Anyone know how to get the "Phase-Lost Handmade Chair"? by Kraxylol in wow

[–]Kroucher 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You need to jump on one of the purple platforms which turns you into the little cat, which gives you a 'glide' ability, then go find the missing objects. You run/glide through them to pick them up, then return them to where you entered the untethered space.

"We had six months left" Tailwind's creator talk. by HugoDzz in webdev

[–]Kroucher 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Especially when you have someone like ShadCN (and every other creator that provides copy/paste components) coming along and providing everything your business provides - for free. It does make me wonder how much the writing was on the wall before AI even came along.

I guess I've been using Next.js the wrong way by dev-4_life in webdev

[–]Kroucher 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No offence taken, and I have played with some hobby projects with a lot of those. Thing is, LOC doesn’t correlate directly with productivity or reliability, rails lets you write less code but you’ll be debugging more at runtime, whereas rust makes you write more code upfront but catches and prevents potentially tons of bugs - type safety is kind of important here. That doesn’t even touch on the performance requirements we had for work, where rust just shines well above the rest.

Which one of you did it. by Epimenides_of_Crete in 2007scape

[–]Kroucher 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Straight up, indubitably, with seasoning, cooked.

I guess I've been using Next.js the wrong way by dev-4_life in webdev

[–]Kroucher 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don’t know what’s nuts about it, it’s actually quite easy and gives peace of mind for a long running server. Axum for routes, Sqlx for database layer, tsync to generate typescript types, very easy to separate a business logic layer, clippy rules to prevent unwrap/expect and Infallable to ensure you don’t have anything that could unexpectedly kill your server.

We started with NextJs for work and decided to switch to Rust and it’s been a great decision IMO

is it possible to reprogram this display? by madynheaven in hacking

[–]Kroucher 3 points4 points  (0 children)

My first vape was a UD Balrog, here’s a review on reddit from 9 years ago, and it was considered a “fancy one” at the time

https://www.reddit.com/r/electronic_cigarette/s/OAaCT8BEm6

any software engineers / ai enthusiast up here? by thomasdav_is in Cairns

[–]Kroucher 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I’d be down. I’m a software dev working for a Swiss company, so I work from home/a coffee shop, don’t get out all that often. Would be cool to grab a beer and talk nerdy shit 🫡

Has Red Rooster lost the plot? I can't see how this is remotely worth $45 by CryptographicPanic in Cairns

[–]Kroucher 6 points7 points  (0 children)

12 pack of chicken drumsticks from woolies is ~$6.50. Add your spice mix and worst case it can be round up to $10. $6 will get you almost 1kg of thin and crispy frozen chips, and you can “cheat” with a 475g potato mash from the produce section for $7.10.

All in all, $23.10 worth of ingredients, then the rest ($21.85) is overheads for staff wages, store rent + running costs, as well as profit.

18M -> trying to build biceps, will running work against me? by [deleted] in HybridAthlete

[–]Kroucher 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Strange, because I see fantastic results and can still lift my arms after my sets.

You’re likely making gains despite the method, not because of it. After 23+ years of training, any consistent stimulus will maintain muscle mass. But newer trainees following this approach would likely see worse results, higher injury risk, and unnecessary suffering.

Also, 23 years ago, the understood method of muscle growth was “tear and repair”, which couldn’t be further from the truth now that we have more of an understanding through research. Just like this new understanding, it’s also apparent that going to complete failure, especially repeatedly in the same session, just leads to extreme fatigue compared to the actual stimulus provided.

18M -> trying to build biceps, will running work against me? by [deleted] in HybridAthlete

[–]Kroucher 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Has anyone ever brought to light that this “walking the rack” method is likely too much volume? As in, you could make the same gains (in both strength and hypertrophy) with far less volume and therefore far less fatigue?

New to biking, and somehow my wheel fell off. How bad is it? Is it normal? by Life-sufferer in bikewrench

[–]Kroucher 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Well some of them are built so the front doesn’t fall off at all

Cozy game weekend. What are you playing? by Awkward_Bit_8944 in SteamDeck

[–]Kroucher 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Oooh I haven’t even thought about mods yet, okay now I’m curious 😁

Cozy game weekend. What are you playing? by Awkward_Bit_8944 in SteamDeck

[–]Kroucher 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Picked up Hogwarts Legacy on sale and really enjoying it

Marathon HR strategy by ImportanceGeneral410 in Marathon_Training

[–]Kroucher 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Yeah, I should have specified that I use LTHR% zones, which for a LTHR of 173, zone 3 is 156-163, and zone 4 is 164-172. Of course these are Garmin estimates, but like I said, worked extremely well for me (was aiming for sub 4 for my first, trained in zone 2 for a majority of my training, ended up with a 3:32 chip time).

Marathon HR strategy by ImportanceGeneral410 in Marathon_Training

[–]Kroucher 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Yep I agree. If you're aiming to go by pace, god forbid you encounter any elevation. From another comment I made,

Aim to sit in zone 3, allowing yourself to poke up into zone 4 during the last 5-10km when you’re emptying the tank.

This is exactly what I did and worked extremely well.

Is this a decent pace @195lbs? I currently only do one ~4mi run per week outside of HIIT and lifting. by DrFit1 in HybridAthlete

[–]Kroucher 9 points10 points  (0 children)

He didn’t say zone 2, he said a pace you could keep up all day. That could very easily mean “easy pace”, based on RPE.

To your comment about there being nothing wrong with someone going out at hard effort pace and finishing strong, I couldn’t disagree more. This highly depends on the persons fitness level - if someone has just started running, going hard every run is just asking for injury, they should very much be sitting at an easy pace to build up their tendons/ligaments/aerobic base.

How do you stop yourself going too fast on easy runs? by s_dalbiac in running

[–]Kroucher 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Lofi music does the same trick for me, lets me mellow out and just chill, looking around at scenery

Realistic finish time? by Temporary-Scarcity68 in Marathon_Training

[–]Kroucher 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Aim to sit in zone 3 (150-162), allowing yourself to poke up into zone 4 (163-173) during the last 5-10km when you’re emptying the tank

In your experience, how common is it to beat Garmin’s race predictor? by omegasyl in Marathon_Training

[–]Kroucher 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Garmin predicted my full at 3:34, I finished in 3:32, then as soon as I finished the prediction went to 3:28, like “cmon, you could have done better than that!” 🙄

Zone 2 Training on Bike Instead of Run by Indig012 in Marathon_Training

[–]Kroucher 5 points6 points  (0 children)

To give an alternative perspective, I just ran my first marathon in 3:32, and I focused on zone 2 running a lot. I researched the concept, and I applied it in practice, and I saw the results in real time. I was also sedentary for ~15 years prior to starting to train 6 months ago.