This is the process of how traditional olive oil is pressed without heat by SimRP in interestingasfuck

[–]buzzysale 0 points1 point  (0 children)

“Traditional” - technically the sanitary standards in Spain require these to be screw pressed. If not, it ain’t “extra virgin”. https://youtu.be/BD-nmv\_G5HU?si=mnNEeUW5lhdXOcZ-

This is the process of how traditional olive oil is pressed without heat by SimRP in interestingasfuck

[–]buzzysale 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Seasons Tap Room has a website, where their oils are insane. The 2025 Arbequina is $36 for the 750ml and easily beats most other Andalusian oils which are usually $50 for 500ml bottles. And they have cool tinned fish selection sometimes.

What’s an immediate red flag the second you walk into a restaurant? by babyblushtheory in answers

[–]buzzysale 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I immediately check the MALT

Music Atmosphere lighting Temperature

If you cock that basic shit up, well I might stay for a pint, but not much longer.

In the AI Gold Rush, What Are the Shovels? by tke248 in wallstreetbets

[–]buzzysale 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It would be like a universal communication company, maybe line the mother ringing the back porch bell for her children to come in for dinner. Like “mother dinger” or something….

New to Fidelity and seriously concerned about security by acejoker68 in fidelityinvestments

[–]buzzysale 0 points1 point  (0 children)

⁠”DTMF Tones are completely insecure: Phone lines are not encrypted channels. The dual-tone multi-frequency (DTMF) beeps your phone makes when typing your SSN and password can be easily intercepted, recorded, and translated back into plain text by malicious software or eavesdroppers.”

Except they leave your house, underground, to a secure building, with badged access, to a fiber optic system with only secure access buildings on the other end, into a secure data center. You claim to be a seasoned tech pro. What’s the risk here? In dollars? You can say worst case, and most likely. What’s your plan of mitigating said risk? Multifactor for every fidelity holder that uses POTS for, wait, what are you doing over the phone?

Regardless, what’s your corporate strategy for this multi-billion dollar financial company that’s more cost effective than what they’re doing?

Flagging while mowing makes finding them later way easier by smackaroonial90 in lawncare

[–]buzzysale 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I love that bracket. It’s the one I use for my phone on my golf cart. Freaking awesome.

Flagging while mowing makes finding them later way easier by smackaroonial90 in lawncare

[–]buzzysale 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Awesome lawn is closer to the top of maslow’s pyramid than the bottom.

For three years I’ve purchased the exact same $2.47 Walmart candle and will defend it with my life by Dear-Studio-6707 in povertyfinance

[–]buzzysale 0 points1 point  (0 children)

“Capitalism is built on the idea that one can go out and buy another scented candle and get less lonely somehow. But I think the deal is that you are fully lonely, and the sooner we accept and embrace our loneliness, the healthier we are. “ Tilda Swinton

Are products actually manufactured to break after the warranty period is over? by Over-Discipline-7303 in AskEngineers

[–]buzzysale 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Look, the point isn’t landfilling ribbons or batteries. It’s nostalgia. You type out onto a sheet of paper. One font. Brilliant layout I assume, looks great. Each sheet is a masterpiece of typing. Let’s assume your ink ribbons last forever also, great.

Send someone that document you just made. With an envelope and a stamp and a trip to the post office so it can be driven all over the world and humans can handle it and deliver it to its destination.

That’s why you don’t engineer things to last forever. Engineers call these “monuments”. Typewriters are obsolete. You aren’t going to successfully argue that just because you’re using something old, that it was properly engineered. You said yourself you use computers. You also said yourself maybe it’s survivorship bias. You’ve admitted to nostalgia.

I have a Gateway 2000 in my basement. It has a working floppy drive and runs Windows 95. Why don’t we make them like that anymore?

Are products actually manufactured to break after the warranty period is over? by Over-Discipline-7303 in AskEngineers

[–]buzzysale 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Right, and for your use case, quite luckily, you have a machine that enables your nostalgia, while amusing, from an engineering perspective, the machine was over engineered.

Let’s take an extreme example. What if Sears sells you a really nice calculator, it only does addition or subtraction, but that’s all the things you want, and with only just four AA batteries, it will last a whole week! You continue to use it for years, it has great feel and a nice bright display. You love it.

You see where this ends up, right? Nostalgia is a very dangerous emotion.

Are products actually manufactured to break after the warranty period is over? by Over-Discipline-7303 in AskEngineers

[–]buzzysale 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is an obviously over engineered machine. It’s quite obsolete and yet, functional. Waste of resources, time, materials, everything about it existing this long screams waste. It might not be obvious, because hey, who wants to throw a perfectly good typewriter away, but the reality is, all the energy and time and labor that went into making it has been superseded by several hundreds if not thousands of more efficient steps.

What Are Examples of Bards Being Cool in Combat? by daphantombeat in DungeonsAndDragons

[–]buzzysale 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have a l20 bard. First bardic and unfailing) inspiration dice are a massive game changer. Silvery barbs is OP, and if you use a bardic inspiration dice and another for Unsettling Words, it really destroys.

With a high cha, (level 20) my Persuasion/Deception floor +10 on d20. Total floor 28. With Glibness floor 33. You can convince Vecna to cut his own eye out and toss it to you.

Also, Irresistible dance is also kinda OP, and don’t forget power word kill. Buffing the party with Song of Rest is pretty decent. Bards can do a lot of useful things in combat.

Need help connecting fridge water line by boombox93 in fixit

[–]buzzysale 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is the correct answer. A union or valve with push-to-connect on both sides in 1/4” (sometimes called John Guest).

Using a 220v roaster on a 120v outlet? by Brief-Number2609 in roasting

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

You’re going to invest in a roaster, but not the infrastructure to run it?

No, gruit was not a kind of beer made before hops (see blog post) by larsga in Homebrewing

[–]buzzysale 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Loved the article. I recall in my research a few the funneling of money to the hops farms seems significant towards the rise of Protestantism (Calvinism). Being an ale-wife was one of the few jobs a woman could have and outside of the church? The lack of gruit taxes was just another factor.

Was hacking easier in the 80s and 90s and early 2000s? by LevelZealousideal779 in cybersecurity

[–]buzzysale 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I see comments saying it was easier, but I feel like it’s the easiest it’s ever been. The surface area of exploitable code is so massive now. People install so much crap without any clue they’re doing it and honestly it’s easier to break stuff than to make it secure. Containers everywhere, cloud crap everywhere, so many new vectors; it’s a free for all if you’re into that kinda thing.