even. Read the source; nothing up my sleeves. Just a QR code.
My offer to you -- I will continue to pay for the domain name and web hosting for it, myself. If you find it valuable, you can pay it back by creating your own useful thing for the world and releasing it for free. Let's take back the friendly web, one vexingly-monetized utility at a time!
Two different approaches to debugging a software problem:
The Sudoku approach: stare at the limited set of clues you have, and think harder and harder about them until you find a way to deduce something useful.
The Minesweeper approach: don't even try to figure out the solution from only the clues you have right now. Instead, focus on finding a way to acquire another clue, and then using that to get another, and so on. Eventually you've collected so many clues that the answer is obvious.
Sometimes the Sudoku approach is necessary, because you've got all the clues you're ever going to get. But I think my new motto is "Never Sudoku a problem when you can Minesweeper it."
@jack_daniel boot/shoe polish makes an excellent fingertip polish if you happen to be out.
nice leather moisturiser can also thoroughly disrupt your fingerprints for around an hour.
Steve:
frequent overthinker, compulsive fixer, digester-then-explainer, "why?" question relishing father, minor-irritant partner, excessive disassembler, original-form hacker, high-efficiency googler, borderline-competent car-fixer, expert-level car-breaker, faster-by-qwerty communicator, indiscriminate photo-taker, Leatherman owner.