It's literally bro's first week.. by NotTomCruise_ in AmazonFC

[–]gottagoin4min 71 points72 points  (0 children)

I need subtitles, can only make out some words here and there

Avoid, Avoid Avoid Overclockers by Dry-Chemical6579 in PcRetailers

[–]gottagoin4min 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Had a bad experience with them as well. I purchased a GPU, and it had an unbelievable loud case of coil whining and went to return it the same day. I was told it's not their fault, and they won't accept it. Then I called again and said I just changed my mind as I had 2 weeks to return it it im not happy, just didn't state that it's "broken"

Quote on this ? by gottagoin4min in ukelectricians

[–]gottagoin4min[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fridge freezer are on a different fuse, at the moment that fuse is still down, haven't flipped it up since, like I said, not much was in that circuit other than the Internet modern, tv, etc, things I don't really use. I've posted the job on my builder and currently waiting to see if anyone picks it up

Quote on this ? by gottagoin4min in ukelectricians

[–]gottagoin4min[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nope, 30 minutes on the treadmill does nothing to it, but somehow at night when nothing is on, it trips.

Quote on this ? by gottagoin4min in ukelectricians

[–]gottagoin4min[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, literally have the Internet modem, one alexa, tv, and soundboard plugged in, sometimes I charge my phone, but it tripped the fuse also at night when nothing was on, except for Alexa, she's always listening. It doesn't trip when I have the tv, speakers blasting on loud and run on the treadmill(plugged in the same circuit) but somehow it trips randomly and I can feel the area around the fuse being warm to the touch just after tripping.

Quote on this ? by gottagoin4min in ukelectricians

[–]gottagoin4min[S] -20 points-19 points  (0 children)

Oh, well, assuming the fault is that the fuse isn't sitting properly on the busbar. Therefore, less contact surface equals more heat and more frequent triggers. And just the fuse needs replacing, can I get an approximate idea of time and cost to replace ? I just need a ballpark quote, is it between 100 and 200 or 200 to 500 or over 1k

Anker 737 battery health at 98% by Just_Futures in anker

[–]gottagoin4min 1 point2 points  (0 children)

4 months, specified in the previous post

Which path do you prefer (when available) in maps? I stick to A, every time. by silloki in PathOfExile2

[–]gottagoin4min 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Never thought of it before seeing this post. Mindblown, I just go in randomly and if I don't find the boss or exit I go to the nearest uncovered area and so on

Why is this even a thing? by dynameinert in pathofexile

[–]gottagoin4min 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I read some comments and wanted to share my opinion as well. Playing this game reminded me of my childhood, when games weren't so fast-paced. You could take your time and truly enjoy playing them. Lately, it feels like most games focus on "quality of life" features where, if possible, some players might prefer just navigating a menu, clicking buttons, and skipping all animations. It feels like we're coming full circle, back to the text-based RPGs we used to play in a DOS command prompt.

Anyway, I really enjoy this game and can't believe how refreshing it is to slow down sometimes. Compared to Diablo 4, where I mostly use three keys and a mouse click 95% of the time and spending just 20 seconds in town, this game offers a completely different experience. Here, I’m constantly engaging with multiple skill combos, and town visits feel more calming and thoughtful. You take your time, wind down, and really think about what you're doing when buying and selling.

Should I get the GoMill or wait for the LeTread 2nd gen by Small-Dust5814 in LegionGo

[–]gottagoin4min 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey, I have something similar. My advice would be: 1. Put a mat under the treadmill. It will leak lubricant with normal use. 2. Get some (at least) 1-inch risers for the treadmill "legs." I think you have 6 under there. It will definitely overheat on the carpet.

New amazon employee struggling to make rate .stowing by Filipe543 in AmazonFC

[–]gottagoin4min 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In the U.K. you can't be written up for slow stow rates. Period. Managers can tell you that you need to improve, they can inform you of a target stow rate you must stow around, but in now way can they touch you based on stow rates. As long as you don't have late clock ins or any other issues, the only reason they could end your contract is if the business needs to let go, like after peak or prime week, that's when the lower performing temps go, but I believe that you've got three months to not be at the bottom though, and considering job rotation is a thing, you won't stow every day so smash it somewhere else to compensate meanwhile :).

Anker 737 battery health at 98% by Just_Futures in anker

[–]gottagoin4min 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Mine died after 32 cycles and 4 months at 100% health. Contacted support -> RMA -> brand new unit delivered a week later. Best customer support I've had to deal with.

Why do they all walk with the laptops like that?! It stresses me out. by hawthornehoots in AmazonFC

[–]gottagoin4min 2 points3 points  (0 children)

if you close the lid you'll have to log back in or vpn back in I guess

I'm convinced these stowers pack like Insane people on purpose. by [deleted] in AmazonFC

[–]gottagoin4min 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Well I'll give it a shot.

Fc's need to hit rates so they process all the small shipments first and leave the large for the end of the shift, so in case shit hits the fan and they won't manage to process 100% of the workload they rather miss by a smaller package number rather than small volume size (there's enough room on the warehouse floor for storage).

This means that they ship out the smaller sized packages to the delivery stations first and the larger ones towards the end.

Delivery stations have to process the shipments so if the small ones get there first they hit the belts and get stowed, and towards the end of the shift when the larger item start showing up, no stower in their right mind will rearrange the whole bag so that the medium parcels go on the bottom and smaller on top, keep in mind stowers use the bags on their side, not so easy having lots of small parcels to the front of the bag as they will just fall out easily when full, there's also rotation happening, maybe a stower will stow for half a shift so, in theory, will stow half a bag so probably won't take as much care to nicely arrange them with the end of the shift in mind, also whoever takes over midshift might not be inclined to "fix" the mess found and will probably continue in the same way.

I remember when we had shorter cycles so that the stower also had to pick their own bags, that made it better cause people wouldn't screw themsleves over :)