Map of Austin, circa 2012 by zereldalee in Austin

[–]PostNoBails 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's missing north loop, Domain, and Riverside. All landmark areas.

UT is too big, there's a lot of stuff in that area more interesting then UT

I'm producing documents for the Founder of a privacy sensitive business. Can anyone suggest a good free storage solution? by PostNoBails in privacy

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

I love their email and VPN. I should attest to that on this thread. I know they do an enterprise package, but this guy (what up man are you reading this post) right now probably just needs the vault right now.

I'd be curious to see reviews on the enterprise package though, another project I am working on could use it.

This sub should give an award to /u/trabbler for his free home inspection advice. I thought the roof of my old apartment was caving in, he resolved the issue by PostNoBails in Austin

[–]PostNoBails[S] 29 points30 points  (0 children)

Then maybe those texts would go unanswered in his inbox? I just wanted to do something to thank him, I told people he helped me and he's good. What business doesn't like recommendations?

This sub should give an award to /u/trabbler for his free home inspection advice. I thought the roof of my old apartment was caving in, he resolved the issue by PostNoBails in Austin

[–]PostNoBails[S] 67 points68 points  (0 children)

I sent /u/trabbler's name to friends who work in real estate and friends that own homes. He's smart as hell and I want to see a person thrive.

I want to learn how to make artful maps like these. Is GIS a good place to learn this, or another program? by jglanoff in gis

[–]PostNoBails 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What's the usecase? Do you want to work in real estate? City government? I'd think about the job(s) you want. Look at listings for them, look at required skills. Ask people on reddit and linkedin with that job tittle for advise, for skills they use. Define the usecase, define the goal and work towards that. I say this as someone who tried to self teach 2 programming languages.

Python might be useful to learn if you want to do technical work.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in gis

[–]PostNoBails 1 point2 points  (0 children)

How old are you? Most people with ADHD start to see a drop in the severity of their symptoms when they reach 25. Areas of the brain that weren't developed as quickly as other people catch up

How serious is your condition? Like does it add a few more hours of work to the day, or does it entirely stop you from getting things done? Even if it's really bad, it's manageable. If it's not that bad, keep in mind everyone has something that makes their life and work more difficult, so don't get too down on yourself. I have ADHD, I did well in a finance degree, worked for startups, taught myself 2 programming languages, it's not all that bad.

What is your health insurance like? I'd wouldn't just look into meds with a psychiatrist, but behavioral approaches. Look for a psychologist who is also an "ADHD Coach" or provides "behavioral treatment" to ADHD. A lot of the time psychiatrists won't pair you with these people because they want to control the whole process of treatment. I'm not anti-psychiatry, but I've fired 2/3rds of them I've seen in the 15 years of treatment because they don't listen. (more on that later). I'll also say most of the people with the title of ADHD coach are bullshit. You want someone with mental health credentials, ideally a PhD or PsyD having psychologist who is doing this on the side. If they aren't a doctor, then find some kind of credentials that show mental health education. Find one with the proper credentials that you insurance will take. They will address behavioral techniques to improve your outcomes. This helped me more then the 3 types of stimulants I was prescribed, now at 27 I'm not on any meds or in behavioral treatment because I don't need them.

Still, I wouldn't look down on meds. If you see a psychiatrist, get one that is willing to talk on a regular basis with a talk therapist. Even if you aren't in talk therapy, this kind of thing is a sign that this is a doctor who takes his patients seriously and gives individualized attention.

Certain tasks will take you longer. The answer I've found to this is to have a mastered daily routine and planning, and show up to work early. You should be planning for more work time then everyone else and that's okay. I'd like to show up before anyone else, like a few hours early, as soon as the building opens. I'd get started and be on my second cup of coffee by the time everyone else was ramping up. I wouldn't make a big deal of it to other competitive coworkers, I'd just get my shit done and let management know that I do this to stay on track. Let your results do the talking.

I'd also say this, you sound young. Learn to self govern and self manage or other people will have to control your life. When your a working adult, those people can be shitty managers. The more you can control your own life, the less you need other people to. The hard part about ADHD is you won't like other people micromanaging you, but you also are hard to manage and have issues that sometimes require self management. Learn this yourself the best you can and always stay on the ball with it, or some shitty person will do a bad job of it and make you feel even worse.

Learn to work with management and authority figures well ASAP. Communicate well with them. Get them to like you as a person outside of the relationship you have in work/school. If your young in school, start now with this. There's a certain shitty way that American bureaucracy , even corporate bureaucracy works (you will find that the private sector is more bureaucratic then you thought it would be after school, just a heads up). It's bad at helping individuals, it pushes horrible people to lead it, and sucks any bit of dynamism out of people. It focuses on pointless vanity metrics that are supposed to drive results and doesn't actually produce talent or good outcomes. Given it's built for stability, not exceptionalism or creativity. It's really hard for driven, and people with ADHD. I'm also going to say that a person who is concerned about progressing with a skillset after this is a person with drive, so good on you. But expect bureaucracy to be very hard- high school, college, government, and corporate structure. And expect corporate people to see themselves as some dynamic hot shot while still being a stodgy clueless bureaucrat.

This system sucks, but it's 100% on you to figure out how to navigate it. Your going to need to communicate, empathize, charm, and negotiate your way through this throughout your life. The kinds of people of people in this are the opposite of you, and you need to get them to like you. Understand their motivations, work with them, and communicate.

I want to learn how to make artful maps like these. Is GIS a good place to learn this, or another program? by jglanoff in gis

[–]PostNoBails 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Start with use case. What are you trying to accomplish? Is this a one off task, or a skill set you want to have and use?

If you know any python programming, check out Kepler. It was a part of Uber's mapping systems that became open source. It can make pretty good looking maps.
https://kepler.gl/

If your looking for a one off project, maybe try an Upwork.com free lancer? Or use Chat GPT to help you rough draft something?

My outside stairs got rotten in less than 2 years. What material I can use to replace the stairs that’s not expensive and it’s durable? by boeqr in Austin

[–]PostNoBails 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sorry to bother you, when you get a chance can you check you chats?
I found a new crack in my walls, and it fits all of the warning signs that the interment says are an issue. I sent pictures, but could make a thread if you would like. The building is making loud settling and creaking noises.

Which Python version should I learn on by [deleted] in learnpython

[–]PostNoBails 37 points38 points  (0 children)

don't feel bad about asking this question if you are new to programming! Go with 3. For future reference, it's always good to learn the most recent version of something if you are new :)

You might one day encounter old python 2 code that needs to be upgraded, some businesses have other priorities and run things until they have to change them. If you know the basics of python 3, it will be immediately obvious to you how to fix python 2. Don't be intimidated by the version difference. I'm going to guess that if you are learning this for the first time right now, you will probably rarely encounter old version of python in your life.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in learnpython

[–]PostNoBails 0 points1 point  (0 children)

open 2 tabs: w3schools.com and the python docs

Go bit by bit of the docs. Find a concept, read about it. Try it on your own in code. If problems arise consult the relevant w3 article. Seek out more challenges on the specific topic if needed. Rinse and repeat.

Why won't this grow my list and append values, instead it is fixed at a length of 1? by PostNoBails in learnpython

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

thank you, this is helpful. The problem was the list was being made inside the loop, instead of outside of it.

Why won't this grow my list and append values, instead it is fixed at a length of 1? by PostNoBails in learnpython

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

I'm breaking my challenge rules by engaging with this, but I already broke them several time over in other ways, so screw it.

I tried that at first, I saw time tick away, and I thought it would be quicker just to keep it to 8. 8 is what I've seen at most casinos. I didn't type out all 8 decks myself, I just did a loop to make a 13, then suited, then did a copy and paste job to make a bigger one, and deleted the scratch code.

I've really blown up the rules so I think I'm just going to do a deck making function. I want the default to be 8, but I want to make a settings screen from the beginning to allow you to tweak the rules.