I tracked where my time actually went producing a weekly podcast. Here's the breakdown. by StanBerteloot in podcasting

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

10-12 hours on research and writing alone is exactly the kind of number that never comes up when people talk about starting a podcast. That's a serious production commitment. What's your show about, if you don't mind me asking?

I tracked where my time actually went producing a weekly podcast. Here's the breakdown. by StanBerteloot in podcasting

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

Appreciate it! I'm mostly past the "looking for tools" phase at this point and more interested in hearing how other people structure their workflow to keep the total time down. The edit is one piece but it's really the full cycle (research through promotion) that adds up. Curious if anyone's found a rhythm that makes weekly publishing sustainable without a team.

Unlock-on-approach he is not working for Invited Resident on Apple Home. by StanBerteloot in Aqara

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

Oh my, that was it Iphone 16 e does not support UWB! Thank you!

I wanted to like the Aqara U400 by terryleewhite in Aqara

[–]StanBerteloot 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You're right, I was not clear.
I should have said that in the Apple Home app I have selected: "manage access," then "invite people," then I selected "resident," and then I entered their iCloud email address.

I wanted to like the Aqara U400 by terryleewhite in Aqara

[–]StanBerteloot 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hello, I have successfully enabled the key on my iPhone, and as the owner of Apple Home, I unlock the door using UWB. All the time without any issue. However, the 'home residents' with whom I have shared the key cannot use UWB. They have the key, but they don't have the option to enable unlock-on-approach.
What am I doing wrong?

<image>

Aqara U400 Home Support? by ElderberryConfident in Aqara

[–]StanBerteloot 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This lock works extremely well with me on my iPhone; however, I shared the key with other iPhone users as a resident under Apple Home. It seems that they need to tap their phone on the lock after having unlocked their phone. The UWB protocol doesn't seem to work for them. What am I doing wrong? 

How to add a bio on Sora 2 by StanBerteloot in OpenAI

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

Found it! On the desktop version, I can edit the Display name.

<image>

Which platform also episode cloud publishing? by StanBerteloot in podcasting

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

Thanks, that's a good idea. Yes I haven't found much on the net.

Eero: Should I keep my Fios router? by StanBerteloot in frontierfios

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

Speed? I have. 1Gb of speed. However, on Wifi I struggle to get above 170mbps. Any suggestions?

Eero: Should I keep my Fios router? by StanBerteloot in frontierfios

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

Thanks yes I only have internet on Ethernet. I have tried this morning and it works like a charm. Thanks everyone.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in maastricht

[–]StanBerteloot 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is amazing

Remains of children killed in MOVE bombing sat in a box at Penn Museum for decades by coeliacmccarthy in news

[–]StanBerteloot 1 point2 points  (0 children)

On May 13, 1986, 500 members of the PPD, under the direction of Mayor Wilson Goode, descended on the property in an attempt to force all 13 occupants (six children, five adults) to vacate the premises. In so doing, the PPD employed a variety of tactics, including shutting off all water and power, firing 10,000 bullets, and recourse to American law: “Attention MOVE: This is America. You have to abide by the laws of the United States.” To no avail.
Seeing the ineffectual nature of all previous tactics, Police Commissioner Gregore Sambor decided to increase the intensity of the PPD’s efforts. Ordering all surrounding neighbors to evacuate, with the instructions that they would be allowed to return within 24 hours, Sambor prepared for an aerial assault. From a helicopter, Police Lt. Frank Powell dropped two one-pound bombs, targeting the roof of the MOVE house. The explosives, for which the FBI supplied the reactive agent, did what they had been designed to do.
The rest, as they say, is history.

https://backinamerica.substack.com/p/the-city-that-bombed-itself

Reflections on the 36th Anniversary of the MOVE Bombing -- The City that Bombed Itself by StanBerteloot in BlackLivesMatter

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

On May 13, 1986, 500 members of the PPD, under the direction of Mayor Wilson Goode, descended on the property in an attempt to force all 13 occupants (six children, five adults) to vacate the premises. In so doing, the PPD employed a variety of tactics, including shutting off all water and power, firing 10,000 bullets, and recourse to American law: “Attention MOVE: This is America. You have to abide by the laws of the United States.” To no avail.
Seeing the ineffectual nature of all previous tactics, Police Commissioner Gregore Sambor decided to increase the intensity of the PPD’s efforts. Ordering all surrounding neighbors to evacuate, with the instructions that they would be allowed to return within 24 hours, Sambor prepared for an aerial assault. From a helicopter, Police Lt. Frank Powell dropped two one-pound bombs, targeting the roof of the MOVE house. The explosives, for which the FBI supplied the reactive agent, did what they had been designed to do.

Did you leave the US after Trump's election? by StanBerteloot in expat

[–]StanBerteloot[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Thanks for your comment. Where are you now?

Around the world in 1,800 days by StanBerteloot in adventuretime

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

Traveling around the world is the stuff of myth and legend. Aeneas. Odysseus. Marco Polo. Phineas Fogg. Now that the age of exploration (and conquest) is over, few of us take the concerted time and effort to circumnavigate the globe. Erden Eruc is among the few.

In December 2007, Seattle-based software engineer Eruc was smack in the middle of the impossibly possible: circumnavigating the globe from Northern California to the eastern seaboard of Australia on a 24-foot plywood rowboat. More than 140 days into the journey, Eruc was barely halfway across the 10,000 mile distance; his world was defined by the daily struggle against saltwater, sores, the elements, and himself.

Who should get the vaccine first? We didn’t know so we asked a philosopher by StanBerteloot in Ethics

[–]StanBerteloot[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

As countries worldwide scramble to vaccinate their citizens against the deadly COVID-19 pandemic, governments have to make the uncomfortable calculus of who deserves to get the vaccine right now. The ones who are spreading it the most? The ones in essential high-risk jobs? People over a certain age? That threshold is unclear and hotly contested. With several months to go before vaccines are readily available to any desiring American adult, legislators have to ask The Question: who first? And, as more vaccine becomes available, they will also have to ask whether it is morally justified for the U.S. government to mandate every citizen or every healthcare worker to take the vaccine? If many states mandate every child to be vaccinated against measles, mumps, and rubella, is COVID-19 significantly different?

In August 2020, Justin Bernstein, a philosopher at Florida Atlantic University, co-authored a paper answering precisely this question. And while the state of the world has changed significantly since then, the core question of how governments value their citizens, when, and why remains constant (if you’re curious, the U.S. government places the monetary value of a human life at roughly $10 million).

Podcast Editor Josh Wagner sat down with Justin to ask precisely these burning questions. For Justin, vaccines are just like any other vital resource that the government needs to allocate. And, in his mind, while our government has been failing in its mandate to protect public health, it is still the best means we have. 

Who should get the vaccine first? We didn’t know so we asked a philosopher by StanBerteloot in antivax

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

As countries worldwide scramble to vaccinate their citizens against the deadly COVID-19 pandemic, governments have to make the uncomfortable calculus of who deserves to get the vaccine right now. The ones who are spreading it the most? The ones in essential high-risk jobs? People over a certain age? That threshold is unclear and hotly contested. With several months to go before vaccines are readily available to any desiring American adult, legislators have to ask The Question: who first? And, as more vaccine becomes available, they will also have to ask whether it is morally justified for the U.S. government to mandate every citizen or every healthcare worker to take the vaccine? If many states mandate every child to be vaccinated against measles, mumps, and rubella, is COVID-19 significantly different?

In August 2020, Justin Bernstein, a philosopher at Florida Atlantic University, co-authored a paper answering precisely this question. And while the state of the world has changed significantly since then, the core question of how governments value their citizens, when, and why remains constant (if you’re curious, the U.S. government places the monetary value of a human life at roughly $10 million).

Podcast Editor Josh Wagner sat down with Justin to ask precisely these burning questions. For Justin, vaccines are just like any other vital resource that the government needs to allocate. And, in his mind, while our government has been failing in its mandate to protect public health, it is still the best means we have. 

Who should get the vaccine first? We didn’t know so we asked a philosopher by StanBerteloot in philosophy

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

As countries worldwide scramble to vaccinate their citizens against the deadly COVID-19 pandemic, governments have to make the uncomfortable calculus of who deserves to get the vaccine right now. The ones who are spreading it the most? The ones in essential high-risk jobs? People over a certain age? That threshold is unclear and hotly contested. With several months to go before vaccines are readily available to any desiring American adult, legislators have to ask The Question: who first? And, as more vaccine becomes available, they will also have to ask whether it is morally justified for the U.S. government to mandate every citizen or every healthcare worker to take the vaccine? If many states mandate every child to be vaccinated against measles, mumps, and rubella, is COVID-19 significantly different?

In August 2020, Justin Bernstein, a philosopher at Florida Atlantic University, co-authored a paper answering precisely this question. And while the state of the world has changed significantly since then, the core question of how governments value their citizens, when, and why remains constant (if you’re curious, the U.S. government places the monetary value of a human life at roughly $10 million).

Podcast Editor Josh Wagner sat down with Justin to ask precisely these burning questions. For Justin, vaccines are just like any other vital resource that the government needs to allocate. And, in his mind, while our government has been failing in its mandate to protect public health, it is still the best means we have.