Enekk 3 weeks ago • 100%
This is because Mary Poppins lied to us. It isn't a spoonful of sugar that makes the medicine go down, but something with a bit of salt in addition to that sugar. Salt masks bitterness.
Enekk 1 month ago • 100%
I have zero Joe Rogan on my feed. You are literally making it worse by engaging with his content in any way (down votes being a big one). Just completely ignore content you don't like and it'll go away over time.
Enekk 2 months ago • 100%
I'm showing my age, but back when IE was basically the only browser and Firefox (Firebird back then) launched, people often lamented that things didn't work in Firefox. The solution? People used Firefox and web developers were forced to make their shit work in Firefox. When Chrome came out, suddenly we had three real options and the way to make everything work? Open Standards.
Now, Chrome is in the position IE was back before Firefox came around. How ever will we make sure things work in Firefox??? Use Firefox. If enough people dump Google's malware browser, the web has to go back to supporting multiple browsers through open standards.
Enekk 4 months ago • 70%
How wonderful if that were true. It used to be commonplace and it made it harder to demonize the other side. People were able to compromise and work together on things. Now that they can't spend evenings reaffirming their mutual humanity, they spend their days talking past each other.
Enekk 5 months ago • 100%
Your situation is more likely to be caused by Android's system to make sure you don't forget your pin. It has a number of unlocks (and a length of time) before it forces you to do the code.
Enekk 6 months ago • 94%
Jojo Rabbit goes from a heartwarming dark comedy about a boy that is living through WW2 and his imaginary friend, Adolf Hitler, into something very different that is too much of a spoiler.
Enekk 8 months ago • 89%
On the contrary, during the great formula shortage of 2021/2022, Amazon Prime and the recurring delivery option was the only way I was able to get formula for my twins. Speed was important l, but so was Amazon's huge supply chain.
Since then, we live in a remote place and getting some stuff just isn't possible at the one store near us. Amazon is really one of the best ways to get things we need. Now, of course, I hate them, but I also hate Walmart and don't really have choices beyond those or a gas station convenience store.
Enekk 8 months ago • 100%
Met my wife in highschool and got married right out of college. We are now pushing 40 and are still happy and content. We were lucky, we grew together and in similar ways, but we also just knew when we knew. We even had twins a few years back and even the stress of that didn't destroy us.
We (hopefully) still have many years together and maybe things will break down, but, so far, neither of us regret marrying so young.
Enekk 9 months ago • 100%
Maybe you can go talk to Gödel. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gödel's_incompleteness_theorems
Enekk 10 months ago • 100%
I respectfully disagree with one major caveat. I'll get that out of the way first; I think there should be a name for these foods that recognize the creators (e.g. Italian American food is American food that comes from Italian immigrants). We've traditionally been bad at giving credit or, worse, using names to mark a cuisine as "other" and weird.
The thing is that there really isn't a food of a place. People use ingredients that are available and use techniques from the people around them. When cultures interact, they create remixes of cuisine that take unfamiliar ingredients and techniques and create something new.
Let me use the food of my own home, New Mexico, as an example. The food of the region is a mixture of Spanish colonizers, later Mexican immigrants, and Native American foods using a crazy combination of techniques and ingredients from all three. It isn't Spanish food. It isn't Mexican food. It isn't Native American food. It is New Mexican food, a thing that arose from a place and its history. Now, with Asian immigrants moving in, the food has started to incorporate stuff from those cultures too.
Enekk 11 months ago • 100%
Thanks so much!
Enekk 11 months ago • 80%
I'm forced to use a Mac for work as well and have the damn Slack bug. What's the solution!?
Enekk 11 months ago • 100%
Interestingly, they were designed for warmer environments where Kinder eggs would melt. The fact that they circumvented the weird US restrictions was a side effect.
Enekk 12 months ago • 100%
The attack vector is as follows:
- Evil.com phishes a user and asks for username and password for Good.com
- Evil.com immediately relays those credentials to Good.com
- Good.com asks Evil.com for TOTP
- Evil.com asks victim for TOTP
- Evil.com relays TOTP to Good.com and does a complete account takeover
The various physical dongles prevent this by using the asking domain as part of the hash. If you activated the dongle on Evil.com, it'll do nothing on Good.com (except hopefully alerting the SOC at Good.com about a compromised username and password pair).
Enekk 1 year ago • 100%
This is 100% correct. I'll add that the best thing you can do is to watch and listen to your crew. Everyone has a job, yes, but they also play a role on your team. Understand what those roles are, how work actually flows around, and what motivates people. Be a servant that helps facilitate that structure.
Enekk 1 year ago • 100%
I'm not sure how you feel about the limiting thing, but it is controversial in the US. Some departments do limit, others feel that isn't fair. Personally, I think we should understand why the academia system is set up the way it is and ask if it makes sense in the modern world.
Enekk 1 year ago • 100%
As a grad student mostly. That said, non-tenured professors also have to work their asses off. The pyramid scheme dream is becoming tenured and having a large pool of grad students to abuse help you with your work.
Enekk 1 year ago • 100%
This is something you'll have to experiment with. Also, once you've "lost the flavor" it can be partially brought back by cranking up the humidity. I don't know what your storage situation is, but a cheap humidity monitor, some plastic bags, and some humidity packs (I like the 62% Integra boost ones) is not a huge investment and will really help your tea age gracefully.
Enekk 1 year ago • 100%
When my twins were born, I commissioned two tongs + 2 cakes of tea made from material picked in their birth year. The plan was to give each a tong when they left home and the cakes were for my wife and I to sample each year. It is very good quality tea, but not the best tea in the world; still, the sentimental value and getting to really experience it as it ages has been marvelous!
My wallet will probably regret asking, but I've sort of run through my normal suspects list of reputable teaware sellers (Bitter leaf, Yunnan Sourcing, Teaware.house, a few now-defunct sellers). Does anyone have suggestions for reputable sellers? I'm not exactly sure what I'm looking for, but I'll know it when I see it!
Enekk 1 year ago • 100%
A myriad of things mostly based on location or time. I have profiles that change the way the phone behaves (notification volumes, screen on time, WiFi/Bluetooth state) based on a combination of where I am and what time it is. I also have profiles that pop up information depending on where I am (for example, the 8 digit door code at a place - it changes monthly, but is not really a secure location).
I've built a couple of mini apps in Tasker that do things like set up timers or interact with voice recording software. the other major use is to handle notifications for really repetitive apps (e.g. if people are chatting a lot in Messages, it slows the pace of notification sounds).
Edit: Apparently "Network Timeout" does not imply that your message didn't get posted 😬
Enekk 1 year ago • 0%
A myriad of things mostly based on location or time. I have profiles that change the way the phone behaves (notification volumes, screen on time, etc) based on a combination of where I am and what time it is. I also have profiles that pop up information depending on where I am (for example, the 8 digit door code at a place - it changes monthly, but is not really a secure location).
I've built a couple of mini apps in Tasker that do things like set up timers or interact with voice recording software. the other major use is to handle notifications for really repetitive apps (e.g. if people are chatting a lot in Messages, it slows the pace of notification sounds).