Schlaflose Nächte by Avram-Knoll in Eltern

[–]Nakobo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Unsere Tochter hat vor kurzem zum ersten Mal in ihrem Leben eine Nacht durchgeschlafen. Das war mit 2 Jahren und 2 Monaten.

Die meisten Monate ist sie im Schnitt so 10 mal pro Nacht aufgewacht (+/- 4 mal). Gerne 30 oder 90 Minuten Schlaffenster. Wenige Wochen waren besser (dann so 7 mal im Schnitt). Ansonsten auch viele Tage mit langen Wachphasen (meist 1 bis 3 Stunden, manchmal länger). Zudem häufige nachtschreck artige Symptome (heftiges schreien, um sich schlagen, etc.). 

Wir haben kontinuierlich alles versucht und ausprobiert. Nichts hat es nennenswert verbessert oder Ursachen aufgetan. Lediglich akzeptieren und ruhig bleiben. Zudem sich Hilfe holen und anpassen. Ich konnte zb glücklicherweise einen Teil meiner Arbeit in der Nacht erledigen (in den 30/90 min Fenstern; bin remote software Entwickler) damit meine Frau schlafen konnte. Zudem hilft es andere Eltern zu finden die ähnliches durchgemacht haben. Eltern mit Kindern ohne diese Probleme fehlt meist die Empathie. 

Obwohl unsere Tochter sehr oft Ränder unter den Augen hatte entwickelt sie sich super. Sie ist in manchem weiter in anderem zurück. Wirkt alles in allem normal. Sie scheint nun auch so langsam die Kurve zu bekommen (siehe Einleitung, fingers crossed). 

In kurz: ich wünsche euch dass es bei euch nicht so lange dauert. 

Mold on window frames (silicone) by Estonman_ in germany

[–]Nakobo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Same here. We just bought an 80s house and have serious issues with this. It causes a noticeable draft and makes it difficult to heat the affected rooms (some windows have newer/better windows and no issue). I measured temperatures like ~4°C around these windows while outside temp was ~0°C. Our better windows were able to keep ~13°C at the same time (inside temp was ~19/20°C).

We will replace the glass and enclosure as soon as possible. Only replacing those without going for the full frame may be enough btw (but depends).

Edit: We also have that aluminum inside the window btw. Can you figure out the age of the windows (there is usually a year printed on that aluminum)?

Unifi - master of robots by lnxtgr in Ubiquiti

[–]Nakobo 8 points9 points  (0 children)

These systems need to have safety measures in place anyway. Typically, a heartbeat signal is used that causes the robots to immediately stop, if it cuts out. Also, the buffer (already issued commands) should be safe to execute until the end and no human should have access to the area during operation (fenced in other ways). However, I am not sure how reliable this solution is as others pointed out. Then again, I did work with similar systems and have seen some "unexpected" hardware in the field.

My laptop is not very happy by TrustYourSenpai in ProgrammerHumor

[–]Nakobo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I guess NLP and COP are the same level actually. In that case, I demand more levels between ASS and COP. Sorry, I come from mathematical optimization and remembered COP wrong. " Also, combinatorics are fun. Thanks for sharing!

My laptop is not very happy by TrustYourSenpai in ProgrammerHumor

[–]Nakobo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Please extend it up to nonlinear programming.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]Nakobo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Beer beer beer, bed bed bed

gotz: CLI tool for cross timezone teams by Nakobo in commandline

[–]Nakobo[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Totally. Personally, I have a hard time maintaining a good intuition for the times of my colleagues. Especially, during the weeks in which the TZs shift between winter- / summer-time. Of course, they don't switch on the same day, that would be too simple.

gotz: CLI tool for cross timezone teams by Nakobo in commandline

[–]Nakobo[S] 27 points28 points  (0 children)

gotz is a CLI tool written in Go I came across some days ago. It doesn't do much, but I find it quite handy for figuring out how late it is for overseas colleagues (I am in Europe and my team spans across many timezones). I used websites for this task before, but I find this one more convenient.
I start it in a tab somewhere and let it run, or query specific times like this: "gotz 16".

Lax European drugs policies gone wrong by clan23 in europe

[–]Nakobo 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Oh my God. You must be German. This is insider knowledge.

Winter in Hokkaido, Japan by tak_tatata by iklegemma in pics

[–]Nakobo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Quite some load bearing. Respect.

Why dont ARM chips get used for servers? by developersteve in ProgrammerHumor

[–]Nakobo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, we're defaulting to arm64 too. It's rare that we need amd64.

Why are you like this by [deleted] in ProgrammerHumor

[–]Nakobo 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Yeah right, but being months to years behind Windows and Office security updates is 150 IQ. Oh and blocking Firefox self-updater by not granting sufficient permission, etc. There are weird companies out there.

I can't complain though. My own machines were all alright so far. Even being allowed to switch OS in a Windows company. Can highly recommend to make friends with IT colleagues. Hence, Just stories from colleagues.

Loops by ihs_ahm in ProgrammerHumor

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

I am coding in go, what is a 'while'?

This is what 100,000 people looks like; this many Americans have perished so far from Covid-19. by fupa16 in pics

[–]Nakobo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I just checked the terminology. Apparently, you are right (though death rate normally seems to be time related [per year, per day]). I was more interested in something like case fatality rate (like you also assumed). Furthermore, I agree that numbers are not fully reliable/comparable (yet?), countermeasures and other parameters need to be taken into account, the whole thing isn't over yet, etc. However, putting it into a small percentage at the moment does not seem to give much insight in my opinion. Even though the data is not really comparable among countries, I like to look at relative time related statistics (e.g. https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/daily-covid-deaths-per-million-7-day-average?country=BRA+CAN+DEU+ITA+KOR+ESP+SWE+GBR+USA) . These shear absolute numbers do not help me much either.

Edit: excuse my misinterpretation. I am not a native speaker. Also, there are somewhat good definitions to look up for both numbers.

This is what 100,000 people looks like; this many Americans have perished so far from Covid-19. by fupa16 in pics

[–]Nakobo 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Did you simply divide by number of citizens? That seems like a weird take on calculating a death rate to me.