[-] ExoMonk@beehaw.org 9 points 1 year ago

I think people should read the actual NY Times interview because this post reads very unhinged and foaming at the mouth. So many things taken out of context and twisted to fuel a narrative.

The real interview was pretty soft but AOC was pretty clear and transparent in what she does and why.

https://web.archive.org/web/20230831054327/https://www.nytimes.com/2023/08/30/us/politics/aoc-third-term-congress.html

[-] ExoMonk@beehaw.org 8 points 1 year ago

When I see articles like this and climate problems in general it just screams to me how fucked we are. My only hope is that I die before things get really bad because I don't believe that capitalism will let our government change the status quo. They'll push for new desalination techniques they can charge a pretty penny for and kick the can down the road further before allowing regulations and serious action to take place.

Yes this is a defeatist attitude because honestly I feel pretty defeated and I don't see a way things will get better in the current political climate.

[-] ExoMonk@beehaw.org 37 points 1 year ago

Maybe it's different for the upper management types, but for me I am easily 3x more productive at home in < 6 hours than I ever was at 8+ hours in the office.

There are soo many distractions in the office environment we had (cubicle farm). People chatting behind me, constant noise, people coming up to my desk throughout the day to ask me something and disrupt my entire workflow.

I work in my quiet home with headphones on listening to music. When people need something from me they ping me in Teams or send an email and I get to choose when to stop my work to respond. And when I really need to focus I can throw on Do Not Disturb mode. In the office "Do Not Disturb" was me booking a conference room for myself to work in silence.

[-] ExoMonk@beehaw.org 19 points 1 year ago

This is my best summary, it is long so sorry about that but there's a lot to it.

Linus is probably the largest tech youtuber there is.

He's been rapidly expanding his company, building out a full lab that is trying to rigorously test products (mostly in an automated way) so that consumers can have confidence that a $50 power supply isn't going to shit the bed, or that this GPU will get you the same performance in these games at this resolution so save your money, etc.

The initial controversy is that they have issue with the automated testing where results were often super wrong and that slipped it's way to multiple videos and instead of taking the videos down and correcting them, they left them up and just had a little text graphic over the video with the correction. Many youtubers do that kind of post video correction, but LTT does it a lot. Additionally they tested an $800 prototype watercooler on a 4090 when it was built only for a 3090ti which pretty much invalidates the entire test, but they still gave a conclusion that the watercooler sucked and was a bad product. That could tank that company. They did not bother re-testing with the proper GPU because Linus felt no one should buy an $800 watercooler block anyway. Additionally(x2) they reviewed a mouse and said it was terrible because the glide was really bad. Turns out there were protective stickers on the mouse feet that needed to be removed. They took multiple days to correct the video and by that point the damage was done.

The second controversy is around a Madison (former employee) where she received tons of verbal abuse, degradation, from various LMG employees/management and some even sexual harassment. There was a lot of hand-waving of her raising those complaints as "causing drama" and to "calm your tits" and other various things. She suffered a lot mentally from it and even "cut her own leg" just to go to the ER to have a day off. Her write up is pretty long and fairly brutal.

I think a large part of the issue is everyone is incredibly overworked at that company and crunching every day to release as much content as possible which leads to a fuck ton of errors, very heated and emotionally charged employees and lack of oversight over serious issues. Couple that with rapid expansion of employees without a functional HR (I think someone was hired recently) and the vast majority of people effectively "learning on the job" how to be a manager, director, leader, etc. and it's just an explosion waiting to happen. And it has exploded quite spectacularly.

I'll be curious to see if they turn it around and also what comes from the outside investigation.

[-] ExoMonk@beehaw.org 10 points 1 year ago

Wait, Joe Manchin is a democrat? /s

[-] ExoMonk@beehaw.org 7 points 1 year ago

Its a great indexer. This and nzbgeek and I need pretty much nothing else

[-] ExoMonk@beehaw.org 7 points 1 year ago

I just started the show earlier this week and just finished season one. I really like it!

It brings back some of the flavor of TNG where it's more about exploration and diplomacy, but keeps some of the "modernness" of the Star Trek movies. Graphics, set design, wardrobe are all fantastic. I love the crew, everyone feels unique and authentic. It's been a lot of fun.

I don't have that "omg I need to watch the next episode" thing which IMO is a good thing because I can watch a couple episodes and then go to bed at a reasonable time. The episodes don't leave you on cliffhangers, each one wraps up nicely.

[-] ExoMonk@beehaw.org 15 points 1 year ago

Read through the post, OP mentioned a few times that this isn't about a phone war. It's just one persons experience going from Android to iPhone; what worked well and what didn't.

I think a lot of folks have picked an ecosystem and never strayed from it; seeing a post like this helps fill the gaps of their curiosity. Being exposed to other people's experiences and experience a change yourself is a good thing.

At the end of the day phones are just tools to help you go about your day to day. We don't have to foam at the mouth over a discussion like this. iPhones are very good devices and have great synergy with other Apple devices and apps. Android is a very customizable experience which has many great phones at very good prices. You can't go wrong with either IMO.

[-] ExoMonk@beehaw.org 11 points 1 year ago

On Disturb's album 10,000 Fist is a song called Land of Confusion. First listened to the album way back in the mid 2000's.

Around 2006 or so I heard the same song being played on the speakers at the Ikea I worked at but it was a lot softer than I expected. Turns out it was originally done by a band called Genesis.

Both version slap but in different ways.

[-] ExoMonk@beehaw.org 12 points 1 year ago

I never realized until recently that a NUC is the perfect device for my aging mother-in-law. She has an old gaming desktop (sans-gpu) with a i5-4670 that is plugged up to a 1080p monitor next to her recliner chair. At some point that PC will die and these seem like a pretty meaty upgrade in a tiny box.

I'm glad someone "reputable" is taking the helm.

[-] ExoMonk@beehaw.org 24 points 1 year ago

Yeah the PS5 is pretty reasonably priced for what you get. I think the issue is two fold:

  1. We already have really expensive machines that probably play games much better than the PS5 in frames and quality so buying another machine for a handful of games is just not in the cards.
  2. Many of us much prefer keyboard/mouse and using controllers is really hard when you've not done it in many years.

I think we just wish Playstation was more friendly to PC players and not have these long exclusives (they've gotten a lot better recently though). Microsoft for example is a lot friendlier to PC players than Sony. Pretty much all MS first party games are on PC pretty much day one and many of them are on GamePass day one as well.

[-] ExoMonk@beehaw.org 10 points 1 year ago

Things I like about working in an office:

  • I liked my coworkers
  • I liked going for random breaks to go walk somewhere or have lunch and get away from the desk

Things that sucked:

  • Constant noise and distractions
  • Small talk with people that I just don't want to spend the mental energy talking to
  • 1.5 hours worth of commute time that just eats away at my day

I've been remote working since Covid first landed. I will happily trade all the things I liked about working in an office to never have to deal with the parts I don't like. If I can help it, I'll always choose remote work. I get so much done here at home in both work and home stuff. Oh I forgot to do laundry over the weekend, no biggie. Oh I need to marinate something, boom 10 minute break. Finished all my planned work for the day? Going to knock off early and go play a game or watch a show.

Remote work has transformed my life and I'll never go back to the office.

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ExoMonk

joined 1 year ago