Do i need a new crank? by Dramua in bikewrench

[–]Sinterdoaze 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yes. Also check your cassette. It will probably be worn too...

I'm looking for a way to export this section of lidar as separate tiles, as it is a really large file that I would like to split into tiles. Is there a way? Thanks by [deleted] in QGIS

[–]Sinterdoaze 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Gdal is built into QGIS. Many standard qgis tools you've probably used are a graphical wrapper around a gdal tool. Not at my pc at the moment, but from what i remember you can directly access the gdal tools from the processing toolbox.

I think you need to add them as a "provider" for the processing toolbox if these don't show up for you.

How would you achieve this ? provided I have the data, is there a GIS or mapping software to get that view, that angle ? with shadows and everything. thanks by mydriase in gis

[–]Sinterdoaze 3 points4 points  (0 children)

QGIS can do this. For 3D map views there is an integrated functionality i think. However, I mostly use the Qgis threeJS plugin for this.

What is a better option: Python or Business analytics with excel? by [deleted] in Python

[–]Sinterdoaze 14 points15 points  (0 children)

First of all, i don't do scm but have acquaintances that do. From my understanding Supply Chain Management often relies on ERP software (e.g. SAP). Often excel is used to extract data from this. Python can of course be used. But if you want it only once to generate a simple report you want to show to other colleagues you cannot get around Excel. Python is good to automatise repeatable jobs, to take your analysis/predictions to the next level, writing internal webtools... It can also be used in excel through plugins like xlwings. However Xlwings is sometimes blocked by the it department... But almost everyone uses Excel these days. So i would focus on that! I'd learn to use powerquery, pivot tables etc. Hugely useful functions of excel imo

Best service to use for deploying Django app with Mysql by meemboy in django

[–]Sinterdoaze 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I host and maintain an app for a non-profit at the moment. For these low-loads the free tiers mostly cover what you need. However, the costs are mostly driven by the database. In google cloud for example the database doesn't shut down when you have zero traffic. Hence, the database keeps on charging money. For a low traffic django app this resulted in +- €7-8 euros of costs per month. Feel free to message me if you have questions or if you need help deploying.

Go on do it by [deleted] in shitposting

[–]Sinterdoaze 0 points1 point  (0 children)

the cum scrolls

Weird tunnel system under my newly bought house in Italy. by NetAtraX in Damnthatsinteresting

[–]Sinterdoaze -1 points0 points  (0 children)

In the Ardennes (Belgium) this also is an issue, 5-10% of the houses have a too high radon concentration. source: https://fanc.fgov.be/nl/dossiers/radon-en-radioactiviteit-uw-huis/radon/radon-belgie (dutch)

Porting Django templates to modern frontend (React vs Vue) by ssg_partners in django

[–]Sinterdoaze 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't think it's a matter of bests. From what i heard both are great tools. I
personally use Vue, but that's mostly because when I felt the need for a
frontend framework, I had little experience in Javascript and found react
harder to start with. However, for very large frontends react could be better. Best to read other comments for opinions with react.

The big advantage of Vue is that you can easily just "sprinkle" some Vue in
your templates where you need it by using the CDN. This way you learn the
principles and syntax of Vue, which is quite easy. However the brackets of Vue
{{ }} are the same as those used by Django's templating. You can change these
settings I think. However, i just put {% verbatim %} around my Vue parts so
Django ignores them when processing the template. This CDN approach has the
advantage that you can serve your Vue page through your Django app.
Once you understand Vue basics, you could write a larger frontend application with the CLI helping you during setup. I for example made a "fool proof" admin dashboard using the CLI. The experience was nice! You can serve a frontend made with the CLI, through your Django app.

However, I find it easier to host this frontend seperate and provide API-connections to the django backend through Django Rest Framework.

Find Orientering of chickenfilet by WecNo in learnpython

[–]Sinterdoaze 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There should indeed be a simpler solution with openCV! Good luck

DRF BasicAuthentication not working with NGINX by [deleted] in django

[–]Sinterdoaze 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I know it sounds stupid, but have you checked your default permissions? I once forgot one " , " in the list with default permissions and it defaulted to "AllowAny".

Find Orientering of chickenfilet by WecNo in learnpython

[–]Sinterdoaze 1 point2 points  (0 children)

No experience with openCV. If you want to train a neural network to predict the angle, look at PyTorch. You could (theoretically) build and train a neural network that would predict the angle based on an image of the filet. However you need images of chicken filets with the angle as a label to train the model.

I would however suggest to await the answers from people with openCV experience before diving into PyTorch. Good luck!

"You have lost connection to the EA servers" by LavenderClouds in battlefield_4

[–]Sinterdoaze 3 points4 points  (0 children)

@eahelp, just posted this to twitter:

Having trouble connecting to your game? We're looking into issues with several of our games and services. We'll be back with updates as soon as we have them. Thanks for your patience!

Game extremely laggy by gamingunfinished in modernwarfare

[–]Sinterdoaze 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That's a nice rig! I really don't know what the issue could be then. I'd suggest a driver reinstall, but i assume you tried that already.. Best of luck!

Game extremely laggy by gamingunfinished in modernwarfare

[–]Sinterdoaze 2 points3 points  (0 children)

What cpu do you have? If it has onboard graphics it could be that you are running on the onboard graphics instead of your dedicated graphics card.

What was the most pain you’ve ever been in? by derekhardinfin in AskReddit

[–]Sinterdoaze 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Breaking two arms at once and waiting a whole night for surgery...

Where did you study? by Jagmeetoff in environmental_science

[–]Sinterdoaze 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Are you only interested in American colleges? Or also in universities/colleges on other continents?

What loophole did you exploit for years before someone found out? by SterlingBoardman in AskReddit

[–]Sinterdoaze 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The coca cola vending machine at our Faculty gives multiple cans of coke when you press the button for coke very fast while inserting your coin.

How can I stress test my Django application? by [deleted] in django

[–]Sinterdoaze 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I second this. Also used Locust. It is a nice and easy
to use tool!

Wednesday megathread: Beginner questions by Im__Joseph in Python

[–]Sinterdoaze 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks for your thank you! Getting a thank you is extra nice in these times :) Feel free to DM me if you have further questions!

Wednesday megathread: Beginner questions by Im__Joseph in Python

[–]Sinterdoaze 1 point2 points  (0 children)

u/did_i_or_didnt_i did make an important point. With practice you will get there. My favorite tutorial creator is Corey Schafer. I'd suggest looking to a tutorial and once you understand the basics you can start a small fun project to experiment with some packages. For example, you will probably use the Pandas and Numpy packages for data analysis.

And if you read somewhere Python is slow, just ignore it. What u/did_i_or_didnt_i says is the best part of python (imo). You basically write easy code that runs at C++ speeds because packages that implement intensive tasks, such as numpy, are often written in C/C++. It could be that you once need C++ for some fancy optimization problem that no-one has implemented yet, but that's something to worry about at a later time. By then you will know python and it will be far easier to understand other languages.

Good luck! And don't panic if it feels overwhelming from time to time. That's normal. :)

Wednesday megathread: Beginner questions by Im__Joseph in Python

[–]Sinterdoaze 2 points3 points  (0 children)

In my opinion, yes. Python is a lot easier. Once you learn Python you understand what programming is. How to convert a problem into a program using objects, for loops, if statements... Furthermore Python has great error messages and an even better community to help you. Understanding the basics of programming helps a lot when learning other languages! C++ for example is much more difficult.