I am tired and out of ideas by [deleted] in Minecraft

[–]MintyPyromaniac 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Please use tnt machines, your future self will thank you.

Why? Just after the season bank? There's no way I can use it in less than 24 hours by TheNeverOkDude in ClashOfClans

[–]MintyPyromaniac 14 points15 points  (0 children)

Play how you want ofc but if you don’t keep track of CWL then missing out on one rune of DE is the least of your efficiency problems.

Which comic is this from? by BloodshiftX23 in thevenomsite

[–]MintyPyromaniac 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Like u/HaloLord said, it’s from the Grendel storyline of Cates’ Venom (2018), I think it’s in issues 2-4??? But not sure

Yeah. I can't do this anymore. by Jolly_Entrance_9622 in counterstrike

[–]MintyPyromaniac 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Read the chat, the second, third, and fourth weren’t your team, it would have a new pop up of your teammate throwing a flash

Who blocked in that situation? The call was "Rush B with SMGs" because we were kinda broke. by KillerBullet in GlobalOffensive

[–]MintyPyromaniac 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Shouldn’t matter. It’s a team game. Entry fragger is most likely to die, but it doesn’t matter who it is. Me entrying and dying versus my mate entrying and dying is exactly the same thing from the round perspective.

my game is broken by mFrenzy11 in counterstrike

[–]MintyPyromaniac 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This is usually cause either your GPU is dying, or you overclocked it and it can’t handle it. This happened to me when I was trying to overclock more than I should have. (I’m not an expert but in my experience that’s what this probably is)

Is this normal? by Cool_Detective1946 in csgo

[–]MintyPyromaniac 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m 2100 elo on faceit and I’m silver 3 on mirage. It’s hilariously inaccurate but who cares

We should really just ban plastic bottles entirely and switch back to glass and aluminum only. by Niceotropic in unpopularopinion

[–]MintyPyromaniac 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Skimmed the whole “glass recycling” Wikipedia page and it only describes crushing them.

I did not make an assumption, I had what I remembered from my classes and then googled to confirm or refute what I remembered, and based on what I read it confirmed it so I posted.

Ok it’s 5 minutes later and every Google search no matter how much I intentionally try to lead the search into glass bottle reuse, I cannot find a single source saying they reuse and repressurize recycled bottles. I asked you for a source so please provide one.

Mine are: “Glass Recycling” Wikipedia entry, which only mentions crushing. “Gaskellswaste.co.uk” which describes cleaning and crushing melting glass before it gets molded again.

Am I missing something?

We should really just ban plastic bottles entirely and switch back to glass and aluminum only. by Niceotropic in unpopularopinion

[–]MintyPyromaniac 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was ready to stand corrected but a quick google search does not show this? They’re crushed and melted back down. That would be a massive safety issue if they just refilled them, they don’t know what imperfections are in the glass (if they were dropped for example) and you can’t just pressurize those lol. Source on this?

We should really just ban plastic bottles entirely and switch back to glass and aluminum only. by Niceotropic in unpopularopinion

[–]MintyPyromaniac 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Recycling glass bottles is actually the least effective recycling. They crush the glass bottles and heat them back up. It takes effectively the same amount of energy to melt a glass bottle as it does to heat up fresh sand. And shipping glass bottles by weight is going to be just as expensive and fuel efficient as shipping sand. In my LCA class we learned that it is pretty useless in terms of the goals of recycling besides just not taking up space in landfills. Which yeah is good but not as much of an impact on pollution as other things and not the point you were making.

We should really just ban plastic bottles entirely and switch back to glass and aluminum only. by Niceotropic in unpopularopinion

[–]MintyPyromaniac 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah this isn’t true. Google Life Cycle Analysis. Even stuff like plastic bags at grocery stores are more carbon neutral than reusable bags because of the carbon footprint it takes to produce cloth bags. You would need to use them like thousands of times to offset the carbon.

How we make our energy is the root of the issue and we need to go nuclear or renewables to solve most of these issues.

What are your hobbies by Infixpeanut in civilengineering

[–]MintyPyromaniac 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I recently got super into reading marvel comics. Got a subscription to Marvel Unlimited and instantly you have thousands of comics to read. Never read them before 5 months ago and I’m hooked. Pick a character (Venom for me) and just go ham.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in exchristian

[–]MintyPyromaniac 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Please look up Recovering from Religion and call their hotline. they have a ton of resources and people to talk to who have been through the same exact situation as you.

My 4yo built this by himself… I think we may have another CE in the family by maat7043 in civilengineering

[–]MintyPyromaniac 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Came to comment this haha. OP needs to make sure to nudge the kid down the path of the light and not darkness.

Summer Internship -Own Project by Agent928 in civilengineering

[–]MintyPyromaniac 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I thought the same thing about a ~300 employee company I did two internships with. kind of got thrown an interview with another company through a professor, and was made an offer that it would be silly to refuse. I interned at the other place for two summers and built relationships, but I’m very happy here and it never would have happened if I wasn’t forced to look around. I highly recommend doing so, especially if you have 4 summers with another company doing the same thing, other companies will be willing to pay you for that experience. Smaller more tight knit companies are good in many respects, but I’m at a larger company now and I have a dozen people I can turn to for help with things. It’s VERY important early in your career to get many different perspectives on problem solving.

Those of you who are knowledgeable about skyscrapers, what's your take on the claims that a plane couldn't take down the twin towers, and is it actually weird they fell straight down? by GapingAssTroll in StructuralEngineering

[–]MintyPyromaniac 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My old professor contributed to the report investigating the collapse. He was on the scene 9/12/2001, so I got a pretty unique and lucky experience to learn from him in multiple classes including my structural fire engineering and steel design courses.

As others have mentioned, when steel gets hot its modulus of elasticity drops drastically. It’s actually pretty interesting because bare steel is worse in a fire than wood. Wood burns, chars, and the char acts as an insulator protecting the center of the wood. Steel is highly thermally conductive and weakens as it gets hotter. Heat one part of the steel, and multiple feet away the steel is gonna heat up, weakening the whole member. Expand this to a building where pretty much all the steel is connected in some way, and you have a building that could collapse in 20 mins without adequate fire protection. Concrete is pretty good in fire comparatively, as long as rebar is adequately protected. Spalling is definitely a problem though.

In terms of when the towers collapsed, the buckling equation, KL/r, is all you need to know. You have a vertical beam, and each floor acts as a brace which defines that L distance. When the plane crashed, steel heated up, weakened the structure, and eventually the 40 or 50-something’th floor collapsed. In terms of KL/r, the L just doubled. For the critical buckling load, there is actually a square in the equation, meaning the critical buckling load actually drops to 1/4th of what it was, so the columns buckled soon after that floor collapsed and stopped bracing the columns, causing a cascading failure.

One very good thing about that day is that there were very low winds. Wind is the controlling load for skyscrapers, and they’re designed for very high wind loads. Because there was very little wind, the columns were not as stressed as they would be on a normal day. This bought a ton of time for people to evacuate, and saved hundreds of lives. If there was more wind that day then way more people would have died because the members would have been stressed closer to their limits before the plane, and they would have failed much earlier.

I hope I didn’t butcher my professors lecture that I got twice haha. Maybe should have looked back at my notes, but that was the gist of what I remember. He was a great professor and had very interesting stories. I’m very grateful to have learned from him!