danhasnolife

joined 1 year ago
 

Looks our first post-phyrexian palette cleanser leans into magical and the fairy tale. Not sure how I feel about this endless sleep threat, but we'll see how it plays out.

 

This is an absolutely spectacular long form article from NYT that walks through small communities in mesopotamia, and how large political and economic changes have made them among the first to experience climate change as a life-threatening crisis. It also foreshadows water wars and how they could increasingly become a part of our political climate.

[–] danhasnolife@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

Still need to vote. Cockroaches are resilient so it doesn't do any good to write him off prematurely

[–] danhasnolife@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (2 children)

I like the concept of being able to talk openly about mens' issues. That liberation name is unfortunate; in my opinion, it definitely sounds at least apologetic towards misogyny. What do we have to be liberated from?

[–] danhasnolife@lemmy.world 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Regarding the question of whether it's stupid or not -- how much would you be kicking yourself if one of your neighbors purchased it from you instead?

In my mind, any chance you get to increase your land and you buffer zone is an absolute positive.

[–] danhasnolife@lemmy.world 7 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Surprisingly melancholy comic.

[–] danhasnolife@lemmy.world 10 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (2 children)

-Password crackdown

-Removal of Basic Plan

-Aggressive advertising to up-package

-Focus on 1-3 years of low-budget 'reality' TV

Yikes. Netflix is hellbent on extracting maximum revenue possible, regardless of how shitty their product gets in the meantime.

[–] danhasnolife@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

Quite a few. I grew up in a conservative, racist family. It took me a long time to unwind the problematic casual phrases I grew up with. I'm not proud of it, and I occasionally cringe looking backwards. I realize now the tremendous weight and damage those phrases could do. Now I just try to be better day by day, and to make sure I don't perpetuate those damaging habits in my own children.

[–] danhasnolife@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

You say "used to". Has it been overfished?

 

Hi all,

First, I understand that neither is the optimal solution. I live in an 1800's farmhouse with plaster-and-lathe walls on top of a three-feet-deep stone foundation. Additionally, the exterior walls are too thin for a traditional outlet and require special retrofitting. I can say all of this with certainty because we discovered all of this while renovating our kitchen and bringing items up to code. To install to-code outlets, we needed to temporarily remove baseboard heating systems, drill through 9" deep hardwood floors, and then angle 90' from the floor into the wall underneath the pex heating cable in order to access the wall, using shallow receptacles to fit.

We simply don't have the funds to do this with all portions of this old house, at least not now. For our window-unit air conditioners (1 12,000 BTU Midea U inverter, 2 older 8000 BTU ACs), we do not have a modern grounded outlet within reach of our AC cable. Recognizing that neither option is ideal, what is safer:

a) Use a 'heavy-duty' short extension cord to bridge the gap between grounded outlet and AC power cable, and then tie the cable to prevent physical tripping or loosening

OR

b) Use a legitimate higher-end surge protector like a Tripp-Lite to extend outlet reach and plug into the surge protector.

Additionally, I would appreciate any general advice on the order of operations in the house as we slowly build towards an up-to-code century home. Our priorities are loosely in this order:

New panel, upgrading to 200a with whole home surge protector and dedicated grounds - DONE

Upgraded kitchen to modern code - IN PROGRESS

Replace all loose 2-prong outlets with GFCI, using "no equipment ground"

Re-order circuits that don't make sense

Add additional outlets -- potentially using wire mold to avoid digging into lathe based on expense.

[–] danhasnolife@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago (6 children)

My wife got me a fitbit. I resisted a little bit because I didn't want to have yet another device to monitor, charge, and maintain etc. I've been really surprised and impressed and how effective it has been in subtly encouraging me to make some small improvements in my habits. Not a bad deal for $100.

[–] danhasnolife@lemmy.world 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)
 

Thoughts? Do you think these will allow some new decks to rise in viability?

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