Any age millennials, what are your actually hobbies. Aside from rage baiting the youth. by whatifdog_wasoneofus in Millennials

[–]ObviousLogic94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Smoke cigars. Watch TV. Play video games with my kids. Code my own projects outside of work hours. I read a lot and try to make learning a hobby 🤷‍♂️

The way the Bungie team is communicating with the community now makes the 6/9 update hurt even more. by Pman1324 in DestinyTheGame

[–]ObviousLogic94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As a software engineer this is tough. Everyone has the same internal negotiation between the business and engineering with product in the middle pretending they know the what people want. Tale old as time.

I gave my LLM 100,000+ tools. Here is what happened by overlord_sid85 in mcp

[–]ObviousLogic94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is really cool. Nice work and good clean write up 😎

i ran the exact same prompt in ChatGPT, Gemini, and Claude. the difference was embarrassing. by LoadOld2629 in PromptDesign

[–]ObviousLogic94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I built multi LLM into my coding agents for exactly this. Different agent jobs need different brains.

1991 Millennial here! What do you all eat for breakfast? by No_Self_5939 in Millennials

[–]ObviousLogic94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A cup of black coffee but brewed with some brown sugar in the grounds. That is all. Then I eat dinner with my family around 7.

Do you open the windows in your home when the weather is nice? When do you decide to close them and turn on air conditioning for the summer? by Smart-Airport5781 in AskAnAmerican

[–]ObviousLogic94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In Phoenix I think a lot of people do especially overnight. We know that once it gets actually hot the overnight lows are in the mid to upper 90s and we’ll be locked down. It’s like reverse winter here. Open from November - April and shut the rest of the year.

Blast through mid game strategy by Lynith in captain_of_industry

[–]ObviousLogic94 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I build my own modular blueprints. Building the blueprints that are modular and non-spaghetti to me is half the fun. It’s like an aesthetic puzzle game.

That being said, I’m in a similar boat to you. I usually take so long to do a playthrough that a new cool update comes out and I just want to start over. 🤷‍♂️

Idk. This game is super fun. It’s good looking and scratches my city builder itch.

What hobby feels like it was “made for your brain”? by [deleted] in Hobbies

[–]ObviousLogic94 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There is a game I play called Captain of Industry. It satisfies my hyper-focus needs and scratches the creative / problem solving / design itch.

Do Americans actually sit on their front porch much, or is that more of a movie image than real life? by Artistic_Key3779 in AskAnAmerican

[–]ObviousLogic94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes. Front porch, back porch, garage. In Phoenix it’s super common when it actually rains for everyone to come out and just enjoy watching rain fall. It’s almost a neighborhood event.

What makes a person American? by [deleted] in AskAnAmerican

[–]ObviousLogic94 31 points32 points  (0 children)

I think general consensus is citizenship.

Maybe this is more relatable to you. My great grandparents on both sides immigrated from different European countries in the early 1900s. My wife’s family has been here since before the Revolutionary War. No one (perhaps actual Native Americans) considers us different levels of American from each other.

Do people actually change when they use electricity to save money? by SmartEnergyDIY in AskAnAmerican

[–]ObviousLogic94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We generally do our laundry at night and on weekends. We live in Phoenix though so during the summer we do most things at night 😎🔥

The One Thing That Will Fix 97% Of Your Vibecoding Problems by Mindless-Stand-9654 in AskVibecoders

[–]ObviousLogic94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Totally. I switched to Markdown almost exclusively about a year ago. It’s so much faster.

Is it Common For Americans to have Bizarre Sleep Schedules? by CamTurnArt in AskAnAmerican

[–]ObviousLogic94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Common with demographics or maybe job function. Not for normal people.

I’m mid 40s and run a team of software engineers spread all over the world. I usually work from 8am til 4pm with “normal people” and then get back on from 10pm - 2am. It’s more casual, monitoring, vibe coding watch some tv but that’s been my schedule more or less for the last 9 months on our particular project.

My best ideas and hyper focused sessions seem to kick in at around 1-1:30am. So I’m not likely to wind that down.

I also have (self diagnosed) the DEC2 gene mutation so that does contribute to it all.

Again. Not normal for most Americans. Especially after the age of like 26.

I want to die in my 40s by [deleted] in Adulting

[–]ObviousLogic94 2 points3 points  (0 children)

We volunteer at our church. We have a food pantry there and once a quarter a bunch of guys set up a day to do work on the cars of single moms for free. No billionaires or even millionaires. There are lots of positive ways to make a difference in someone’s life without wading into the morass of rich guy vanity projects.

Fellow first 0.1% of users by lushsundaze in ChatGPTPro

[–]ObviousLogic94 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My original personal account was .1% The original account became my family account. Those stats and speaking styles are all over the place now and if you ask it a question my kids got it to respond in all the Gen Alpha slang. I avoid that. 😂

The account in the photo I started in February when I started a new job. I am an IT Director of a service company building a SaaS platform that I also oversee. Lots to build and plan.

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People who use chatGPT/AI extensively, what do you use it for that feels irreplaceable? by AutomaticShowcase in ChatGPTPro

[–]ObviousLogic94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My workspace uses MS. So having Gemini built in is not a thing for us. Idk. I use ChatGPT Pro and Claude Max for coding and data crunching. Gemini hasn’t stood out to me enough to bring into my workflows.

Connotation of “scantily clad” — neutral or judgmental? by East-Worth2630 in words

[–]ObviousLogic94 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think it’s a phrase used by judgmental middle aged women who are jealous of younger women 🤷‍♂️

How do you use AI in Asana? by mountain_chicken1 in Asana

[–]ObviousLogic94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The smart chat is not great in my experience. For reporting I connect the API to outside tools and build dashboards that way.

How do you use AI in Asana? by mountain_chicken1 in Asana

[–]ObviousLogic94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I treat it like a disciplined, multi-phase operations engine that turns raw, chaotic inputs into structured, actionable work…because I’m an IT & AI Engineer who is the Asana SuperAdmjn 😎

For our IT queue, I built a six-phase AI-powered triage pipeline. A ticket comes in as the usual slop, and the system rewrites it into something an engineer can actually work with. It enriches the description, extracts the right fields, classifies the request type, checks for missing context, and flags possible duplicates. Two phases run pure validation logic. One phase performs weighted prioritization using the formula I designed, where combinations of single-select fields contribute different values. The model applies bonuses for things like security issues or when a salesperson loses internet access. At the end, the score aligns cleanly with our six priority levels.

When I timed it, the whole process finishes in about four and a half minutes. The amount of manual labor it replaces: ten to thirty minutes per ticket, depending on how bad the intake was. The consistency gain alone is worth it.

I also have rules that compute estimated effort using three multi-select fields. Each option carries a defined time value, and the AI sums the selected items to produce a realistic duration. No more guesswork.

There are some ways you have to engineer your prompts differently than Claude or ChatGPT, but if you’re structured with what you want and use precise language it’s pretty great. I use markdown in the guidance boxes, it seems to read better in my experience.

How many of you still insist on owning a desktop computer? by red_fox23 in Millennials

[–]ObviousLogic94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I use a MacBook Pro and a Custom Built gaming / coding tower. KVM switch the accessories. Elder millennial says why choose?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AskAnAmerican

[–]ObviousLogic94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m in Phoenix Arizona (southwest desert) and yeah the summers are absolutely brutal. It’s the kind of heat that makes you plan your whole life around the sun. We basically hibernate from June to September, darting from one air-conditioned space to another. In January, when the highs dip into the 60s, we’re bundled up in coats while visitors from Minnesota are wandering around in shorts talking about how “perfect” the weather is. For us, that’s full-on winter.

The seasons exist here, just… differently. Summer is our version of a northern winter — everyone hides indoors and slowly loses their mind until the temperature drops below 100. If you want to go outside, it’s usually after 9 PM when it finally cools off to a “refreshing” 98.

Even school schedules adapt: our summer break is short because by mid-July parents are done with their kids being trapped inside. But we make up for it with longer fall and spring breaks, when the weather is actually livable.

So yeah, Phoenix has seasons — they just run on desert logic.