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BakedCatboy , to mildlyinfuriating in YouTube needs more potato

Thank goodness it’s in HDR

sgibson5150 OP ,

I love basking in the vivid, radiant luminosity of a potato.

ZombiFrancis ,

Pixels be crisp.

bionicjoey , to mildlyinfuriating in YouTube needs more potato

Usually this happens when the only resolutions available are the ones shown (typically because it’s an older video)

Alexstarfire ,

It would be odd to show resolutions not available.

sgibson5150 OP , (edited )

I think it was posted within the last week. I remember the HDR processing wasn’t done processing the first time I tried to watch it. Would I be complaining about the resolution of a video from 2007?

Edit: Sorry. My reply sounds rude, but I ran into this problem on a channel I’m familiar with. They’re an HDR walker. All of their content is in 4K. I could have included that in the post, but you could have assumed that I’m not a complete dumbass. Maybe we both can learn from this.

Fiivemacs , to mildlyinfuriating in YouTube needs more potato

You probably didn’t watch enough ads for crap you already bought

Sam_Bass , (edited ) to lemmyshitpost in He's got a point

I used to pull 12hour sessions on everquest and suffered none of that

Turun , to lemmyshitpost in He's got a point

Yes? But that’s already explicitly warned about.

At work I had to fill out a form which threats to my health could impact me. Next to chemicals or radiation, working at a desk for more than x hours a day was also listed as a potential source of bodily harm.

fidodo ,

Exactly. Saying it’s a problem when playing video games doesn’t mean that it isn’t a problem anywhere else. For office jobs specifically, there is already plenty of awareness being spread and most offices give out onboarding material that gives tips on stretches you can do and on how to have a more ergonomic setup.

fidodo , to lemmyshitpost in He's got a point

To be fair, lots of companies specifically point out ergonomics and give out onboarding materials with suggestions on exercises to do and office setup best practices.

Awareness is important, and most office jobs already raise awareness about it. I think the only time I’ve seen it in video games were those take a break reminders I’ve seen in some Nintendo games.

Maalus , to lemmyshitpost in He's got a point

Someone who points out excel has clearly never played Starcraft in any capacity. There is a caster, who has a shirt with an x-ray of a hand that’s bolted to some sort of frame, with “APM” written on top of it (actions per minute, a measure of how fast a player plays the game).

Mobas, RTS are hell on wrists. FPS too, with all the flicking. You can do excel in a shitty position for years and you’ll not end up with screws in your hand or nerve pinching.

melpomenesclevage ,

Yeah I played RTS games, including both starcrafts, through my mid twenties (really hung on to the damn things) and was pretty good (got to diamond and stuck there in sc2, which is another animal entirely from pro tier. High school pitchers rarely need special shoulder surgery), and I never needed hand surgery or even serious carpal tunnel help.

Until I was in a position where I had to use office shit for ten hours a day. Then I needed physical therapy for about a year. I think with the games, theres time during matchmaking and loading where you just have to move, even in your seat. Its a whole thing.

KevonLooney ,

Most people don’t need physical therapy after working in an office for a few years.

melpomenesclevage ,

Wasnt exactly an office, and I was going at the excel about as hard as I did the StarCraft.

TheKingBee ,
@TheKingBee@lemmy.world avatar

Carpal tunnel is still a thing, my old manager had to get surgery on both wrists.

MisterFrog , to lemmyshitpost in He's got a point
@MisterFrog@lemmy.world avatar

I love spreadsheets (hey, we all have our weird interests) so at first thought this was an ASD meme.

Bigmouse ,

How is liking spreadsheets connected to autistic spectrum disorder? (Im being genuine here)

FlyingSquid ,
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

Good question. I have known many people on the spectrum in my life including several close family members and loving spreadsheets is not something I would attribute to any of them.

MisterFrog ,
@MisterFrog@lemmy.world avatar

Loving spreadsheets isn’t something everyone with ASD loves, and I didn’t mean to imply that, just the hyper-fixated interest (8 hours) on a something which I personally happen to love.

Bgugi ,

B.3. Highly restricted, fixated interests that are abnormal in intensity or focus (e.g., strong attachment to or preoccupation with unusual objects, excessively circumscribed or perseverative interests).

Excel is a highly structured environment that follows strict rules and procedures to generate outcomes, often sorting and making sense of “messy” inputs. Prime candidate for an ASD hobby/obsession.

cumskin_genocide , to lemmyshitpost in He's got a point

Both can be true

theneverfox , to lemmyshitpost in He's got a point

It depends… If you’ve got good posture (and I don’t mean sitting up straight, you have to shift around), a good chair, and you get up every hour or two to at least walk around? It’s still probably not healthy, but at least you don’t get too many aches and pains

On the other hand, it’s a lot harder with gaming. You’ve got your hands on the keyboard or clutching the controller constantly, you (or at least I) will tense up and put strength in my wrist at a weak angle, sometimes I’ll find myself leaning forward and tensing up

I feel it if I’m on a gaming kick, but day in and day out it’s usually not too bad. It helps that I need to walk to refocus anyways, so even gaming I usually take a lot of breaks

Raxiel , to lemmyshitpost in He's got a point

I’m more likely to take a break with work. Unfortunately that break often entails sitting in the same chair, watching YouTube on the same screen.

psmgx ,

Same. A lot of work chats and interacting were often meeting that could have been an email sorta things, mostly to get us moving around and active

sfxrlz ,

Smoking breaks help. But that also kind of defeats the purpose

SuperSaiyanSwag ,

I love video games, it my favorite hobby, but gamers get so defensive when someone points out any flaws with the hobby.

Altofaltception , to aboringdystopia in consider the implications for a post scarcity future

Don’t forget, US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen was just in China to protect US interests - this time because China has flooded the market with cheap solar panels.

We can’t have solar power becoming affordable and accessible for most people.

Chocrates ,

It’s nuanced. Domestic solar panel production is lagging and cheaper shit from China is gonna make it worse. It is not necessarily evil to want to have local production, and if we live under capitalism then it has to make money.

I agree though that for the most part even our good politicians do whatever they can to maintain the status quo, and that is generally bad for us and good for corporations and the billionaires

lewdian69 ,

That doesn’t sound nuanced. That sounds like the free market, so capitalism, did its thing and the US doesn’t like the outcome. It’s almost like capitalism is a terrible system that the US’s lead economist is trying to subvert.

Chocrates ,

Agree, but we aren’t in a free market. That is a fantasy the conservatives have been pushing forever to get away from regulation.

lewdian69 ,

Correct.

Blue_Morpho ,

I don’t see the problem. Buy the underpriced Chinese Solar. If they raise prices, build a factory. It’s only a few years of overpriced panels, then prices go back down. If they are dumping panels, it’s the Chinese who are handing free money to US consumers.

After the US is 100% solar we can worry about domestic manufacturing for maintaining infrastructure.

djsoren19 ,

except the U.S. needs solar panels for military industrial complex reasons too, and they don’t want to rely on a notoriously hostile power to build the groundwork of that structure. a big part of selling the U.S. on solar is the promise of energy independence, you don’t get independence if your entire foundation is built on another country’s tech.

Blue_Morpho ,

The US exports oil and gas so we are already energy independent. If China sold Gold to US consumers at $1000 an ounce, should the US step in and stop China from giving Americans cheap gold?

Yes I understand the need for domestic production. Factories take a few years to ramp up. Domestic production can be started after everyone has solar panels and old panels need replacement.

HobbitFoot ,

The USA keeps several wartime industries afloat with subsidies in case of war. The big one is steel, but there are others as well.

There has been a recent rethink of what industries are needed during war and solar capacity is part of that.

hark ,
@hark@lemmy.world avatar

If it was that important then the US should’ve invested in local manufacturing.

Chocrates ,

Solar panels degrade over time, I don’t know what the numbers are but they used to be dysmal, like 30% reduction in generation capacity over 5 years. Whatever the actual numbers are, we will constantly be replacing panels. I am sure we can figure out refurbishing too at some point.

Juvyn00b ,

Yeah they’re definitely better now, I’m reading anywhere between 1% per year or 12.5% at year 25. There are other things that can pop up though, micro cracks causing localized overheating of the panel - to backing failures and other physical issues. I’m interested in standing some up at some point but the capital eludes me at the moment.

Chocrates ,

I’m am certainly wrong, that figure was something my dad told me as a kid, we were on solar back then.

Juvyn00b ,

No worries at all. Like you said though, with advancements people will likely do upgrades over time anyways. I don’t have numbers off the top of my head, but even just the per panel efficiencies have grown fantastically since your last experience.

Chocrates ,

Yeah I was totally wrong, that is great though!

Blue_Morpho ,

but they used to be dysmal, like 30% reduction in generation capacity over 5 years.

??? Monocrystalline silicon losses less than .4% a year. That means after 50 years it’s still producing 82% of when it was new. It takes 90 years to get a 30% reduction rate.

engineering.com/…/what-is-the-lifespan-of-a-solar…

Chocrates ,

Do you know the type of pv panel that was used 20+ years ago? I lived in an off grid house and my dad mentioned that at one point.

Croquette ,

Yeah but your point is that solar panels degrade 30% after 5 years, and then you reframe the context for 20 years ago?

Go astrosurf somewhere else.

Any grid has a maintenance cost and degradation. Solar panels isn’t any different.

Chocrates ,

The fuck are you talking about. I was wrong. Get over it.

Blue_Morpho ,

Monocrystalline silicon was used 20 years ago. It’s the oldest solar technology.

According to the source data in a link in the page I linked thin film CIGS rollable solar sheets was the least durable. Panels installed before 2000 had a degradation of 3.5% a year. That’s 10 years to lose 30%. But CIGS solar systems installed after the year 2000 show only .02% degradation a year. The document talks about manufacturing defects that were corrected.

www.nrel.gov/docs/fy12osti/51664.pdf

Chocrates ,

Ok, I’m just flat wrong! Til!

Altofaltception ,

Domestic solar panel production is lagging and cheaper shit from China is gonna make it worse

Isn’t this the point of the free market? Shouldn’t capitalists rejoice when things are working as intended?

UnderpantsWeevil ,
@UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world avatar

Only when they own the means of production.

If they can’t extract profit from Chinese imports, they don’t want anyone else to import them.

Chocrates ,

Yes but we don’t have a free market.

Cowbee ,
@Cowbee@lemmy.ml avatar

States don’t serve the majority, per se, but whoever wields the state. Cheap imports are good for consumers, but producers struggle. Capitalists wield the state in America, so this is a bad thing.

prole ,

Do subsidies not exist in your reality? Or are they only reserved for corn farmers?

Chocrates ,

They do, but I was responding to someone that said Yellen went to China to address it, so they aren’t immediately starting with subsidizing production.

KneeTitts ,
@KneeTitts@lemmy.world avatar

Id say the bulk of jobs being created in north america wont be in manufacturing the panels, but rather in the installation and upkeep of solar farms and solar panels on houses. If thats the case, then we want the panels themselves to be as low cost as possible to keep the overall cost of projects down.

If politicians had any balls at all (they dont) they’d be proposing publicly funded solar farms outside every major city. But we cant have that because that would be the government directly competing with oil companies, and thats why oil companies have bought one side of our entire political system to keep that from ever happening.

Addv4 ,

But then you have the issue of being dependent on China for the solar panels, which is why it is crucial to have domestic production. And we have already seen this demonstrated, as China has banned the export of solar panels recently in reaction to us banning electric cars from import (they would probably hurt our domestic car market).

AA5B ,

in reaction to us banning electric cars from import (they would probably hurt our domestic car market

Which is an entirely different story that I don’t get. Sure, the protectionism, ok, but there’s no one even attempting to compete with them, and legacy manufacturers have backtracked even more in introducing any. Even Tesla appears to have given up on a reasonably priced EV. What’s the point of protectionism if there’s no equivalent market to protect and no one wants to establish one?

shiroininja ,

I’ve said it a million times, we had the opportunity to get into the market early under Bush JR, but he shot down investing in the tech. Now who is one of the top exporters?

quicksand ,

The manufacturing would still have probably been moved to China at this point, but it’s frustrating that we didn’t even try to support it.

shiroininja ,

100% true

UnderpantsWeevil ,
@UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world avatar

It’s more complicated than that. Supply shocks cause short term instability in markets that require long term revenue streams to offer service.

Because we privatized our infrastructure, and because private firms divert a bunch of their revenue to profit, we have a bunch of material infrastructure that needs to be maintained by firms more interested in extracting profit than keeping them functional.

That’s the real threat of solar panels. If we cut into private profit margins, they’ll allow the infrastructure to collapse rather than maintain them with declining profit.

Altofaltception ,

All I keep reading is the failure of capitalism at the end of the day.

soEZ ,

Its failure of regulation. Same shit will happen in any system if its not properly regulated and checked…

Grimy ,

Seems like the real problem is corporations and the solution would be to violently nationalize at the slightest hint of bad faith.

I don’t think it’s a good idea to have our infrastructure be used as a hostage.

UnderpantsWeevil ,
@UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world avatar

nationalize at the slightest hint of bad faith.

That’s a smart policy, from the economics perspective. But its pretty disastrous from the politics perspective.

Countries that try to nationalize their major productive assets regularly find themselves destabilized and regime changed in short order.

MissJinx , to lemmyshitpost in He's got a point
@MissJinx@lemmy.world avatar

Are we all working the same job? Just spending 8 hours inputing data, filtering and moving columns in excel?

afraid_of_zombies ,

Sounds boring and easy to automate

MissJinx ,
@MissJinx@lemmy.world avatar

no no, the learning curve on the business enviroement won’t cover the financial benefits ;) lol jk, of course it is but no one is going to say it

afraid_of_zombies ,

Just automate it yourself and “work” from home.

MissJinx ,
@MissJinx@lemmy.world avatar

If I knew how, I would have a real job as a programer. at least I would create something

afraid_of_zombies ,

Million tutorials online or if you are lazy you could just post the contract on something like upwork. I answered a post like that and the guy tried to haggle with me. Automating his job and he wants a discount cause he claimed he could get someone in India for cheaper. Told him he should do that. Point is you could do it and as long as you are not him get quality code in short order.

xpinchx ,

I’m not a programmer by trade but I learned some python and VBA to automate some of the things I do every day. Any time you’re doing some manual shit and think “there’s gotta be a better way” there probably is - just Google how to do that one thing and you’ll build up your knowledge over time.

It’s up to you to decide if you tell your boss or not. I chose to and took on some extra duties along with extra pay so it worked out for me but it’s a small business with a high value on productivity.

bstix ,

You can learn how. VBA for Excel is pretty easy to learn on your own.

There’s probably a lot of material online for learning it, but that will most likely only scare anyone off from actually getting started, because it is too comprehensive.

I suggest you just start trying and then search for each problem at a time. You’ll soon learn how to make anything you need.

The first step is to get familar with macros. Enable the developer tab and record a macro. Start with something easy, like searching for a word and format it as bold or whatever. Then stop the recording. In the macros dialogue box you can set a keyboard shortcut so the macro will run everytime you press that key combination. Play around with it.

If you then open the visual basic editor or click edit on the macro, you can see what code was recorded.

You’ll soon realise that even if macros are powerful, they’re also very limited for larger tasks. There’s always something that doesn’t really work as intended when trying to use it on other cases. That’s when you need to start editing the code and this is when the online resources come in very handy. Simply search for “vba” and any function this causing issues and you’ll easily find solutions.

Xephonian ,

Love the huge programming capabilities built into Excel itself but for everything else it’s AutoHotKey FTW. I have a bunch of macros tied to the F keys along the top of the keyboard that can fill out any number of forms with a couple key presses.

Gordon , to coffee in Anyone tried CoffeeSock? A V60 Style Reusable Cloth Coffee Filter

So my issue with this is the amount of water you need to use to clean it. Paper is compostable and bio-degradable.

Daxtron2 ,

I would imagine it’s not much if you can just toss it in with your normal laundry. Most of the time it’s just a quick rinse anyway. Many people have no way to compost either.

Gordon ,

True, but I drink coffee daily and only do laundry every week or even two weeks some times. So although that may work for some, it would not work for me.

Daxtron2 ,

I can’t imagine it needs a full wash every time

Gordon ,

Even just getting the user grounds and fines out would require at least a gallon of water.

psud ,

I don’t think I want laundry flavours in my coffee. I’d follow Hoffman’s method - rinse well then leave it in the fridge in a glass of water; wash in espresso machine cleaner whenever it gets too oily; freeze it in a ziplock if not using it daily

Daxtron2 ,

Hoffman the goat, always trust that man when it comes to coffee

HessiaNerd ,

Have you seen paper made? There is a reason paper mills are usually on rivers.

ChickenLadyLovesLife , to lemmyshitpost in He's got a point

Add two+ hours a day sitting in your car and the aging process is actually reversed!

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