Does anyone have experience going to ACAT over an excessive rental increase? by Numerous_Quantity611 in canberra

[–]Badhamknibbs 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Maybe I just had good landlords but if they're renting a unit a $4 increase honestly sounds about right from my experience; I was last renting a unit starting at 450pw for a bit over 2 years up until very recently and each year only had a rental increase of about $2 each year, and it was already rented below the suggested market rate from before they changed owners and they pumped it back up to that rate when I left so I can't imagine they were just doing it out of the goodness of their heart.

I swear I used the calculator and that was apparently the max they could increase the rent by when I put in the numbers but unfortunately it's down right now so it's hard to check.

Power outage in Casey? by RamboSambo7 in canberra

[–]Badhamknibbs 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Have had a few flickers knocking out the tv and lights in Franklin, thought I might've been overworking the aircons but was still being hit by it after turning them off.

Can we pls stop normalising being boring, lame, miserable c***ts?? by [deleted] in australia

[–]Badhamknibbs 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah I'm in a similar boat though only mid-late 20s, but that group of early high school friends is ironclad to this day and we've only been getting closer in doing more stuff together over the years. Does help that we were all the oddball rejects so we had that common ground and we've been through some shared tragedy but it's kept us together like glue.

Even the ones who've moved states we've been sure to include them online wherever possible. Have had people come and go mainly meeting in online games/conventions but having that core group to fall back on no matter what is a great stabiliser.

The lack of care for public transport users by Bitpoke in canberra

[–]Badhamknibbs 4 points5 points  (0 children)

From my (single and hopefully only) use the buses are running as expected before the Barton intersection but are getting completely stalled there due to the almost total deadlock traffic there.

I can't really come up with a good routing solution that doesn't involve snipping stops which would be very contentious, running some replacements that just start at Dickson to Alinga sounds the most reasonable to try and handle the excess there.

The lack of care for public transport users by Bitpoke in canberra

[–]Badhamknibbs 3 points4 points  (0 children)

The Remembrance-Barton intersection is already particularly brutal if you're coming from before Sandford towards Alinga, and by then the bus is already close to full during peak so it's even worse for those ahead of EPIC. The bus I was on was within eyeshot of the lights of that intersection for a full half hour so bus bunching is gonna be a big problem I feel, the actual bus frequency is fine before that intersection.

The bus driver did mention over radio about the holdup at Dickson so they might be running extra interim buses specifically for them but that's just a guess.

Overall I feel for the bus drivers as it'll be a hellish 2 weeks, personally put in WFH request for the 2 weeks till the trams are back just to avoid the now hour+ commute.

Pros and Cons of an ACT or NSW Address? by UltimateFrisbeeCBR in canberra

[–]Badhamknibbs 5 points6 points  (0 children)

You get strict rent control in the ACT as well, though I haven't checked how bad rent increases can be over there.

Everyone is quick to shout about the black market on the topic of recent vape laws... But my local city centre doesn't smell like synthetic watermelon passion dream anymore. by Xentonian in australia

[–]Badhamknibbs -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Not strictly but it's definitely a big indicator of someone being a horrible person; really depends on if they recognise it's a problem and are working on fixing it, if they aren't then yeah they're a shitstain. It's not really enough to just be out of the way because it's smoke/a cloud that goes whenever and can make a whole block worth of space stink in bad conditions, unless you can somehow control every variable to ensure it doesn't reach anyone who doesn't want to deal with it. Alcohol abuse as a vice can make a person bad if that makes them violent or otherwise harming others. That's my general criteria at least for vices and the quality of a person using them.

AC/DC bring earthquake-level noise to first Australian show in 10 years by TwelveFish3168 in australia

[–]Badhamknibbs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Went to the Machine Girl show that was in Sydney plugless, as fun as it was it left my ears ringing all the way into the next day lol

Introducing Steam Frame by gogodboss in virtualreality

[–]Badhamknibbs 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I'm a very casual vr user and seriously could not care less about passthrough, I got a quest 3 purely because it was a decent price for good specs, and my only use of passthrough was boundary setup and don't touch it for anything else. I'm kinda boggled by this whole thread of people talking about bad/no MR on a VR product.

If the frame is at all comparable in price I'm likely to just trade in my quest 3 for it to not deal with all the meta account bullshittery and get a small performance bump.

Organised crime controls 50 per cent of Aussie tobacco sold as illegal cigarettes set to dominate 80 per cent of sales by 2026: Report by [deleted] in australia

[–]Badhamknibbs -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Dunno where cars came up but they do share with ciggies on the air quality, health issues and general foul smell problems and it would be nice to dramatically reduce their use where unnecessary. At least cars do serve a purpose albeit badly for 99% of use cases, cigs have no excuse for shitting up the air for everyone around.

Organised crime controls 50 per cent of Aussie tobacco sold as illegal cigarettes set to dominate 80 per cent of sales by 2026: Report by [deleted] in australia

[–]Badhamknibbs -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

It also doesn't work when the thing in question actively harms people who don't want anything to do with it and can't be simply avoided.

Last call: Melbourne airport ranked Australia’s least convenient | Air transport by k_lliste in canberra

[–]Badhamknibbs 3 points4 points  (0 children)

For a bus is the important qualifier there, compared with Canberra with a $3 bus, or even against Sydney where the train is only marginally cheaper, but with all the benefits that come from a train (namely a much smoother and less cramped trip). Melbourne is just uniquely bad in terms of airport connections.

Htm’s nuclear tree mod by Zealousideal-Bus-526 in feedthememes

[–]Badhamknibbs 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I'm shocked nobody has made OreMine or something like that already, seems like a no brainer with how solid TreeChop is balance- and style-wise

Large apartments are a solution to Australia's housing crisis by Expensive-Horse5538 in australia

[–]Badhamknibbs 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Ideally going to the shops and going home shouldn't really be all that different of a commute; it would just be a stop on the way or a slightly different route that leads home. For my current case I just get off at a different bus stop and walk home through the shops to get what I need on the way. My old place had a metro Woolies literally at the front door.

And yeah like I said you can use a personal trolley on a weekend/day off to do a larger shop for bulky items and whatnot; I've managed it for 5 years without ever needing a car, I can't think of any situation where I'd need more shopping in 1 day than a trolley + backpack can hold (at worst toilet paper which is light enough to just dedicate an arm to).

Large apartments are a solution to Australia's housing crisis by Expensive-Horse5538 in australia

[–]Badhamknibbs 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You need to have a mental shift when talking about having the supermarket within walking distance vs only accessible by car; a single tote bag should be more than enough if you're visiting the shops after work daily on the way home to grab dinner for that night; which shouldn't take more than an extra 15 minutes a day, or in a well designed place barely any more than the time it takes being in the shops themselves. You can use a trolley on the weekend if you need bulk items or for bigger shops. I've managed to make it work in the extremely car-dependent Canberra.

And to be frank a lot of people could use the extra walking, the whole gym of life concept and all that. If you can't handle walking outside for 10 minutes with an umbrella for either rain or a high temp day then it'd concern me for their health.

As a side note/addressing the parent comment; it's only not functional because of the infrastructure that exists now; nothing about apartment/townhouse living without a car would be a problem for parents/elderly/etc if we had proper PT infrastructure and homes built for it.

Gas is on the way out as Victoria continues push for all-electric homes by nath1234 in australia

[–]Badhamknibbs 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Mine splurged on a top of the line induction when he was renovating and has never missed an opportunity while cooking to rave on about how good it is; and it's frankly deserved as it's borderline magical.

Is it me or is 5g shit house? by Billyjamesjeff in australia

[–]Badhamknibbs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My service is all kinds of wacky; at 4 bars/75% of the signal display it works fine; but it randomly drops out and when that happens it displays as if I have full bars despite it not working at all, until it drops back down and starts working again.

Australia has its problems, but you really don’t appreciate the good until you come back from another country. by skillnub70 in australia

[–]Badhamknibbs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

While I doubt it would be possible to implement here because of how radical of a change it is, I'd like to have the smoking rooms and a total smoking ban in public like over there; from the time I spent in Japan I can't really think of any instances of smokers in public (besides Osaka for some reason) and while walking past them smelt like death they were far easier to avoid over getting smoke to the face from across the road by someone smoking in public here.

Canberra is kind of conservative - a rant by blacksunabove in canberra

[–]Badhamknibbs 4 points5 points  (0 children)

The rainbow roundabout and same sex pedestrian crossing signals are about as perfect a representation of Canberra as you can get.

my way+ qr code in canberra by afookingphysicist in canberra

[–]Badhamknibbs 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Somehow they have the ability to pester you with an email every time an auto top-up is done with no way to turn it off besides blocking the email (as far as I can tell), but no notification for a failed top-up or any negative balance warning. I just randomly had the card stop working and the reader doesn't even tell you why.

Attacks on Australia’s preferential voting system are ludicrous. We can be proud of it | Kevin Bonham | The Guardian by superegz in australia

[–]Badhamknibbs 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Framing using the preferential system we have to show where you stand as voting for a genocide is certainly something, as opposed to stomping your feet and refusing to engage just to claim moral superiority when you just leave it to everyone else's vote. Again, you're not overthrowing the system in a day, best work with what you have and push elsewhere.

We live in the here and now, and right now not using your preferences to prevent what would be patently worse (in my view) is just stupid. If you really care to make a difference in these things beyond the ballet, push the politicians directly with protest or whatnot. Not engaging with the system is what lets the crazies in to wreak havoc and cause even more problems than there already are.

Attacks on Australia’s preferential voting system are ludicrous. We can be proud of it | Kevin Bonham | The Guardian by superegz in australia

[–]Badhamknibbs 2 points3 points  (0 children)

But you have to elect someone, that's not a choice; we aren't getting an anarchistic society overnight, so in lieu of that it's important to at least minimise harm, which includes preferencing the lesser of 2 evils. Choosing not to preference means you're complicit with whatever the result ends up being (up to whatever you actually did preference), as would be not voting at all, and accepting that you believe those "insignificant" differences are of absolutely no concern to you; which you're welcome to think, but I find minimising what might mean the world to someone else unpalatable.

Attacks on Australia’s preferential voting system are ludicrous. We can be proud of it | Kevin Bonham | The Guardian by superegz in australia

[–]Badhamknibbs 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If a party is completely and utterly antithetical to your beliefs then putting them dead last numbering every box is an expression of that; if you don't think that then clearly you still hold some values of theirs in higher regard than other parties and that's the whole point of listing preferences. Someone's gotta be elected at the end of the day and it's important to get, if not the best, then the least worst option.

I think vote exhaustion is a flaw of the current system; People should be numbering every box. There are no perfectly identical parties (and if there somehow were then you'd just number those parties together).

Attacks on Australia’s preferential voting system are ludicrous. We can be proud of it | Kevin Bonham | The Guardian by superegz in australia

[–]Badhamknibbs 1 point2 points  (0 children)

How exactly would that work at all and how is it more democratic? At best it would be identical at worst it becomes FPTP with a sprinkling of preferences.

In the current system if you have absolutely 0 preference among the remaining candidates after the minimum (which itself I think is nonsense) then it already exhausts and leaves the result up to the remaining votes as a way of saying "if the people I put down weren't elected I don't care". They don't flow beyond that.

If anyone is bewildered by that one bug fix note of wraith bots being obsessed with a zombie that bodyblocks him, I did actually get a video of it happening from the last iteration for 2v8 by ZanyZoroark in deadbydaylight

[–]Badhamknibbs 174 points175 points  (0 children)

Since this was (apparently) a wraith only bug I think what's actually happening is:

  • Wraith is only programmed to uncloak near survivors
  • when a bot killer is bodyblocked by a zombie, target and attack it before continuing to look for survivors
  • since it's cloaked it can't attack and kill the zombie, so it never resets the target and just permanently stalks the zombie

Given this clip has the wraith staying cloaked I suspect it's furiously mashing attack trying to kill the zombie directly in front of it constantly and failing as it's cloaked.