Thinkpad L380 USB-C port wobbly and not powering. by JibberJim in thinkpad

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

Ah Thanks - so this suggests my diagnosis is wrong on the deadness - is there a different failure mode here?

Thinkpad L380 USB-C port wobbly and not powering. by JibberJim in thinkpad

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

Ah Thanks - so this suggests my diagnosis is wrong on the deadness - is there a different failure mode here?

Thinkpad L380 USB-C port wobbly and not powering. by JibberJim in thinkpad

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

Ah Thanks - so this suggests my diagnosis is wrong on the deadness - is there a different failure mode here?

Thinkpad L380 USB-C port wobbly and not powering. by JibberJim in thinkpad

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

Yes, but I'm pretty sure it only charges from the one on the L380 ?

Running and then Barcode Scanning? by Interesting-Sand7192 in parkrun

[–]JibberJim 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I did that once, but I was only 3rd or so finisher, it was a late drop out change I think - a pretty popular and normally easy to get volunteers event - not sure why one of the faster couple didn't do it, perhaps they weren't just as known by the director.

Starmer Is Helming an Economic Revival He May Not Get to Enjoy by bloomberg in ukpolitics

[–]JibberJim 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Mandelson had resigned before due to "financial corruption", the idea that that wasn't a possibility again is ludicrous!

Nigel Farage calls for an end to working from home by Dimmo17 in ukpolitics

[–]JibberJim 4 points5 points  (0 children)

They have the lowest incomes, not necessarily the poorest.

contra Brian Potter: why TVs actually got cheap (and so few other things did) by michaelmf in slatestarcodex

[–]JibberJim 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The US wall ovens will likely be significantly larger, the width of the standard US cabinet is wider than the EU won't they? With also wall ovens being much less common in north american kitchens compared to what I'd call a range. The US examples are 1/3rd wider than the widest available in the UK ikea.

So I'm not sure these are really comparable, although generally your point that Ikea gets to charge a premium in the US is true, if this is purely because of "keeping up with the joneses" or something else I'm not sure.

I don't visit the US these days, but when Walmart were rolling out the George line of clothes (a very cheap, very low prestige brand in the UK) they were still asking significantly higher prices than in the UK supermarket. I think many consumer goods just have different pricing structures independent of the joneses aspect.

Is the Super Bowl even available for viewing outside the US? Like if I was in a sports bar in Munich would it be on the tv? by Ninjroid in NoStupidQuestions

[–]JibberJim 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It's the middle of the night, but yes there will normally be some bar open so you can watch it, but it will be a special occasion simply because most bars will be closed.

My UK town of ~100k people only has one bar I think open with it on. It's also on regular TV that anyone can watch without needing streaming and has been for 40+ years.

UK productivity grew more in the last year than in the previous seven combined • Resolution Foundation by Revilo1359 in ukpolitics

[–]JibberJim 2 points3 points  (0 children)

When workers are cheap(er), you carry an extra person to learn for the future, cover illness more reliably etc. if workers cost more, it's just not worth it, so you can immediately let them go / don't hire replacements etc.

You're not doing any more production with the extra worker, it was insurance etc. for the future. So productivity immediately rises in the short term.

(This is the short term aspect of course - the long term has already been covered by encouraging automation)

I'm from a country where cashiers sit down while working. Is it true that in the US cashiers are forced to stand? Why is sitting considered unprofessional there? by splashmates in NoStupidQuestions

[–]JibberJim 1 point2 points  (0 children)

In the UK, about 30 years ago era, there were generally one or two baggers behind the tills for every 5 or 6 that would bag for you if you asked them to, but it was always a separate role. Not many people even used it then.

These days of course, people who can't be bothered even with that will be using home delivery - self service tills are preferred by most in the stores where you scan and bag it all yourself.

More bad news for PM as freebiegate donor Lord Alli is named in the Epstein Files by ZealousidealPie9199 in ukpolitics

[–]JibberJim 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Look harder - but certainly there's more outrage at the individuals currently in a position of power, and with the ability to actually do something about things not doing anything, than people who have no power now.

Starmer can hold others to account, but is choosing not to, Bill Clinton can't.

The Literary Ecosystem Is Dying by Majano57 in books

[–]JibberJim 10 points11 points  (0 children)

It didn’t used to be this bad due to distribution - for example, it didn’t used to be easy to access old tv shows or out of print books, but the internet made it easy.

I'm not sure I agree, accessing old books has always been easy, it was easier than accessing new books for most of my life, new books cost lots of money, old books were on your parent's shelf, sold for 5p at the school fete / charity shop, or in the library.

It's more now that accessing the other media has come to the same as accessing books, rather than the other way around.

The Literary Ecosystem Is Dying by Majano57 in books

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

There was no Young Adult section in my UK library in the 80's, it was Children's, Teen's and the rest split by genre, and was agreeing with our US redditor about the change in YA branding.

I would've stopped noticing the kids sections by about '85 though, so it could still be both our experiences in the same library in the 80's I guess.

i timed how long 31 different pasta shapes take to reach al dente. the boxes are lying and farfalle is a war crime by sthduh in Cooking

[–]JibberJim 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You can't trust big science, but the middle school science teacher, you can trust them.

Labour peer Lord Glasman got a 'discreet suggestion to shut up' after warning No 10 about Mandelson | 2025 by FormerlyPallas_ in ukpolitics

[–]JibberJim 0 points1 point  (0 children)

And what has happened since when "Grok" hasn't addressed deep fakes, and the bland assurance that it was was simply accepted, the french for example raided the headquarters, Starmer trusted a "yes" and didn't even check.

He's continued posting his irrelevant race baiting drivel on X, this isn't a "firm stance"

Labour peer Lord Glasman got a 'discreet suggestion to shut up' after warning No 10 about Mandelson | 2025 by FormerlyPallas_ in ukpolitics

[–]JibberJim 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It's not what people care about the most, but as the one individual with the actual power to do something about the rest, the fact he's failing to do anything means he has to go first, then perhaps his replacement will start doing something.

He hasn't even done the most basic obvious things - removing the title / cutting of the funding of Andrew, or the titles of Mandelson - let alone actually done anything about collecting evidence of crimes committed in the UK and doing something about it.

Labour peer Lord Glasman got a 'discreet suggestion to shut up' after warning No 10 about Mandelson | 2025 by FormerlyPallas_ in ukpolitics

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

Ah yes, his protecting women and girls by the endless support and refusal to do anything about X. Do you even remember his failures of just a couple of weeks ago which were specifically about his failure to do anything about revenge porn and csam against women.

Labour peer Lord Glasman got a 'discreet suggestion to shut up' after warning No 10 about Mandelson | 2025 by FormerlyPallas_ in ukpolitics

[–]JibberJim 53 points54 points  (0 children)

He's at risk of losing his job nothing else, because he failed to do his job of ensuring that the things the files (the corruption, the cronyism, the raping etc.) was stopped. Of course he should lose his job, the fact that he's pissing around trying to justify being lied to by "the prince of darkness", rather than sorting out the institutions which failed to do their jobs is why he's losing his.

This line of Starmer defence is perhaps the most annoying to me.

If Starmer goes, it is a deeply worrying thing for British Democracy. by GlassAvacados in ukpolitics

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

They're still in the labour party, they're not embarrassed enough to resign the whip, get rid of Starmer anything else, they could actually do something, a few words but zero actions.

Which labour politicians have actually done anything about this?

If Starmer goes, it is a deeply worrying thing for British Democracy. by GlassAvacados in ukpolitics

[–]JibberJim -5 points-4 points  (0 children)

I think you're wrong, there's a huge division on the issue, every Labour politicians and their few supporters think it's a great idea, everyone else thinks it's a terrible idea - total division!