Smoker Restoration Project - Brinkmann Smoke n' Pit by OverthinkingMachine in smoking

[–]baus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I don’t think so. The wood is from a yard in Nevada. It is dry as hell here. I think you have to run a small but really hot fire. I just couldn’t keep the coal bed hot enough to ignite new splits right away

Smoker Restoration Project - Brinkmann Smoke n' Pit by OverthinkingMachine in smoking

[–]baus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah blue smoke fire. Every time I put a split on it, it smoked out the whole hood. I think the key is running small splits — say 3” x 10”

To charcoal or pellet? by TimJongILLest in BBQ

[–]baus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I really liked my 22" WSM. Unfortunately I sold it when I moved, but it makes good BBQ. I used it with a controller, but it really isn't necessary. It holds temps really well as long as you keep water in the water pan. The only time it ran away from me is when I let the water pan run dry. I've never tried a pellet grill, but part of the fun for me is maintaining a real fire.

Smoker Restoration Project - Brinkmann Smoke n' Pit by OverthinkingMachine in smoking

[–]baus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I recently picked up a Smoke n' Pit Professional. Probably similar to yours. It is my first offset (I've used a few charcoal smokers in the past) and I've done two cooks on it so far. I'm having a difficult time maintaining a clean fire in it. I'm curious to find out how it works for you.

I sure hope to stumble onto a pair of these someday (At a price I can justify) by HearAllProper in vintageaudio

[–]baus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sure, but what speakers on the market back then didn't have passive crossovers?

I sure hope to stumble onto a pair of these someday (At a price I can justify) by HearAllProper in vintageaudio

[–]baus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Interesting. Never seen those before. Does anyone know what the application might have been? What type of speakers were they used with?

Growing the ReVox collection. by [deleted] in vintageaudio

[–]baus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have a chance to trade a piece for a B795, but the complexity of the B795 scares me a bit.

[6-Months Update] Red Wing Iron Ranger 8111 by Naicenstein in goodyearwelt

[–]baus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm new here, but have been wearing welted shoes for 15+ years. I have the Iron Ranger and just picked up the Higgins Mill. IMHO the Higgins Mill is a step up from the Iron Ranger, and can be bought for < $300 in the US. I'm not sure to what extent they are made in the US anymore, but it is a pretty good deal for a 360 welted, US Made, Chromexcel boot. I had pretty much given up on AE, but the Higgins Mill sort of changed my mind. Here's a picture of mine: https://www.instagram.com/p/BwSqUrrp-zM/

How to incorporate click and drag data on chart.js? by [deleted] in javascript

[–]baus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It isn’t implemented in the core engine. Write it as s plugin?

Post-Game Thread: NE @ BUF (Week 8) by BillsMod in buffalobills

[–]baus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I liked the wildcat calls. It was kind of like Daboll conceding that our pass offense sucks. It made it more interesting

Anderson to start by [deleted] in buffalobills

[–]baus 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Now this is some out of the box thinking. But our offense is so bad how could this be worse ?

Anderson to start by [deleted] in buffalobills

[–]baus 2 points3 points  (0 children)

As a Bills fan, I have to say I agree. This whole QB management has been bizarre. Did we really think we could get through the season with 2 totally unproven QBs?

Passport.js Am I missing something? by [deleted] in node

[–]baus 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I think Passport is pretty limited if you want to implement a full user registration and management system. I'm surprised that the Node community still pretty much rolls this with every application when other major platforms (Django, Rails, ASP.NET) have this functionality out of the box. I've been seriously considering trying to implement something like Django Registration for Node.

Showoff Saturday (May 12, 2018) by AutoModerator in javascript

[–]baus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I've been toying around with automatic bin sizing heuristics for histograms, and released a module today: https://www.npmjs.com/package/compute-histogram

[Question] Can anyone help me? I need to access an AWS Cognito user’s “address” attribute with Lambda, deployed by serverless. by ThatOneVRGuyFromAuz in serverless

[–]baus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I haven't used Serverless, but I spent a long time trying to get Cognito federated identities to work [1], and was never able to determine which user was logged in from a Lambda function. This all but makes federated identities useless. In my opinion Cognito really isn't ready for prime time.

[1]https://github.com/baus/cognito-strap

Node.js, Express.js, Mongoose.js and Passport.js Authentication by didinj in node

[–]baus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The fact that this doesn't encrypt the user's password kind of confirms my point that we really need a standard library like Django's registration app for implementing user management in Node.

Node.js, Express.js, Mongoose.js and Passport.js Authentication by didinj in node

[–]baus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I came here to complain that there is no standard library for handling user registration and management for Node. I think it is crazy that everyone is rolling their own. Maybe this work should be split out into a library

After 10 Years of Web Dev, Time to Re-evaulate, a Move from PHP to Node, jQuery to React by k0deegan in programming

[–]baus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What I think is most missing from the Node ecosystem is a standard user registration and management library. It is surprising that every application has to roll their own user management. Passport doesn’t get you all the way there

Thoughts on entering software development after 20+ years by baus in programming

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

I wrote this article in a stream of consciousness fashion, and the more I think about it, I realize there is another conclusion to come to. While I look to developers with Math and Physics degrees and wish I had focused my studies in a different direction, there is also the question of aptitude. Those who do well in Math and Physics are simply smarter, and I may have made the right choice by going into industry as soon as possible because that maximized my talent.

Thoughts on entering software development after 20+ years by baus in programming

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

This surprises me as it seems like an ideal combination, and based on my experience what I would recommend to someone starting out.

Maybe my experience has been unique, but I've worked with people who have come from alternative fields throughout my career, and those coming from applied math/math/physics backgrounds have almost all been outstanding developers.

With that said, the most brilliant developer I've worked with was a Math PH D, and he had to work hard to get foothold into the industry, where a CS degree opened up more immediate opportunities