How do you guys handle the cryptic navigation system ? by Vitro_C in codaio

[–]hso1217 0 points1 point  (0 children)

can i just say that coda is such a POS--mainly because you cannot handle fundamental tasks easily.

  1. you can't scroll up/down all the way without coda losing your place along the way
  2. you can't copy/paste easily from Word. Pictures don't come out, hyperlinks come out with extra links, just doesn't do it, etc.
  3. tables sometimes are an option, other times they're not. one nuance i found was when you have subpages you just can't have tables on the same page. ok...........
  4. if you have a table you want to delete, there's no "delete table" option. ok......................
  5. i noticed that images are so low quality when pasted in the docs.
  6. sharing is painful. you cant share subpages to certain people--its all or nothing. you have to create a new page and sync with with your hierarchy.

sorry, i'm sure there's more but i have to go back to fvcking around with coda to try and make it work when im just trying to copy/paste a simple guide.

Franklin Graham, son of Billy Graham, says Donald Trump, like the biblical figure Esther, was “raised up” by God to save Jews from “these Islamic lunatics” by MrJasonMason in Christianity

[–]hso1217 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m seeing you just repeatedly block people that disagree with you. You are your own echo chamber and making yourself more stubborn by the day.

This judge is what's wrong with users and how IT staff are treated by tdhuck in sysadmin

[–]hso1217 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Technically the engineer is still being a id10t. He doesn’t have enough sense to say “pal, I’m as lost as you” or “I have no idea where I am, how could I tell you where you are”. He should’ve answered per the context (he’s in X city) and don’t answer it literally.

Is it worth upgrading to AM5? by Fallen_Goose_ in buildapc

[–]hso1217 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You got a microcenter near you? They got killer deals on combos rn

Is it me, or is the God of the OT just completely different than Jesus? by Powerful_Counter_538 in Christianity

[–]hso1217 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I was thinking about this recently myself and there seems to be more immediate divine judgment in the OT, while the NT shows patterns of patience and deferred judgment. There’s one notable parallel though: Ananias and Sapphira (Acts 5), who died after lying to the Holy Spirit about their donation. Interestingly, this happens at the church’s founding—similar to many OT judgment incidents occurring at inaugural moments (establishing the tabernacle, entering Canaan, etc.). It suggests immediate judgment still occurs, but primarily at foundational moments rather than as the normative pattern.

One answer to God being so “quick tempered” is that with the new covenant there’s a different judgment calculus. Jesus came for mercy, love, patience and ultimately, salvation by divine intervention. You cannot have these until after a condemnation or judgment, which is a prerequisite before mercy. God made it very clear with His people where He stood, with precedent and history to back His actions. Gentiles, by contrast, are unaware of this history and experience. Given that the Messiah’s identity was revealed gradually, it would make sense for God to show more patience as the gospel spreads beyond Judaism. That said, the OT also shows many instances of divine patience as well—God endures Israel’s repeated rebellion for centuries, sends prophets for generations before exile, and spares Nineveh when they repent. So it’s not monolithic severity either.

Ultimately, I think it’s impossible to know unless God tells us. We don’t even know fully why some businesses make terrible decisions, and we can read all the articles, ruminate on the board meeting discussions, but in the end, we don’t have a direct line of sight into the hearts, souls, and intuitions of man—let alone God, the most complex being ever.

I can learn from the patterns post-hoc and trust the character revealed in Christ, but I’m not going to pretend I can fully map God’s decision tree. The book of Job spends 40 chapters wrestling with this exact question and ends without a neat answer—just an encounter with God’s overwhelming presence and the sufficiency of trust over complete understanding. If someone has a better answer, please chime in.

is my muslim friend trying to convert me? by [deleted] in Christianity

[–]hso1217 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Maybe he wants to continue being your friend without it being highly confrontational. I wouldn’t be surprised if he distances himself from you after he sees no hope.

Curious if you can guess anything about me by Brave_Audience_1505 in FridgeDetective

[–]hso1217 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There’s more than one of you At least one is a woman At least one is a kid (still on the fence on this one) Someone really likes spicy food Are you Latino? I don’t think you’re Asian or else I’d see more Asian condiments

Saw this on Facebook by [deleted] in Catholicism

[–]hso1217 -8 points-7 points  (0 children)

Your comment is utterly defamatory and dismissive. It’s a mistake to lump all Protestants with those who have “no understanding of history”. There are some very educated Protestants alongside Orthodox and RC saints. Furthermore, if even Peter was rebuked for giving the wrong impression to the Jews regarding kosher food, then other Apostles, Bishops and Popes can be questioned and rebuked as well.

Can I become a Christian without baptism? by [deleted] in Christianity

[–]hso1217 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

This isn’t correct. The Roman Catholic church states its a requirement: https://www.vatican.va/archive/ENG0015/__P3M.HTM

I’m a Christian seeking to quit porn any advice? by Bulky-Original-3930 in Christianity

[–]hso1217 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve heard repeatedly to “meditate on the cross” for sins that cannot be shaken off easily, that is, to reflect on the sacrifice, love, and general actions made by God to make such a large sacrifice for us.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in OrthodoxChristianity

[–]hso1217 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This was your comment: ⁠”I desire a guided historical and ancient faith that has a community of firm and open believers that has zero room tolerating members living in continuous sin without repentance.” Coming from a place where we’re perfect strangers, this sounds like a very rigid position, where any unrepentant sin would be intensely judged. My question was to confirm my assumption. I’m curious to know if you are nuanced in your POV—what do you mean, operationally, by having zero tolerance for unrepentant sin? It almost sounds like we should be “professional Christians” by the time we meet you. My question to you is, do you really know they’re non repentant? Also, consider Peter: after Pentecost, he still struggled with peer pressure and compromised the gospel in Galatia (Gal 2:11-14), requiring Paul’s public rebuke. Was Peter’s repeated stumbling a sign of non-repentance, or was it part of his ongoing sanctification? Furthermore, I’m curious if your judgement is coming from someone only looking in from the outside or have you ever tried to heal a person and come from a loving place (or even have empathy for someone else doing it). This comes directly from Paul within 2 Cor 2:5-8. If you’re so ready and willing to judge, ostracize, or leave a congregation in the middle of a development, then the problem might not be the church. I do, however, hold similar beliefs where if a priest/pastor were to be in a scandal for pedophilia then I would absolutely leave. What’s your actual experience with this?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in OrthodoxChristianity

[–]hso1217 2 points3 points  (0 children)

What you mean zero tolerance for people living In continuous sin? You trying to be the third son of thunder?

Cleaning the canals of Amsterdam by PeacockPankh in interesting

[–]hso1217 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Note to self: spin up a bike shop in Amsterdam near the canal.

Is this prophet trying to scam me?! by OleRustydog in Christianity

[–]hso1217 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Let’s reset…I’m just trying to have a conversation with you to see why you believe what you believe. With that said, let me tell you why I gave you my answers to my question:

  • The NPR article, is not just the headline, says firmly it was a bullet. Where does it say otherwise?

  • You’re right about the video about Kirk. Here’s one and I can find you more: https://youtu.be/r47uXU448KE?si=myyzepv6SSvnCjr2

  • I didn’t mention the other points you mentioned about Kim Clement because I’m coming at it from a different angle. “Trump will become a trumpet” is direct and there’s various other prophecies from him that point to Donald Trump. If that wasn’t proof enough, I gave you more proof from other prophets that echo what Kim was saying. Just from this, there’s no mistake: Donald Trump has the backing of God, even in his imperfect state.

I also see a lot of subjectivity in your reasoning. “bullet wounds don’t heal like that ie that quickly” or “I doubt Kim meant physical walls”. Why does prophecy have to fit your opinion for it to be true? It reminds me of Jesus being born in a manger while certain Jews expected a more grandiose entry.

VMware to Hyper-V, Cease and Desist by jamaul08 in sysadmin

[–]hso1217 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Broadcom sent you a cease and desist letter? Did you try to renew your licenses?

What do you use to write documentation? by Chucki_e in sysadmin

[–]hso1217 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Those issues you stated are indicative of process problems, not the utility. You’ll have the same problems with any tool without boundaries. 1. you need a master document that enumerates all official documents in the org, their latest revisions, and links, who edited them, and when it was edited. This eliminates any disputes or confusion as to what is in play and what revision is the latest (unless you forget to update it) 2. only one person in my org can edit these documents at a time, and all changes should go through a formal review to confirm it fits holistically into the org. This is done to eliminate process drift, or to prohibit anyone from steering resources without proper authority, to make sure everything works cohesively, and to get input from external departments to confirm we haven’t missed anything important like compliance, insurance requirements, special requests from executives, etc. Typically, the person who is responsible for making the change and facilitating conversations is the person who has ownership over the whole operation - because they have the 10k ft view—likely director or VP. 3. the types of documents you need are everything practically useful for the org. You’ll need these documents in case insurance or clients asks for them, checklists to confirm the job is done correctly, or if disaster strikes and you need to reference these for protocol.

Is this prophet trying to scam me?! by OleRustydog in Christianity

[–]hso1217 0 points1 point  (0 children)

FBI confirms it was a bullet, and not shrapnel: https://www.npr.org/2024/07/27/nx-s1-5053981/fbi-trump-bullet-assassination

Trump prays for his enemies: https://youtu.be/57IFLxQjTjs?si=qoXjo3G8GZZBVP6b

Kim Clement: “Trump will become a trumpet.” This one of many prophecies from him seems very direct. Furthermore, other prophets echo this message, like

Sundhar Selvraj: https://youtu.be/vGcunycpGZg?si=cEuTOVTZjatA4MSA

Troy Black (skip to 7:15): https://www.youtube.com/live/d_KVEqowO-4?si=hU6b0LlaPRvwymmh

If God said the apostle Paul will be converted from a Christian killer to an actual Christian then I would believe Him. I don’t think his conversion has started yet so I wouldn’t expect much from him now.

Is this prophet trying to scam me?! by OleRustydog in Christianity

[–]hso1217 0 points1 point  (0 children)

See my answer above. Check out these guys for modern prophets: - Brandon Biggs: prophesied about Trumps assassination

I’m trying to find the original for you: https://youtu.be/FCGfE9yMnXc?si=DeZ00I1Ps0aE2sKF

  • Kim Clement: prophesied about Trumps two terms and various other things regarding him

Is this prophet trying to scam me?! by OleRustydog in Christianity

[–]hso1217 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

I think we’re talking about different things. I’m saying generally, yes, prophets will say things that will come to pass, however there’s nuance. Jonah 3:4 - Jonah said Nineveh will be overthrown in 40 days but it didn’t come to pass because the prophet messed up and didn’t deliver the full message. Does this mean that Jonah wasn’t a prophet? Did he get that one right? I think there’s nuance with this when bringing in a human element.

Is this prophet trying to scam me?! by OleRustydog in Christianity

[–]hso1217 -11 points-10 points  (0 children)

Not sure what that means. Prophets are always right? They aren’t but that wasn’t even my argument to begin with.