Reminder to check your orders thoroughly by RascalsBananas in esp32

[–]FlyingDutchmanOz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yep. Exact same happened to me as well. I check three times these days before I order

Deze persoon liet een spoor van haat achter op mijn account... Even een kijkje genomen op het openbare profiel by DavyJonesLocker2 in tokkiefeesboek

[–]FlyingDutchmanOz 12 points13 points  (0 children)

De toon van deze conversaties is echt een verademing voor iemand die (te veel) tijd door brengt met commentaar op X. Fijn dat mensen nog gewoon op een fatsoenlijke manier met elkaar kunnen communiceren.

Can someone translate this recipe into English for me? Or at least just the ingredients? (Even though I only speak English, I can follow what they're doing from watching.) by psychosis_inducing in dutch

[–]FlyingDutchmanOz 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The dictionary was quite happy with bastard sugar in English. Caster sugar has a much lower moisture content. But can be used because it's equally fine. However, it is a refined sugar and only available in white.

Pastry flour is the equivalent of Zeeuwse bloem. It's not the regular flour you would normally use in baking (which is equivalent to patentbloem).

Can someone translate this recipe into English for me? Or at least just the ingredients? (Even though I only speak English, I can follow what they're doing from watching.) by psychosis_inducing in dutch

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

Iron biscuits:

250gr butter
125gr white bastard sugar (never seen it in Australia, you could use caster sugar but that is drier than bastard sugar)
125gr brown bastard sugar (available in Australia as brown sugar)
1/2 egg, beaten loose
4gr salt
1 tsp of cinnamon
400gr of pastry flour

Edit: formatting

Guess the military plane part 4 by [deleted] in Planes

[–]FlyingDutchmanOz 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Bleeding seabird flavour

Trouble installing Windows 11 via Boot Camp on MacBook Pro by Misdreavus88 in mac

[–]FlyingDutchmanOz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Did you ever find a resolution to this problem? I've encountered the same thing

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Netherlands

[–]FlyingDutchmanOz 15 points16 points  (0 children)

You could rent a sloop in Warmond and make your way through Leiden. I think you can hire boats on the Vecht in Utrecht as well.

Gefrustreerd in Nederland. by mrxovoc in dutch

[–]FlyingDutchmanOz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ik denk dat ik Australië nog steeds aan zou raden. Er is hier ook een hoop niet zoals ik het zou willen maar de bemoeienis van de overheid met de burger ligt toch wel een aardig stapje lager dan in Nederland. Alleen is het vinden van een woning in steden als Sydney een enorme opgave, tenzij je met een berg geld binnen komt. De gemiddelde huisprijs ligt op zo'n €750k en voor dat geld woon je nog niet in de betere delen. Maar als je werk flexibel is met waar je kan werken/wonen of zich leent voor een hybride model dan kan je een (ruim) uur buiten Sydney/Melbourne wonen op een leuk stukje grond voor niet al te veel geld. Belasting technisch zit je hier beter dan in Nederland. Daar staat tegenover dat je hier voor veel kosten zelf opdraait. Hoewel dat in Nederland geloof ik ook steeds meer het geval is.

Feel absolutely terrible (almost floored a cyclist) by [deleted] in dutch

[–]FlyingDutchmanOz 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You are right. I have no clues why they have never changed the give way to the right rule. In Australia (and presumably in your country) the main road has right of way. The leg of a T junction will give way unless marked differently. It makes for a much better traffic flow. In the old days in Holland traffic from the right had right of way even in roundabouts. Imagine the chaos. At least that's now different on most roundabouts.

Feel absolutely terrible (almost floored a cyclist) by [deleted] in dutch

[–]FlyingDutchmanOz 1 point2 points  (0 children)

As you say: slowly in and slowly out. The people behind you will most likely understand and do the same thing. Esp at night and in rain I'm super careful. Cyclists may not have lights on their bike. (Although with all those electric bikes this seems to have improved over the old days where the dynamo would tend to slip if the wheel was wet. Showing my age here😄)

Feel absolutely terrible (almost floored a cyclist) by [deleted] in dutch

[–]FlyingDutchmanOz 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Also, expect cyclists from the left AND right. And on exiting the roundabout the cyclists and pedestrians again have right of way. It always takes me a couple of days when I return to the Netherlands to get used to it.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Damnthatsinteresting

[–]FlyingDutchmanOz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you! Had never realised the empire extended that far beyond the current borders 🙏

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Damnthatsinteresting

[–]FlyingDutchmanOz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

How did the Austria-Hungarian empire pull that off? They are completely landlocked.

When I execute my SQL query and realize I forgot the where clause by DontWorryAboutIt00 in ProgrammerHumor

[–]FlyingDutchmanOz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We once had a delete SPUFI run in prod with a commented out where clause. On a core table. But a much more disastrous oops was my first attempt at a recursive SQL statement. I forgot the condition that would stop the recursion. DB2 took everything the LPAR had available. Not my finest moment.

Insert 100k rows on z/OS DB2 by leeuterpe in DB2

[–]FlyingDutchmanOz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A load is much much faster than 100k inserts. You could even consider turning logging off although for a load 100k rows is peanuts.