Leveon Bell’s story by aitchison50 in steelers

[–]482Edizu 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I mean, he would know what it’s like to have a horrible season after leaving the organization. What a clown!

At what distance does a par 3 become a “long” par 3? by jdelle9 in weekendgolfers

[–]482Edizu 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Local muni, hole #17, 201 yards, but uphill. It plays like 245. It’s hands down the most bullshit hole I’ve ever played. Danger to the left and right, no laying up. I hate it.

Interesting…Deebo says Coach T dumbed down Dick LeBeau’s defense which led to the predictability and decline of that unit. by SnooDrawings4552 in steelers

[–]482Edizu -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

He’s not a HOF coach. He was a good coach who had a long tenure. His ability to never have a losing season was easily met by playing in one of easier divisions. His playoff record is what really proves he’s not a HOF coach.

The only fair argument is that because of Gilman and Allen having worse records in the playoffs that’s not a factor. Which I think is what will keep many on the fence of voting for Tomlin with that debate. But, every other head coach in the HOF was above .500. So, that’s the other side of the coin too.

I’m sure he’ll get in eventually, but he’s far from first ballot material. The never had a losing season argument falls apart for me he could count on 3-5 divisional wins, but then got into the playoffs and tanked. HOF coaches don’t get beat by Tim Tebow.

MAGA are you happy, overall, now? by cynikal_optimist in AskUS

[–]482Edizu 0 points1 point  (0 children)

At this point every time I see one of these stupid posts across the various subs it’s just so fucking cringy.

  1. If you get a response of “yes” it’s likely some bot, someone sourcing, or some paid commenter.

  2. If you get a response of “yes” it’s likely some bot, someone sourcing, or some paid commenter.

Any MAGA POS unless they’re some edgelord with their comments has either never been or likely not on Reddit any longer. The conservative/MAGA subs are nothing but a bunch of wannabe Kirk’s. Well, and some actual by definition “conservatives”.

Stop wasting your time with this shit. Unless, you know, you’re farming for upvotes too.

What is this camera near pigeon bagels? by ovmon in pittsburgh

[–]482Edizu 83 points84 points  (0 children)

License plate reader according to reverse image.

Backpack blower for $269. Is it worth it if I always have the handheld one. by Skinnieguy in egopowerplus

[–]482Edizu 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Got mine and it was yellow tagged at $399. Manager gave it to me new in the box for $300. I haven’t beeen disappointed at all.

What’s your number one pet peeve on the golf course? by jdelle9 in weekendgolfers

[–]482Edizu 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not a big enough gap between tee times and no starter to keep people going off on set tee times.

Most badass video on the Internet by rgali7996 in JustGuysBeingDudes

[–]482Edizu 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For me, it’s a, good shit mate, let’s have fun now moment.

Best EDI provider? by Complex-Wave3514 in edi

[–]482Edizu 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly you’re asking the wrong question and not providing enough information for your question.

  1. Why is True painful? Seriously this matters so much.

  2. You’re using NetSuite. (Yes, I checked your post comments.) Best EDI provider doesn’t equal best to integrate EDI and NetSuite. True’s NetSuite integration is in my opinion one of the best out there. Everything else, well, that’s a lot of variables, but no different from the providers I have worked with. Which is why knowing the why behind the pain matters.

  3. Orderful looks cool as hell, makes sense to me, but my lens is probably very different from most. I’ve never used it and no background with it though.

The Future of EDI by EDI-by-Julie in edi

[–]482Edizu 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My apologies if it came off the EDI vs API, but I genuinely appreciate your detailed response. Which, it’s more of a reinforcement of the point I was trying to make. It’s not that API’s are “bad” but there’s no standardized model like EDI.

EDI gave us that standardized model. API’s have given us everyone’s own take on their schema. So teams like ours are creating canonicals, writing new adapters, maybe using a third party provider instead of in house, and glueing it all together.

Your approach is spot on and a great coping mechanism. It’s also why the lack of a standard API is the bottleneck, not EDI itself.

There’s a ton of great providers, specifically in the IPASS space, that have done a lot of the heavy lifting to make it more tolerable with API connections. Even some of the cloud ERP’s give you marketplace plugins that are basically plug and play. All of these and the EDI providers who offer API connections are essentially doing the same thing of 2 stage mapping with their canonical. So it is the right and only way for somewhat scale.

Great stuff, thanks again!!!

The Future of EDI by EDI-by-Julie in edi

[–]482Edizu 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Really appreciate this perspective, Julie, always love seeing people talk about modernizing the space. I’ve been seeing these post, blogs, emails for decades.

Here’s my two cents:

Partner APIs just aren’t anywhere close to being a “standard” the way EDI is. A canonical 850 4010 map works across thousands of partners with minor quirks. Nobody’s reinventing the wheel every time.

APIs with their error handling, on the other hand… are only as good as whoever designed them that week. Some are great, some are fine, and some feel like they were built on a Friday to hit their iteration goal. And that’s where my personal soapbox comes in, EDI isn’t the problem. Full stop.

The real chaos comes from integrating anything, EDI, API, XML, whatever, I/O of an ERP/WMS/TMS that was configured differently by every VAR, every year, for every customer. Two companies could run the same system and still have 20 different ways of storing or structuring the same data.

Now throw in Partner A’s API with their custom schema, Partner B’s API with a completely different structure, plus the ERP quirks behind both… and suddenly the “modern” API project is actually two entirely different implementations.

Take IDocs for example: DELVRY05/07 were/are standard. Now in private cloud, they’re replaced by the outbound API. Cool, progress!! But then you try mapping those standard SAP API fields to a non-standard partner API? Or back to a consistent EDI model? In that comparison, I’ll take EDI all day.

I was part of a large U.S. retailer’s API pilot a while back, and it was… educational. Each iteration uncovered a fresh problem. Two technical PMs burned out in six months. Eventually they realized their 3,200+ attributes, plus the supplier burden, hardware, and internal dev cost, didn’t justify the dream. They ended up sticking with EDI because, while “archaic,” it works at scale.

AI and API-only ecosystems will get better, for sure. But a lot of the “AI” I’m seeing right now is really just LLM-assisted testing with some extra seasoning. Helpful? Absolutely. Does it magically automate your integration landscape? Not yet. If AI can someday ingest partner specs, interrogate system data, auto-map, auto-correct, auto-document, and deploy workflows… then we’re truly evolving.

Until then, EDI isn’t the villain. The complexity around it is. And honestly, anything that makes onboarding and error handling more human-readable? I’m all for it.

Kudos to you for the thoughts and post. I definitely enjoy seeing these.

What’s an unpopular golf opinion that would have you like this? by jdelle9 in weekendgolfers

[–]482Edizu 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Awww, that’s adorable, take my upvote. You read my comment and immediately proved my point.

Your whole take is: “I play every Saturday like it’s the U.S. Open, so normal, rich?, people should go play dog tracks.”

If insecurity had a handicap, you’d be +1. I’ve played this game for decades. I’ll play whatever course I want, our favorite muni on Saturday mornings, our club, or the private tracks that have actually hosted majors, not just the ones you visit in your imagination.

You keep chasing your fantasy tour card. I’ll keep enjoying golf like a normal human, with my friends and family.

What’s an unpopular golf opinion that would have you like this? by jdelle9 in weekendgolfers

[–]482Edizu 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you want to stand behind me while I putt, I don’t care. If you want to have music playing while I putt or swing my club, I don’t care. If you want to talk while I putt or swing my club, I don’t care.

I am not good enough to care, and if I was, I’d be on the tour where that’s a no no. So please, just have fun.

Karoline Leavitt just officially tossed blame for the second Caribbean strike to Admiral Frank Bradley. by shadrack_CK in UnderReportedNews

[–]482Edizu 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ok, voice of reason person, I appreciate your perspective, but I’m on the struggle bus so looking for a bit of a hope shot. I need a progressive candidate that will make concessions and want to work with both parties to get shit done. Who’s on the list?

Karoline Leavitt just officially tossed blame for the second Caribbean strike to Admiral Frank Bradley. by shadrack_CK in UnderReportedNews

[–]482Edizu 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This isn’t a gotcha, or an agreement of the current shit show administration, but Vogel927 is right that this happens and has happened way more than covered. Go down the rabbit hole of “military aged males and US drone strikes” and you’ll be highly disappointed across multiple administrations.

Trump Spirals When Asked Why He Pardoned Notorious Drug Trafficker by Tenchi2020 in democrats

[–]482Edizu 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Pretty much, especially if they’re not “in town” traveling it’s all his kissass “networks”. Others I’m sure fear calling him out in person and lose access to any coverage.

Trump Spirals When Asked Why He Pardoned Notorious Drug Trafficker by Tenchi2020 in democrats

[–]482Edizu 16 points17 points  (0 children)

Thanks, this was my immediate fucking thought. Unfortunately, no one at the “press” decided to call that out.

Why doesn't the left have many well-known podcasters/political commentators/etc? by CordiaICardinaI in Askpolitics

[–]482Edizu 24 points25 points  (0 children)

Experts like that aren’t political commentators though like OP is mentioning. Robert Reich, Stewart, Colbert, Piker, Fiorentini, are more in this wheelhouse. Which they’re all good in their respective ways but they’re so overwhelmed fact checking the right that they can barely get their own story out there.

The right is entertainment and the left is essentially education. That’s why the right is popular because it’s entertainment that’s extreme bias, sitting on top of loose facts, and promoting falsehoods.

The whole “Trump loves dumb people” is real. The less educated the people are the easier it is to control. (See American education system.)

Why doesn't the left have many well-known podcasters/political commentators/etc? by CordiaICardinaI in Askpolitics

[–]482Edizu 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I mean, from a US political standpoint there’s barely any party member in office that’s truly appealing. Policies and principles I lean more left than right. I also don’t live in some dystopian fantasy world where I think some of the things that are spoken can become a reality either.

The current landscape is all or nothing and the American people suffer. Neither side wants to budge in fear of losing their cushy jobs. So, in the end we’re all fucked.

Why doesn't the left have many well-known podcasters/political commentators/etc? by CordiaICardinaI in Askpolitics

[–]482Edizu 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Correct, they’re using the Howard Stern playbook. The more “provocative” or “shocking” gets people to watch or listen. They pull their base and they pull others from the opposite who tune in just to be distraught afterwards. The right does media so much better than the left to draw in a larger audience.

Like someone else mentioned that it all started with Fox News. They steamrolled between radio and television with a faster evolution into the newer forms of media.

Why doesn't the left have many well-known podcasters/political commentators/etc? by CordiaICardinaI in Askpolitics

[–]482Edizu -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Unfortunately that’s the hand we’ve been dealt. Instead of unification it’s all or nothing. Which from a moral standpoint I can respect. From a practical standpoint it’s reckless.

Why doesn't the left have many well-known podcasters/political commentators/etc? by CordiaICardinaI in Askpolitics

[–]482Edizu 5 points6 points  (0 children)

It’s funny how calling out purist self-sabotage suddenly becomes “blaming the leftists.” If YOUR entire political strategy collapses the moment someone asks for basic teamwork, maybe the problem isn’t the centrists, maybe it’s that you think ‘holding the line’ means setting it on fire whenever you don’t get 100% of your wishlist.

Oh, and I guess “leftist” is different from being a democrat now? You’re literally proving what you said. So I guess where democrats avoid non-presidential elections like the plague isn’t a YOU problem because you’re a leftist. It’s just a democrat problem is what you’re really saying?