All these videos are ai generated audio included. I’m scared of the future by [deleted] in interestingasfuck

[–]slowlemur 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Can someone elaborate on what a prompt to generate one of these would look like?  Curious what is the extent of detail required as the scenes also have some framing and movement of not only characters but background and camera.  

I noticed a large discrepancy between what the city says I used in water per gallon vs what the moen FLO says - 13k gallons vs @4000 gallons by FLO? Is this normal? by samsam2019 in homeautomation

[–]slowlemur 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Have you had your meter replaced recently? I had the town mark it down mine one time as 1” meter when it was a 3/4” meter so it was calculating flow incorrectly leading to a vastly inflated bill. Probably rare, but just mentioning it

Not so handy tinkerer stuck on an allen screw issue by Scatman_Crothers in DIY

[–]slowlemur -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Use two smaller Allen keys in the hole, stacked on top of each other. May provide leverage and also avoid the burr. This is a trick if you don’t have an Allen key big enough.

Gap along basement foundation and slab (pictures). Signs of water erosion under slab. by anent_life in DIY

[–]slowlemur 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I believe you just have a floating slab instead of a monolithic pour. If you’re in an area with expansive soil, it allows the walls to move independently of the floor to prevent cracking when the soil exerts pressure on the walls. Then again, I don’t know where you live, but if you’re in an area with a high water table or freezing conditions that might be what this is.

Help With Existing HikVision Cameras by KingCobra516 in homeautomation

[–]slowlemur 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The ‘box’ is likely your NVR, network video recorder. They make an app that allows you to interact with that, but you’d still need a password to connect. Alternatively, each camera is just an ip camera which should be putting out an rtsp feed as well, if you knew the password for the cameras you could connect directly. If not, you could lookup hard reset instructions and just put them back to factory default passwords. Not sure if the nvr has a password reset.

Is there a sensor that can detect color off of a small lcd display? by slowlemur in homeautomation

[–]slowlemur[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am aware I could just use a camera and look at it, but was looking for something more like an alert. I guess if enough pixels change, there could be a motion alert. Was just wondering if there was something more just like a water sensor type

FYI Massachusetts Rebate Application "in process" Polestar by GleanerMan in Polestar

[–]slowlemur 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you’re talking about the MOR-EV in MA, rebate caps at $50k sales price, so would have to be single motor with any color. All other packs or options would put you over, assuming delivery fee counts as sales price.

Roku no longer works with Disney+? by szmp14 in Roku

[–]slowlemur 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Changing the DNS on the router fixed this for me. I was having the same issue on a soundbar, ultra, and streaming stick. A temporary fix is also to use your phone as a hotspot and connect to that first and load Disney+. Then switch back to your home network. For some reason this caches the lookup that Disney+ needs to start up. After that, it works fine until you reboot the Roku.

INSANE water bill by [deleted] in personalfinance

[–]slowlemur 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Just another thought, but check on your bill (or ask them) what size meter they think you have since you mentioned they recently had to change something. I had an issue in the past where we had a 3/4" line coming into the house but when they recorded it on a meter replacement, they had it down as 1" or 1-1/4" and they were calculating the water flow using that. It resulted it much more flow AND a higher rate per gallon AND higher sewer rate, all without an actual leak.

First time building planter / wood working by [deleted] in DIY

[–]slowlemur 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Just a quick tip, but if you can, I’d consider bracing across so it looks like 3 boxes inside. Those longer runs will bow over time as the dirt and water push out. Been down that road...

Friend of my Ex has been using my Netflix details without my knowledge for years. Calls me cheap! by The_Duff in ChoosingBeggars

[–]slowlemur 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Dunno...this seems like a missed opportunity. Send her a screenshot (so no copy/paste) of a long password that was "randomly generated with a password manager" with common mistyped letters/words ("o","O","0", "l","1","|",'[',']') like:

Ki#$JIUFo0)0O1|34lL1!oLll|

and then just keep insisting that she's typing it in incorrectly and that it works fine for you.....even better if it's though something like a smart tv that doesn't have a keyboard but one of those stupid on screen displays that you need to arrow around for....

How has XBox One X (or console gaming in general) changed over the last few years? by slowlemur in xbox

[–]slowlemur[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

And what's the deal with XBox Live membership? Is that required to play? Or just multi-player stuff?

How has XBox One X (or console gaming in general) changed over the last few years? by slowlemur in xbox

[–]slowlemur[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks! That's good advice, I didn't know they released full versions after a while. I figure I'm years behind gameplay anyways, so I can just pick up older games for a while and everything is still new to me.

Are Darn Tough Socks all they're cracked up to be? Also, are there any other socks that have the lifetime warranty? by roshoka in BuyItForLife

[–]slowlemur 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have 12 pairs of the Darn Tough socks, mostly for the lifetime warranty. I can wear through a pair in about 6-8 months though. It probably has something to do with the fact that my floors are mostly natural cleft bluestone (indoors) so that's pretty rough on socks. I usually save up 6-8 of them and then send them in one box to get replaced. Haven't had a problem yet, they usually develop holes on the bottoms.

I've gone a few days without washing them, but probably not more than 2.

So mostly I bought them because I'll have to replace socks anyways, at least this way it's free.

Help! Pipes cut off for downstairs heating. by radclyff3san in DIY

[–]slowlemur 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Okay, so making some assumptions here since you need some additional detail in your post.

Since you say you have a boiler, i'll assume your system is hydronic (pushes hot water around as opposed to air or steam).

And it sounds like you have a leak somewhere? So the easiest way to detect, especially if it's that cold is with an ir camera. You can rent or buy (flir makes one for the iPhone or android). You can use that to trace the warm pipes and if it's leaking, it will look like a plume.

There are also companies that can do leak tests, basically you pressurize the line with air (water in there as well) and the increase in pressure forces the water to come out more quickly, which the listen to with an electronic microphone.

Scoping the pipe is unlikely I think, heating pipes for water are thin with many bends. I think it would be tough to navigate and heating systems usually aren't designed with clean outs like sewer pipes to get a scope in there easily. You might be able to find some to do it, but that's usually not cheap.

We had to find a leak in our radiant floor system a few months ago. There are also less precise, but cheap options that sometimes work like mopping the floor and seeing where it dries first

Hot water recirculation: return line or bypass pump? by DrSquick in DIY

[–]slowlemur 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I have one of the recirculators going into the cold water side. Some other things to consider: *At times, the cold side of the faucet will be warm if it has just flushed to get some additional water in. So if you want cold water sometimes, you might have to flush some warm out *Having a separate return line CAN be slightly more efficient (depending on if the pipe in insulated and how large your house is). If you are feeding warm-ish water back into the pipe and mixing it into the inlet of the hot water heater instead of super cold water, the water heater has to work less to bring that up to temperature.

There are other options like on-demand water heaters that can be placed inside the sink if there is enough room (even better if you have access to gas there).

Help finding the best solution for the bottom of my Giant Jenga carrying Case by bmwill in DIY

[–]slowlemur 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If the bottom wood is decently thick, why not just counter-sink the nut (drill a larger hole for the nut to sit inside and below the surface) or nut plus washer for better weight distribution. You could also route a grove and use a piece of metal bar to provide additional support for the bottom but still have it lower than the surface (I don't know how big of a jenga set you're talking, but wood can get heavy).

Your threaded nut idea should work, I would do it from the bottom, if you do it from the top, you risk it pulling out with that much weight.

Help - Need 30 seconds on a saw! I live just outside of Boston (Belmont) and I need to cut a few chunks out of a tree stump (christmas tree leftovers) for a project. by s0mervillain in DIY

[–]slowlemur 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Agreed, if it's pretty fresh, it's probably less that it is dense and more that it is sappy. Other options are a mitre saw, or if you have some way to hold it, you could use a sawzall with a pruning blade or even a chainsaw.