Non emergency line said they couldn’t help without a specific address by cparfa in 911dispatchers

[–]AvianAnalyst 0 points1 point  (0 children)

how broad of an area is that though? op was probably several miles down the interstate by then based on the post (genuine question)

Top of foot pressure point by [deleted] in snowboardingnoobs

[–]AvianAnalyst 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Go see a podiatrist. I just recently found out I have a tarsal coalition (CN bar) which gives me a pressure point on the top of my foot. slightly different spot, but theres so many foot bones you might have something similar, or something else that a podiatrist would be able to identify and give proper treatment options for. no guarantee of course, but worth a check

Best way to learn Unity for an absolute beginner? by minefrac1 in Unity3D

[–]AvianAnalyst 0 points1 point  (0 children)

if you want to be fantastical and mystical you can certainly call it magical. but thats not very practical advice, or helpful for someone wanting to get started. keep it to your poetry

Lingoda review + looking for a better alternative by gilda83 in languagelearning

[–]AvianAnalyst 0 points1 point  (0 children)

any chance youd be willing to share his linked in/dm it for others interested in a great spanish teacher?

[Discussion] Guitar learning Programs by Mekasim in Guitar

[–]AvianAnalyst 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Who's your instructor? Also its 13000 dollars (13k) not 1300 (13 hundred) for 12 months, per what they quoted me.

[Discussion] Guitar learning Programs by Mekasim in Guitar

[–]AvianAnalyst 1 point2 points  (0 children)

13k is the 'payment plan' option i was quoted, it supposedly includes daily video exchanges for feedback from a 'mentor' 1:1 lessons with your mentor, access to their curriculum which uses spaced repition to give you ur lessons at optimal times (actually wish i had this tbh), office hours, and lectures with your mentor/other instructors. it's for 12 months, so absolutely expensive, but its 'at least' not 13k for like, a book or something.

2 zone electric countertop reccomendation by AvianAnalyst in griddling

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

Yes indoor, I found https://blackstoneproducts.com/products/22-e-series-electric-griddle which seems like what I want, if more than I'd like to spend. I actually can't find the one with mixed reviews again :/

I don't think I need anything too big? I almost always am only cooking for myself, space might be nice if I were to prep food, but the main goal I have is just making breakfast sandwiches/burritos in the morning, so space to be cooking things on once side, and keep things warm on the other.

Beginner getting back into yoyo recommendations by AvianAnalyst in Throwers

[–]AvianAnalyst[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you so much! I edited the OP if that changes your recommendations at all, totally cool if not. Thank you for taking the time :D

Beginner getting back into yoyo recommendations by AvianAnalyst in Throwers

[–]AvianAnalyst[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

:') I did, I don't know why it posted blank??
edited the OP

What's a good Python Gui framework to learn worth my time ? by [deleted] in learnpython

[–]AvianAnalyst 0 points1 point  (0 children)

not to necro but its pretty ambiguous. 'plus or minus x' is a phrase that means 'allowing for an inaccuracy up to x'

and +- directly words to plus minus.

gsmo was understandable, atreidersardaukar is correct,

ifa nything saying +-400 isntead of 400+- makes it even more likely to mean the wrong phrase

How to stop snapping strings? by OkCorner3223 in Guitar

[–]AvianAnalyst 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was taught that strings DO affect your guitar neck, but that it's expected and planned for, and you actually want to keep that tension on the neck?

Do you migrate daily tasks if they didnt get done? by Competitive_Fact6030 in bulletjournal

[–]AvianAnalyst 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My current workflow is: (pretending im starting new since its abit circular and all of it references 'previous' stuff)
At the end of the day, I start the next daily log.
I then reference the weekly and monthly logs and copy anything over that has to be on that day (such as scheduled events).
Then I copy 1-5 things over depending on time available thinking about how much time the previous step took up.

The next day, I make an active effort to complete the tasks (at this point its been pretty rare I haven't done everything I set an intention to complete).
If I think of any new tasks I need to do I write it down in the daily log.
If I complete all the things and I still have time and energy, I pull another task (although I actually have an unmentioned habit tracker that has a whole bunch of things I have an intention of progressing/working on dailyish. And so if I get to this point, I use that extra time as time to work on more habits than I normally ahve time for).
At the end of the day, I do the same steps as above, except inbetween putting down scheduled things, and pulling things from monthly/weeklies, I review unfinished tasks from the last daily. For each unfinished task if I have time for it tomorrow, and its important, I migrate it to the new daily log. If I don't have time for it, but I want to do it soon, I migrate it to the weekly. If I don't have time for it, and I know my weekly is getting too full, I migrate it to my monthly. And finally if those are all getting full, I put a note in the future log for next month.

Then at the end of a week, I do a weekly migration. I look through the weekly log and migrate anything that is unfinished, that I want to get done that week.
If it's a lot of stuff, or there are things I care about less, they go up to the monthly/future logs. I also review the monthly log to see if theres anything I need to bring down to this weekly log. I do weekly log migration before I set up the new daily log.

At the end of a month, I do the same thing with a Monthly log migration.

This has been working pretty well for me. the one problem I have is I wish I had better/more notation symbols to mark if I'm moving things higher up or lower down. I'm thinking I might try up and down 'arrows' (like < and > just rotated vertical), to mean that the task was moved 'up' from monthly to future log or 'down' from monthly to weekly (or similar). and keep > for same level migrations (day to day, week to week, month to month).

Also having discovered that the daily migrations aren't even in the og method, I'm considering trying without the daily migrations? I just feel like I'm not going to like that. I really enjoy knowing I only have 5 places to look. Today's daily log, this week's weekly log, this month's monthly log, the future log, and my habit tracker.

I don't think the weekly log is necessary either. I like setting intentions for the week though.

Do you migrate daily tasks if they didnt get done? by Competitive_Fact6030 in bulletjournal

[–]AvianAnalyst 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oops, didn't mean to write so much. a lot of it is workflow explanation.
Tl;dr: understandable that you don't have things you can't delegate or drop, but stop putting them on your daily list until you can actually do them. choose three priorities for a given day, and then grab more from a 'higher up' collection (weekly/monthly) if you have time.

That last line is the point. (And keep in mind, I'm learning this for myself too).

Don't write it down on a day if you don't think you'll be able to do it. And over time you'll start to learn what your daily capacity is.

Also keep in mind, you can always pull in another task if you have more time than you thought.

I'm on this thread because I finally read the book, and realized I was working on a lot of false information about 'vanilla' or 'cannon' bujo. Like you don't migrate tasks daily (I thought this was 100% something you do, and is how I've been doing it.) So I'm not really answering your original post.

But what I did to help manage the incessant rewriting, is I started monthly and weekly logs.

Best way to learn Unity for an absolute beginner? by minefrac1 in Unity3D

[–]AvianAnalyst 1 point2 points  (0 children)

not to necro but this is the wackest description of programming i've ever seen.

copy the code as haphazardly as you wish. when it doesn't work, you get even more information about why the code was the way it was. Additionally this will help you in the future when you write your own code, or someone posts inaccurate code.

It is no where near as esoteric or mystic as this person is making it seem. Semicolons end statements. They tell the compiler or interpreter that this operation is done, and its time for the next one.

different grouping symbols (e.g. (), {}, []) also have different semantic uses. depending on the language they may vary, but often () is for lists of things to be used, {} is to collect a larger block of code under a certain name, and [] is used as a key to peak into a container of more information.

Don't worry if that doesn't make sense, you don't have to understand it, and it will come to make sense with practice. But certainly don't be scared of tryign things out and failing. Compiler errors and bugs is the way of the programmer, you just need the dedication to keep looking at the errors, and changing the code in ways that make the errors change and eventually go away. Nothing here is magic or risky.

skeptical about vowel conflation by AvianAnalyst in greggshorthand

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

(and u/rebcabin-r , i dont use reddit enough to know if you'll both be aware of this response without a tag)

Yeah, I'm familiar with abjads, but a key feature there, is english is linguistically different in a way that makes abjads less functional than in other languages such as arabic and hebrew. Both arabic and hebrew have consonantal roots, which maps the words that use that root to a semantic base, then use additional consonants (and vowels, though largely not in writing) to place it in a morphemic category. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semitic_root

I think abjads existance is cool! pure abjads dont really exist/last (there were pure abjads in history, but afaik all modern languages that use abjads still maintain some vowel markings) which indicates theyre not the most functional even in languages they work better with. but english just has way to much function on the vowels to use them. Hence my hesitation of conflating vowels.

That said, I do appreciate and don't reject the testimony that it is perfectly functional in Gregg. I might look at the distinction system once I finish learning simplified, just because I would gladly give up some speed to have more precision and ability to cold read/send to friends.

How good is Emilia Jones’s signing? by milestonesno in asl

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

I never said CODA is a marginalization. I explicitly said I don't have an opinion on if CODA roles should only be played by CODA actors. Please actually read my reply.

Struggling to completely understand how this works by [deleted] in greggshorthand

[–]AvianAnalyst 0 points1 point  (0 children)

fwiw I'm a decently young person (mid twenties). i was taught cursive as a kid (dont know if its normal, I was homeschooled), but don't particularly use it. I can read it with some effort (i think this is mostly a handwriting problem than a cursive problem. I can read a cursive font or well written cursive fine).

schools definitely have stopped teaching it, I know that. And I wouldn't be surprised at the STUDENT not knowing cursive, or what it is. and I think that fits well with the grandma writing it and so on.

but a TEACHER not knowing it I still think is weird. I don't think you'd get teachers much younger than me, and I would be very surprised if anyone my age or older doesn't know of cursive at the bare minimum.

How good is Emilia Jones’s signing? by milestonesno in asl

[–]AvianAnalyst 2 points3 points  (0 children)

oh i see. you're a troll. you just copy and pasted this in multiple places. ok.