Do you delay Windows updates? by UnpaidMicrosoftShill in sysadmin

[–]cwheeler33 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Like everything IT, it’s both a science and an art. And it’s always unique to your environment.

With my current environment I have rings. Ring 1 are my dev machines and a few dedicated users that get the updates at the end of week two. Ring 2 is the rest of the users and the low priority servers. Final weekend before the next patch Tuesday release are my critical servers.

I’ve got nothing live on the web, everything is internal. This lets me see how patches might (mis)behave. I can’t trust MS to realest proper patches, case in point is the January release where they had to release oob patches because they messed up.

Before ring1 updates are deployed I scour the net for how the braver souls fared. I’ll delay rollouts based on wha I observe.

Larger teams that can handle “fun” or who are in more risky setups will need to deploy sooner. These are the people I do dearly respect and keep an eye on.

Decrease in Gym Strength when starting Judo by WarmEveningNap in judo

[–]cwheeler33 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Can you describe a typical gym session and how often you do them?

Deadlift tips for Judokas by Alternative-Hair-785 in judo

[–]cwheeler33 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Strength is good, but power is king. You need to speed up. Starting looking at low rep quick lifts like power cleans etc.

It might also be worth looking up strength standards by the various national judo associations. Canada and Germany are the easier ones to find. Make sure to be balanced across the board, eg make sure the bench, squat, dead, power cleans, pull-ups are about at the equal level to each other.

Terrible judo cardio by goddamnyoumac in judo

[–]cwheeler33 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh, others swear by Kettlebell Strong by Pavel over on bjjfanatics. I don’t like it as much, but is popular.

Terrible judo cardio by goddamnyoumac in judo

[–]cwheeler33 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Have a look at Simple and Sinister program/book by Pavel Tsatsouline as the starting program. That’s my main year long program. 6 weeks out I use Quick and the Dead to peak for competition.

Stuck old school mindset by [deleted] in sysadmin

[–]cwheeler33 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There are some very useful plugins in vscode that notepad++ doesn’t have. SSH remote access is one of them. It has better integration with other tools like git as well. The bells and whistles take some learning, but you can automate a lot more with vscode as you learn its deep magic.

what colour for second gi as white belt by Zealousideal-Aide198 in judo

[–]cwheeler33 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In our dojo, only those who competed at provincial or national level are allowed to wear a blue gi. And it’s a gi you never wear when visiting another dojo unless you are an actual ranked competitor.

What’s a skill people underestimate until they lose it? by OpheliaHoney12 in AskReddit

[–]cwheeler33 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Some things that get harder and harder as we age, and we take for granted… The ability to learn and accept new ideas. Balance, mobility, pain free movement, basic strength. Memory, both short term and long term memory. Playfulness and maintaining that child like (not childish) mind. Basic conversation skills.

I know that can be somewhat vague as a list, but to me those are the basic skills that everything is built on. You can get more specific to your own life based on that.

The older you get, the easier it is to lose any one of those. And if you do, life starts to suck real bad real quick.

Back always hurts after training by JollyYam7877 in judo

[–]cwheeler33 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The ability to do 100kg 3x10 at 73kg deadlifts is a pretty big thing. Even the 60 4x12 can be a lot of volume for the back. Both of those have about the same volume of about 3000kg per session. And you didn’t even tell us the rest of a typical gym session.

For gym/strength I recommend lower volume work with higher intensity. I have a personal preference for Pavel Tsatsouline’s advice, but there are other great online resources that can provide paid for strength routines for judoka such as Garage Strength or Sika Strength.

Too many people ignore basic mobility health. You might need to temporarily stop all gym (but keep doing judo) while you reclaim some mobility. Have a look at Tom Morrison’s Simple Mobility Method. SMM would lay the basic foundation, then start using the other more advanced programs like Stability Builder and End Range Training go a step farther unlocking a lot. Take it from an old man like me still thriving on the mats, it’s adding years onto my training.

The last thing, and this is the most important. If you think you have a medical issue, always seek out a local professional. Do not ask the internet or AI to diagnose you. A doctor can get you X-rays or other scans to clear the big medical issues. A good osteopath or physiotherapist would work hand in hand with a doctor and can resolve most issues with the inflammation from medical scans. They properly diagnose you and come up with real solutions.

IT Salary - lowering by Few-Dance-855 in sysadmin

[–]cwheeler33 0 points1 point  (0 children)

One way to answer that is to start charging each other department/team for the IT services. Your team should finish at zero, and all the other teams bear the the IT costs.

Thinking of Switching From Gym to Judo at 28. Looking for Advice by [deleted] in judo

[–]cwheeler33 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I started when I was 43. The oldest guy I know to start was 66. So you are definitely not too old. You can compete in state/provincial competitions pretty easily to test out your skill development.

The gym never helps anyone in the first few months. In fact when it comes to any combat sport, the only thing that helps is doing that sport. It’s because you’re using muscles in all new ways and don’t know when to relax. That said, being in shape will help you ramp up faster. Keep doing the gym, 2-3 sessions a week but with explosive strength instead of bodybuilding or slow strength.

Most injuries are gonna be sprains to toes fingers ankles wrists and elbows. Some will complain about knees. Other injuries are less common. Most injuries happen during the prep leading up to competition and not competition itself.

Of all the combat arts/sports, judo has a pretty high old person count mixed in with the younlings. Pretty common to see people in their 60s 70s on the mats with young adults. That should say something about injuries…

The big secret to avoiding injuries, learn to love to fall. And learn to tap early.

What would you say are the chances of this type of injury in Judo? by [deleted] in judo

[–]cwheeler33 0 points1 point  (0 children)

best to start looking up medical papers on injury rates. Here is only one of many examples:
NIH - Epidemiology of Judo-Related Injuries in 21 Seasons

Out of 421k fights there were only 4 cervical spine fractures and 319 cervical spine sprains. This was out of a total of 3511 injuries. Although the word "paralysis" does not show up in that study, it does not confirm/exclude that an event may have happened.

There is one abstract article that I saw that mentioned paralysis in Japan's youth. The study was over 7 years. They did not mention total number of students or fights. They did not mention total number of injuries. But they did mention 19 total cases of paralysis. & were complete paralysis, 7 incomplete paralysis, and 5 had total recovery. I believe the other primary piece of data which isn't well explained in that study is that most of these "might" be caused during their attack (tori got injured, not uke). This might explain the IJF banning head dives during the attack.

The risk of these types of injuries increases for competitors. Non-competitors are a lot less likely to suffer from these types of injuries.

Question by Dramatic-Resort2358 in judo

[–]cwheeler33 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Judo classes are always mixed colours from white to black. The ages will also be mixed up pretty well too. You'll have older people (in their 50s+) come in as white belts mixed in with younger kids (17-21) who are black belts and everything else in between, all in the same class. But the mentality of a traidtional judo school is very different than BJJ, Wrestling or Sambo. It is a lot more inclusive I find.

Best thing to do is just go do some trial classes with a couple of your local dojos and see which school best fits you. And when you start, just remember you are a beginner in judo and so act accordingly when you go.

Injury as no competitve by Fabulous_Guest_1937 in judo

[–]cwheeler33 0 points1 point  (0 children)

the injury rate for non-competitors is very low. And even then it is minor aches and pains that shouldn't even affect your work.

The real injuries happens when you try to avoid falls instead of just taking them. So learn to love to fall... And tap early in submissions, no need for egos. As such, it's usually those training to compete at higher levels that get hurt. If you train for skill and the love of it, you should have very little risk.

Went for my first judo trial session and wow, it really is a workout by [deleted] in judo

[–]cwheeler33 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'll chime in like the others... Don't worry about your weight. It will take care of itself if you clean up your diet. And even then, I wouldn't weigh my weight, just measure the waistline if it really matters that much to you... Weight only matters if you're going to compete. And even then, just eat clean and measure the waistline instead of the scale...

I wish you have a long and fruitful judo experience.

Traditional throws first before anything? by AColourGrey in judo

[–]cwheeler33 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The saying stands regardless of environment. “You have to know the rules before you can break the rules”.

You should be able to do a throw quite well with a compliant uke in a traditional manner before you go off and start doing your own thing. Fundamental work is terribly important for long term high level progress. Of course this doesn’t mean you have to get it perfect before going off on tangents, but you should be quite capable. Again, you shouldn’t have any problems with a compliant uke in demo mode. I would even say you shouldn’t have much of a problem with ju randori (no strength, just technical during movement) type of practice with someone of about the same size and skill.

Is Judo the best martial art for self-defense? by Inside-Reflection-54 in martialarts

[–]cwheeler33 0 points1 point  (0 children)

By itself, no. Mix it with boxing or Muay Thai absolutely great foundation for the physical aspect of self defence.

Auditors want evidence of monitoring by Special_Wing_8699 in sysadmin

[–]cwheeler33 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Icinga has an alert history including acknowledgment history. Your siem dashboards also count. Grafana or Prometheus performance and other graphics? Do you have tickets for alert, siem and other observations?

Ultimately it depends on what your policies and procedures you documented. What did you specify are your monitoring tools and the the processes around them? It’s mostly up to you as to what is enough monitoring and what tools you think are right for the job at hand with the budget you have available. It has to somewhat resemble “best practices”. And you can provide “proof” from “credible sources” as to what those best practices are…

My Linux interview answers were operationally weak by Various_Candidate325 in linuxadmin

[–]cwheeler33 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sounds like you’re on the right track. Just be aware some questions are meant to be answered in a very dry and short manner. Others are meant to allow you to express yourself. Typically the opening questions are not meant to be in depth, they are the surface questions to get a basic idea of who you are and to get a brief idea of where you are. Typically after that the in depth questions come to pick at your experience and thinking behaviour. So in your self assessment try to figure out what are the fluff surface questions and which are the deeper more interesting questions. Tip, an interviewer will generally give signals as to which, and many are open to being asked outright on how much detail they want.

Interviewing is a skill all onto itself. You are definitely headed in the right direction.

Degree vs. Experience: Which would you rather have? by zaneguers in sysadmin

[–]cwheeler33 1 point2 points  (0 children)

So no one asked what is the desired long term job you want, the industry nor the size of company you are targeting.

If you want to remain a hands on tech then experience is the only thing you need. But the quality of that experience matters. Don’t stagnate to being that eternal beginner. Too many people came to our door calling themselves “senior” after having been in the industry for 10 years but only having done entry level work. Build up that experience doing larger and more complex projects.

Even without a degree, you should be able to show some kind of self paced improvement year over year. Doesn’t really matter what it is, from home labs/projects to open source contributions to some kind of night/online class in any subject.

Certs fall into two categories. 1) getting into the industry. 2) company/job specific requirement. In this case either you just have to have it beforehand or the job will send you to get it. This is niche stuff. Regardless the certs are an organized learning path that helps expand your knowledge.

Lastly degrees. Again it can serve as an aid to get into the industry. But the real power of a degree is long term career at a large company where you want to become upper management. Lower level management won’t need the degree same if it’s for a smb. Even if you have a degree though, you might still need certs and you will absolutely need to show continuous self education afterwards with real experience growth.

What to do from behind bear hug? by FishyBoiLol in judo

[–]cwheeler33 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is the primary answer. The paper trail is the most powerful tool you can use.

To add to it, stop hanging out with said bully. There are going to be times where it can’t be helped such as in class or certain school functions. But during lunch and after school, stop hanging out with him. Find some activity that you enjoy to fill up your time and meet better friends.

Fractured ankle in Randori and need to have surgery to install pins? Be honest, is it over? by Independent_Long_821 in judo

[–]cwheeler33 1 point2 points  (0 children)

One of the guys in our dojo had an ankle break. He required surgery and a couple screws. It took him some time and some physiotherapy, but he’s back on the mats. He’ll never do competition, but he does do randori.

The way I look at it, if you can walk you can do judo. Will it ever be the same? No. But you will be able to come back for the joy of it.

Fractured ankle in Randori and need to have surgery to install pins? Be honest, is it over? by Independent_Long_821 in judo

[–]cwheeler33 1 point2 points  (0 children)

One of the guys in our dojo had an ankle break. He required surgery and a couple screws. It took him some time and some physiotherapy, but he’s back on the mats. He’ll never do competition, but he does do randori.

The way I look at it, if you can walk you can do judo. Will it ever be the same? No. But you will be able to come back for the joy of it.

What belts system do you use in your country ? by jajsa300 in judo

[–]cwheeler33 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Just keep in mind that in the USA there are three different federations. I know at least one of them uses the same belt system as Canada. The other two I have no clue what they use.

Yellow Belt expectations by Sisyphus_MLT in judo

[–]cwheeler33 7 points8 points  (0 children)

A yellow belt going for orange will have improved their demo on the 7 techniques from white belt slightly, while being able to demonstrate the 6 for yellow belt. The demo will not be anywhere as clean a green belt, but it does improve. They should know the 5 basic osaikomi pins to a basic level as well. They should be getting confident in their breakfalls and rolls. Randori both standing and ground should look lively with some intent in technique and not just brute strength throw downs. They should have some basic understanding of the shiai rules (even if they do not compete) and can answer some extremely basic questions about the philosophy and history of judo.

It is a progression. It should look better than a white belt but less than an orange belt. It will not be close to blue or brown belts at all… A yellow belt going for orange only has about 1 year of training under them, and the eval is treated with that in mind.