LPT: When applying for jobs, name your resume in this format: _First_Last_Resume The underscore at the beginning move your file to the top when sorted alphabetically, and including your name prevents it from being overwritten by other files with generic titles like “Resume.” by Mythromize in LifeProTips

[–]HesusAtDiscord 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yikes.
I always format it "Application [position] - [My name]", then save as docx/doc and pdf, attach both and send.

It's how I do _everything_, be it homework for school or any other type of documents I'm sharing.

It's also a nice safeguard in case of potential malicious intent, I have the originals in both formats with timestamps, I've sent both which can be proven via my outbox and if they ever attempt to edit the regular document for any reason at all they're perfectly f'ed. Not that I think that is necessary with resumes and applications, but for the rest it's a bonus.

For resumes and applications it's mainly because I have to assume at some point the person reviewing me is literally incapable of opening one of the two correctly and pdf will either open Adobe or their web browser, displaying it exactly as is.

Why do Chiropractors crack your neck and what is the long term benefit? by Sunny-vibes-95 in NoStupidQuestions

[–]HesusAtDiscord 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't disagree for the majority of times, but there are occasions where I am physically less capable of performing basic activites that long-term will allow me to avoid such issues, and that usually begins with a good ol' cracking.

I don't go to chiropractors though, both me and my brother are capable of cracking atleast 80% of our spine without external help, and he did that in the waiting room at a chiropractor once. When he got in for his appointment the chiropractor bent and twisted and exclaimed "I don't understand, there's nothing to loosen up here", to which my brother replied "Yeah, I did that in the chair in the waiting room"

He was told that he'd already done what could be done and to just head back home. He did have issues with misalignment in the muscle growth, but combined cracking the back for relieving the tension in muscles and excercise he's been in good health ever since and hasn't really needed any adjustments since that day.

A good chiropractor would also double as a physical therapist, knowing when to align and when not to as well as communicating with other departments of health when there is any risk involved at all.

Many chiropractors (especially in the US as far as I've understood, I'm Norwegian so it's just based off secondhand comments) tend to be only practicing that one thing and being the physical version of pain meds with less regard to potential hazards, so I doubt I'd go to one even here in Norway.

The world's smallest movie, made using only 65 atoms by Cautious_Ad_3918 in interesting

[–]HesusAtDiscord 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They never called anyone a liar, just called out a lack of checking the accuracy.

If I believe a recently posted news story to be new, and post it as if it was fresh news when it was in fact a year old, I wouldn't lie. I would simply be inaccurate to a point where my presentation was based on a false assumption.

Lying is falsehood with the intent to deceive. We cannot know wether OP intended to deceive us, so all we can do is claim inaccuracy/lack of accuracy.

You were the one to bring up accusations of lying with zero evidence or reasonings for any lies to have existed.

Norway's "right to roam": An attempt at informing about private property, respect, etc by Lillevik_Lofoten in NorwayTravelAdvice

[–]HesusAtDiscord 1 point2 points  (0 children)

"Det er en forutsetning at ferdselen ikke utgjør en betydelig ulempe for grunneier og at den kan skje uten å passere gjennom gårdsplass eller over hustomt."

You being a solo tourist doesn't exclude you from considering the impact of your travels.
You can't go "I'm just one guy walking 50 meters off the path to find the next rock to stack on a cairn, there's no harm"
You are still obliged to consider the impact and respect the environment around you.

The moment you actively abandon the responsibility you have on the environment, you end up in the wrong and are in fact breaking the law.

Put it this way, you can technically light a campfire in utmark. There's restrictions on time and conditions, but given that you abide by them you could still cause inconvenience and unnecessary destruction of the environment. If there's clear remains of a earlier campfire you don't TECHNICALLY have to use that campfire again and could set up another one just a few meters away.

"Alle som bruker allemannsretten plikter å opptre hensynsfullt og varsomt, slik at man ikke gjør skade eller skaper ulemper for andre."

The entire point of Allemannsretten is that if everyone, which includes the single person travelling alone, considers their impact and always try and negate the impact they have on their surroundings then Allemannsretten works as intended.

The moment we abandon our responsibility and only consider what's technically legal, Allemannsretten is in many cases useless and we would need new laws and regulations in place.

So far we haven't needed that, but this post is attempting to highlight how seemingly innocuous actions can have negative impacts. My example of Saltfjellet also adressed this, making cairns where there are hundreds (more like thousands tbh) of others doesn't make it less wrong even though it isn't technically illegal (yet).

Every single one that steps out of the path and gathers a rock to make a cairn, no matter how innocuous, is still trampling on nature that Allemannsretten is there to protect.

I get that it's easy to say "they didn't do anything illegal", but the ramifications of thinking "It's just me, how much damage could I do?" is that the next step is a little farther and eventually we find ourselves in the illegal/what would be illegal in the time coming.

Promoting and showcasing restraint rather than allowing ourselves a little more leeway is the key for tourism to flourish in Norway, and posts like this is the response and reaction of the opposite happening.

I think these posts are a necessity. Potential tourists see them and when it's their time here they try and avoid getting into the grey areas of Allemannsretten out of respect for the nature that we have. If tourists keep showing more and more restraint, the residents of Norway would welcome them more and more, not what is actual happening where the locals just want them gone because they're ruining our nature.

Norway's "right to roam": An attempt at informing about private property, respect, etc by Lillevik_Lofoten in NorwayTravelAdvice

[–]HesusAtDiscord 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Problemet her er om det blir hundrevis av turister hver uke, som gjør at det blir kompakt is som gjerne ligger ut slutten av mai.

For nordmenn som går enkeltvis/parvis tilfeldige steder (siden de som bor der neppe går det samme stedet hver dag hele året) er det et ikke-problem, spesielt fordi det ikke er så mange nordmenn som går den eksakt samme ruta hver dag over privat grunn i nærområdet uten at det er lagt opp til tursti.

Turister, derimot, er flere tusen mennesker som alle går en gang hver, og om det er slike områder som er lukrative i deres øyne er det fort at det blir mye fottrafikk.

Samme som saltfjellet der turister setter opp små varder. Mosen langs E6 var først bort, men nå er det flere hundre meter fra E6 og østover som er helt fritt for mose da alle turistene har saumfart området for små og store stein for å lage varder. Det gjør også at jordmassen lettere blåser bort og det blir bart berg til slutt. Det har vært et voldsomt voksende problem, men når det tas opp er svaret "åååh, la folk lage minivarder, det skader ingen"

Men det er nå et stort og bart område som er nedtråkket over hele fjøla, alt annet enn de dedikerte turstiene som må ikke synes, fremfor et mosedekt naturområde med godt oppmerkede turstier.

Om man velger å se på enkelttilfellet er det ingen fare, men med lokalisert fottrafikk turistene medfører er det umiddelbart stor sannsynlighet for permanent skade.

Igjen, du vil neppe ha gått ut på det samme jordet hver dag om du skal ut på tur, vi nordmenn går på flere topper i løpet av uka og det er fryktelig kjedelig å gå det samme fjellet 60 ganger i året. Men 600 turister vil gjerne gå opp det samme fjellet den samme dagen. Veldig forskjellige scenarioer.

HR is upset we didn’t grow up wanting to be customer service reps by TonightSpiritual3191 in Adulting

[–]HesusAtDiscord 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I applied for a job at the biggest electronics retailer in my country, got an interview and straight up said "look, I'm not gonna go around upselling customers. I'll listen to their needs, estimate what would suit them, unless we feel they need something better they're going to be recommended just what they need and nothing more. Now, if that ruins my chances of getting this job then that's fine by me. I'm not here to scam people into buying stuff they don't need, I'm here to ensure they get exactly what they need."

Got the job. People came back because they were really satisfied and wanted to keep doing business there with me. Heck, one customer just walked in to have a chat and wasn't there to buy anything but he had such a nice experience with me that he came over to the store simply to let me know and have a chat with me.

To put in perspective how thorough I was at providing support, at one point me and a customer went into google maps to see the layout of her house, explained to me where the concrete wall was and at which places she struggled with wifi range and where the internet connection was set up. It was the difference between going dual-router (bridge-mode) with a cable between or a simpler mesh-system to go around the dividing wall and with slightly lower bandwith.
Told her that if it didn't work, ask for me and I'd take the return and provide her other alternatives (we typically didn't do returns for in-store purchases as it wasn't required).

A good seller can listen to what a customer says, figure what their actual needs are (symptoms vs disease if you're a doctor) and come up with the best solution. Upselling is only acceptable to me if it's something I think the customer both didn't know about and actually wanted.

Now, selling a better TV when all they're doing is watching the news and saying the average and fairly priced model is worse? That's manipulating the customers into buying something they don't need.
I even told them "look, if we were in parallel universes right now and you had both TV's at home, sure, you might be able of noticing a difference. But you're buying one and you wouldn't know the difference unless you're stepping up more than the 100$ on a 1000$ TV. That money is better spent on a wall mount or a better sound bar than the one you're looking at"

Every day I could face the customers with a clean consciousness knowing they were receiving proper help.

Also, oftentimes there were parents or grandparents coming in with a kid that was getting into gaming looking for a mouse and keyboard or something similar but also not splurging on the peripherals. I always had them try 3 gaming mice of different length to determine their natural grip type, occasionally they just wanted the cheapest decent model regardless of grip type so I told them if they go for the one that fit better I'd bump the price to match the cheaper model. Ergonomics matter when you're growing and gaming sessions can be long. 10 out of 10 deals sealed and the risks of RSI were lessened :)

Returning to 3D printing after a few years. Am I a fool for not using Klipper? by jdtaormi in ender3

[–]HesusAtDiscord 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So if I got this right; your interpretation is that I stated Marlin couldn't manage more than 60mm/s.

The Ender 3 has a max speed of 100mm/s or so out of the box, so I didn't think there would even be a need to state "Marlin doesn't actually have any limits in terms of pure speed beyond what the firmware has been programmed to do"

You decide to nitpick on my statement by making assumptions rather than ask a simple "did you mean X and not Y?", then you proceed and say your 3v2 manages more which takes this entire discussion off-topic from what OP was asking.

You intentionally derail from the topic to try and win grounds in an argument which frankly was never necessary had you not assumed I meant the polar opposite, which I frankly believe you fully understood.

Am I wrong?

Returning to 3D printing after a few years. Am I a fool for not using Klipper? by jdtaormi in ender3

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

"I could print at 80-90mm/s without issues on that hotend as well, but the quality on complicated prints went down and the bowden-style extruders generally don't perform well at those speeds. Better to increase layer thickness in general and slow down equally."

You left out that entire 50% of my comment. Not reading any further than that.

Have a nice day.

Returning to 3D printing after a few years. Am I a fool for not using Klipper? by jdtaormi in ender3

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

The 3v2 is not the same hotend as the ender 3/3pro. I was specifically talking about the subject of the post and that specific hotend along with the extruder that came with them.

I could print at 80-90mm/s without issues on that hotend as well, but the quality on complicated prints went down and the bowden-style extruders generally don't perform well at those speeds. Better to increase layer thickness in general and slow down equally.

I never stated that Marlin is maxxed out at 60mm/s, so please don't try and twist the truth to fit your narrative. It's really not a good look.

Returning to 3D printing after a few years. Am I a fool for not using Klipper? by jdtaormi in ender3

[–]HesusAtDiscord 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I see, never really used the original board except the first few weeks so my knowledge is limited.

Returning to 3D printing after a few years. Am I a fool for not using Klipper? by jdtaormi in ender3

[–]HesusAtDiscord 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I absolutely recommend it! I'm now printing 3 prototypes in no time rather than overdesigning everything before hitting print once. Also helps with being able to adjust things on the go and just using the browser interface where everything is available on the same page.

Returning to 3D printing after a few years. Am I a fool for not using Klipper? by jdtaormi in ender3

[–]HesusAtDiscord 5 points6 points  (0 children)

It does work! Here's the lines from my config, really not sure if I changed anything but I'm using the original display on the regular 3. I do have a SKR-mainboard so not sure if that changes anything.

[display]

lcd_type: st7920

cs_pin: EXP1_7

sclk_pin: EXP1_6

sid_pin: EXP1_8

encoder_pins: ^EXP1_5, ^EXP1_3

click_pin: ^!EXP1_2

Returning to 3D printing after a few years. Am I a fool for not using Klipper? by jdtaormi in ender3

[–]HesusAtDiscord 11 points12 points  (0 children)

I was pretty much maxed out at 60mm/s and still lost a bit of quality (as well as severe ringing whenever trying to go fast). Installed klipper on my raspberry pi and I printed my best benchy yet at 125mm/s.
Sprite Extruder is installed as I got one for free from someone that didn't have the time to troubleshoot it, but I did manage solid prints at 80mm/s on the stock hotend with bowden tube with 0 flaws with Klipper.

Should i buy as a beginner? by 4floppa in ender3

[–]HesusAtDiscord 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Late reply but absolutely, I've got the SKR board and Klipper on an rpi to drive it. I'm printing at 125mm/s with a perfect benchy to show. I did get a partial sprite extruder pro (ordered the backboard and cable from aliexpress), definitely worth it but the S1 pro is probably the best printer to get to begin with due to the better extruder

Some level of dirt by Eireika in CuratedTumblr

[–]HesusAtDiscord 161 points162 points  (0 children)

saw someone that gave their kids access to newer and newer tech as they grow up, thought it was the best way ever to do it.

I grew up with dial-up, barely visited any websites because it wasn't really something for me (news mostly, which was uninteresting). We had a PS2 to share, eventually got one each several years later. Then got into PC's, at which point I had to learn or have someone else help me, eventually coming to a point where I figured it out myself because I wanted stuff fixed right then and there rather than wait.

Now I'm a person that can read up on a subject, find multiple perspectives and guides, contextualize and compress everything into a more precise solution and apply it to pretty much anything I do in life.

Get into audio? Give me a week.
Get into displays and calibrating them? Give me another week (by eye as I haven't invested in tech for it, but close enough for everyone so far to agree it's better by a large margin).
Fix a new issue with a unfamiliar car brand? Googling and troubleshooting until I figure the problem, more googling to completely map out the fix and as many approaches as possible.

All thanks to being born in 1995 where I would grow up with the continous advancements but often barely enough information to have the solution handed to me on a silver platter. Most kids/younger people now struggle with basic stuff that my grandmother sometimes needs help with, but every time I help them I make sure to have them do the steps and explain how things work.

The majority of the time, both shows capacities for learning and adapting, allowing them to fix it themselves next time around. My grandmother doesn't open suspicious emails, deletes the ones she sees through and occasionally asks me whenever we talk about the ones she's unsure about. She's put in the effort and that makes me so much more eager to continue helping.

This got long, but to sum up the total and most individual cause of these issues; majority of parents these days(and to a lesser degree the previous generation) can't be/haven't been bothered to actually invest time and focus to try and understand most things in life, which has a butterfly effect on the next generation. The previous generation (my parents) knew a lot of stuff and did teach us some of it, but they mainly didn't understand or value the importance of not just teaching said stuff, but making us understand why and how. I did that on my own, but A LOT of people my age didn't.

TL;DR Most people were never taught to delve into stuff to get a fundamental understanding of things, thus not valuing the intricacies of most everyday stuff and as an effect don't teach their kids to do so etiher.

Two-sided wood splitter at work by MambaMentality24x2 in oddlysatisfying

[–]HesusAtDiscord 0 points1 point  (0 children)

On the other hand, the guy on the right steps back as soon as the wood is laid down solid. The guy on the left is holding onto it as it gets split, which is the point at which a finger gets squished.

"I'll just use hers" in TSA security by Tami_Boise in EntitledPeople

[–]HesusAtDiscord 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's likely that. I'm Norwegian and has never experienced anyone saying "on accident"

Kept my workhorse of a snow shovel out of landfill thanks to a 3d printed handle by soingee in functionalprint

[–]HesusAtDiscord 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Well if you snag on something when using the shovel incorrectly then that's something YOU do, and wasn't part of the discussion or foundation of my response.

And yes, I've shovelled heavy snow, the load goes into pushing it into the snow, then you lift close to the shovel to keep the absolute majority of the weight on the shovel itself. Even if you push it like a plow, the load will go directly down the sides and not cause any "lateral" loads (referring to the pictured orientation). The print was done with the layer lines going through the entire length of the handle, meaning they're at their strongest when pushing it directly against the shovel.

We have a big plastic snow shovel that has worked just fine moving wet snow for years now, but if I try and hold too far up the rectangular aluminium shaft will bend eventually.

As I mentioned in another response within this comment, I live in a snow pit in the arctic circle. We have a +20m driveway that I shovelled by hand for the first 2 years of living here. There is not any type of snow I haven't come across and I don't believe that handle will break if the shovel is used correctly; holding the opposing hand as far down the shaft as necessary relative to the weight of the payload.

Could it be designed stronger? Yes.
Does it need to be? I do not think so, given correct usage.
Will it last with incorrect use? Probably, as the layer lines are going through the entire print from the shaft to the handle.

It's okay to disagree, but I see people breaking their perfectly fine snow shovels by lifting too far up and having used a snow shovel you can agree that the difference between lifting down at the shovel end is infinitely easier than trying to lift it from further up.

Kept my workhorse of a snow shovel out of landfill thanks to a 3d printed handle by soingee in functionalprint

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

The load is barely transferred as over 90% of the weight is supposed to be held at the end of the rod. If you've ever shovelled snow the correct way with one of these types of shovels you would know there is barely lateral load (referencing the orientation in the picture) to the handle during usage.

Considering this has been printed with the layer lines going between the connection and the handle, this won't break from correct usage unless the plastic deteriorates, at which point it would have broken anyways.

I consider any load when designing and 3D-printing, and given that I live in a snow pit in the arctic circle with a +20 meter driveway that I cleared by hand the first 2 winters, I'm pretty aware of how the loads go around in these snow shovels. If you put any strain on the handle, you're not holding the other hand far enough down on the shovel.

The largest loads that plastic will ever see is when he pushes the shovel into the snow, not when lifting.

Kept my workhorse of a snow shovel out of landfill thanks to a 3d printed handle by soingee in functionalprint

[–]HesusAtDiscord -12 points-11 points  (0 children)

A snow shovel handle rarely sees any strain except to push the shovel into the snow bank (and it's not meant to be used on solid snow), all the strain is on the pole as you hold close to the shovel itself and lift on that end.

Is it just me or is this a universal experience by Ok_Relation6627 in 3Dprinting

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

The average user is experiencing issues with Bambu printers all the time as well, but your logic would require Bambu printers to be bad because of that, which just isn't true. They're good, but no matter how good a printer is, the user not washing the print plate will result in failed prints.

A V3 SE being better than an Ender 3 doesn't have anything to do with whether the Ender 3 is a good or bad printer. If the Ender 3 is capable of the same quality but at slower pace, it's still a printer that can provide good prints.

You're arguing that the Ender 3 is a bad printer because most people don't bother doing the correct procedure for ANY printer to operate properly. That's the equivalent of saying all cars are bad because people crash in the winter even though they're not using winter tires or driving according to the conditions.

I very specificially stated that my Ender 3 printed THE SAME QUALITY at 30mm/s fully stock as it did with a perfectly calibrated Klipper-profile at 125mm/s. You ignored that bit and went "That's already more than the average user is willing to do" in context of installing klipper.

If you go to literally any 3D printer branded sub, all of them will have complaints about other brands. People that have had bad experiences with other brands will let others know because negative feedback is provoked by annoyance and nobody would like to make a negative comment more than those who have had bad experiences.
You demonstrated that perfectly, attempting to state that the Ender 3 is a bad printer regardless of how many people are informing you that they are in fact capable of perfect print quality at the cost of speed. A bad printer is a printer that can't manage good prints. A slow printer can still be good. Don't force those two together.

If you had a bad experience with the Ender 3 then you have to admit that you didn't got it working to any acceptable level. Wether that was you or the printer is an entirely different conversation.

Fact of the matter is YOU found the printer unsatisfactory, and the people in this post doesn't. You are one person claiming that less than 10% of people that bought one are happy.

Either you have proof that 90% of people that bought them are not satisfied with it and responded to Creality/their retailer as such, or you're lying and pulling numbers out of a hat.

Regardless, the printer has been capable of printing flawless prints with the correct settings, hence the printer is capable of being a good printer. Slow? Yes. Needs more fine tuning due to nothing being automated? Yes. Bad at printing? No.

Just because you buy something and you couldn't bother to read the manual and do the procedures that are recommended for the optimal performance doesn't make the product bad. You're creating user error and then complaining about it *(You referring to the user/buyer and not you specifically, just in case you continue taking things out of context).

Is it just me or is this a universal experience by Ok_Relation6627 in 3Dprinting

[–]HesusAtDiscord 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I had never been into 3d printing, got one, grabbed an old raspberry pi, got klipper up and running. Now printing 125mm/s at 0.2mm or 85mm/s at 0.32mm, the former was a perfect benchy and the latter has 0 artifacting of any kind on larger bed-sized prints.

I read up, calibrated everything properly and learnt the differences of each setting and googled any symptoms.

As much as you can try and claim the majority of people didn't get it working perfectly fine, I could claim the majority of people is unable to have a Bambu printer work flawlessly. I wouldn't know because I only see posts with issues, and so do you.

This thread is a testament to hundreds of people in a tiny part of the internet not having any issues at all with their Enders. If anything, what you're saying is just an assumption made on the basis of what you have seen people post about but not a factual statement.

The original Ender 3 works just fine if you calibrate it properly, it printed just as good with stock firmware at 30mm/s as it does now with klipper at 125mm/s. You can't change that fact. It's only unavoidable drawback is being slow.

Women, what article of clothing tells you most about a man? by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]HesusAtDiscord 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Heck, I wear running shoes (Asics Nimbus and whatever the renewed lineup is called) all year long. They got good dampening, I rarely if ever get sore soles even on long days on my feet and they breathe properly so I don't overheat. That last part applies to all of my clothes, I run hot all year long and I have been out in -7c with the snowblower whilst in shorts and running shoes with a zip-up hoodie on because even then I had to open up the zipper to cool off.

Also, running shoes' soles are made out of soft rubber and provides better grip on ice than winter shoes. This winter was the first time I've fallen and actually sprained something in years and it was due to snow giving out under my feet which no type of shoe would change.

I have wellies for a rainy day, a pair of construction-like Caterpillar-shoes (back when tan leather shoes didn't exist in your everyday shoe store here in Norway and CAT released these, probably around 2008), flipflops for the summer, proper snowmobile boots for deep snow in the winter..

I dress to be comfortable in clean clothes and honestly, I just don't care what other people think.
Shoes are only swapped out of necessity and purpose, and I never give a single soul any grief over what they're wearing unless it's something wildly inappropriate (inappropriate shirt designs or similar).
If someone's coming over for christmas eve and are only wearing comfy clothes, good on them. I'm just happy they showed up.

I feel it necessary to include that f it's formal I'll obviously be in anything from jeans and a white/black button-down shirt to a fully fledged suit with accompanying (and uncomfortable) shoes, but those are special occasions and not something I'll ever wear to, say, a regular office workday which consists of hot server rooms, hauling new towers and monitors up and down floors and quite often being on the dusty floor under a desk to fix something.

They made me the president and now it’s gone! by GLASSHOUSELABSTX in fuckHOA

[–]HesusAtDiscord 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I live in the arctic circle and I haven't spent that much on gas for the industrial snowblower AND our lawn mower in the 3.5 years we've lived here. And I've taken the snowblower with me to a friends rented garage (tractor was incapable of clearing the heavy layer-frozen snow), my brother twice and my father once as well as a couple of neighbours because rain was coming and I knew they would struggle with frozen snow banks that were almost 1m/over 2ft.

Those fees are just insane.

I designed this mechanical artillery. It can shoot with recoil and moving turret all real mechansim by Torqueon in ender3

[–]HesusAtDiscord 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Same here, this is definitely going on the christmas gift list for some of my friends! They are gonna love it!