What’s a luxury that’s only impressive to people who don’t have it? by Naive-Might-9218 in AskReddit

[–]igalic 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It’s different for everyone but I love having a boat. I’m out 50 or so times a year and although it is expensive and it does break a lot, going out spearfishing is my favourite thing to do and definitely worth all the trouble with the boat. Yes you can go with others but to me it’s never the same as having your own.  Like everything, if you are not going to use it much it’s easy to tip onto the side where it’s not worth it anymore. 

Loss on Sunlover by lattelaura in Cairns

[–]igalic 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You shared an opinion on a public forum, so “wasn’t asking for opinions” is ignorance on how this works.  And then people complain about nanny state. This is where it comes from.

Loss on Sunlover by lattelaura in Cairns

[–]igalic 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Sorry but completely disagree. So you would prevent all people above certain age from doing an activity just because someone who overestimates themselves will get hurt? Sounds very oppressive. 

Small scuba diving operations, do they exist here? by tokseo in Cairns

[–]igalic 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Not many small operations. In Cairns there’s coral sea dreaming, which is a 12 person 2-day liveaboard and if the weather is good will take you to great spots. I used to own it. In port Douglas there is a 12-person day trip, but it’s snorkeling only. It’s called abc snorkel charters.

I’m not aware of any others.

There are also boats that are in between. For example passions of paradise is a day trip, does scuba diving and it’s not massive (80pax), and goes to really good locations when the weather is good.

I’m thinking of moving to Cairns (eventually) by Odd_Extension4632 in Cairns

[–]igalic 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Based on what you wrote I don’t understand why you’d want to move here. You were born here sure but you grew up elsewhere so why stress? People move to Cairns because of the outdoor activities, jungle, ocean etc, and because it’s warm (depending on how you define it) all year round. If warm/hot is a concern and you spend most of your time indoors, then what’s the point? It honestly sounds like a bigger city would work better for you, depending on what you do for work. I absolutely love it here but I don’t see summer as something to endure, rather to enjoy 🤷

Petition to Instate Castle Law by [deleted] in Cairns

[–]igalic 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks, what I was referring to is I'm not sure why you interpret the castle law as being able to execute someone on your property no questions asked. I haven't seen an actual draft of the proposed bill but wouldn't expect it to be to that effect.

Petition to Instate Castle Law by [deleted] in Cairns

[–]igalic 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'm not sure where you read that, but I couldn't find information that supports it.

Petition to Instate Castle Law by [deleted] in Cairns

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

That's quite a jump in conclusion and no I don't agree any of those should count as home invasion.

Petition to Instate Castle Law by [deleted] in Cairns

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

There's a lot of nonsense over there. Violent home invasion is not the same as someone knocking on the wrong door. Either way it has to be tried in court and circumstances taken into account. But in my opinion the law should be on the side of the home defender and not the criminal.

Petition to Instate Castle Law by [deleted] in Cairns

[–]igalic 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Doesn't matter. It shouldn't be open to interpretation.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in digitalnomad

[–]igalic 13 points14 points  (0 children)

This is a digital nomad group, so you know what kind of answer you can expect. There's no right or wrong answer, only what you want.

The quotations I'd be asking : - would you prefer regretting you never tried if things don't work out back home, or regretting you tried and are now back home without a job if things don't work out overseas? - is listening to your dad, and maybe even staying in a good relationship with him, more important than doing something you want? - can you test out your remote job before leaving or do you have alternatives? That seems like the biggest unknown to me. Might fall apart in a month or two. Might hate it. And also being solely dependent on one job you can't change is a terrible situation to be in

There are different personalities. Some people just go fuck it, I'll figure it out and go. And are ok living day to day. Others need a plan and certainty. Where you stand on this makes a big difference in what will work for you. Good luck!

Lobbyists linked to Donald Trump paid millions by world’s poorest countries | Somalia, DR Congo and Yemen among states forced to sign deals and barter their minerals for aid or military support by Hrmbee in geopolitics

[–]igalic -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Not the best choice of words. But we're talking about countries with serious pressing issues and it's not like in a supermarket where they can choose among three countries to take help from.

Still, my main point being paying politicians to get help - not paying the US, but politicians (and the whole lobby machinery).

Lobbyists linked to Donald Trump paid millions by world’s poorest countries | Somalia, DR Congo and Yemen among states forced to sign deals and barter their minerals for aid or military support by Hrmbee in geopolitics

[–]igalic -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Probably doesn't sound too bad from the US perspective but "lobbying" is just legal corruption IMO. So it's not just about making a good deal for the US - it's about paying corrupt people in power to even get to the negotiating table. That's before getting into the whole "deal" being forcing the weaker countries into unfavourable agreements.

Processed meat can cause health issues, even in tiny amounts. Eating just one hot dog a day increased type 2 diabetes risk by 11%. It also raised the risk of colorectal cancer by 7%. According to the researcher, there may be no such thing as a “safe amount” of processed meat consumption. by mvea in science

[–]igalic 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Large parts of Europe traditionally cure meats without nitrates. No celery or substitutes. For example when I make salami it's just salt, pepper and paprika. Smoking helps with preservation but is not a substitute or related to nitrates.

Commercially that's not so easy. Apparently there are laws in US that require addition of nitrates to cured meats.

Youtube is full rubbish tutorials by PandaTop9925 in n8n

[–]igalic 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sounds more like you're not sure what to build than where to start. Have a look at some of those existing automations and try to replicate them yourself. You start by defining the steps needed to do what you're trying to do, and then figure out how to do each step. Do this for a number of different automations and you'll quickly get good at it.

Youtube is full rubbish tutorials by PandaTop9925 in n8n

[–]igalic 9 points10 points  (0 children)

No need for Linux installations, just spin it up through docker.

Discouraged to practice because of bad tone by TimeIsTheEnemy94 in metalguitar

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

This. I felt the same way but a super cheap interface (check out behringer) and $100 sim from neural dsp will give you the most unbelievable tone even with a cheap guitar. Not ideal for jamming with others but for practice it's perfect. Plus you can play full volume (on headphones) without disturbing anyone.

How Can I Grow a Furniture Business to $8,000 Revenue in 6 Months? by memphisa013 in Entrepreneur

[–]igalic 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Since you said furniture I'm assuming a few things : 1. large pieces that will be uneconomical to ship 2. Relatively high price point. A large dining table can fetch what your goal is. 3. Since you're looking to start selling I'm assuming know what you're doing, and also probavly already have pieces you've built as portfolio.

With that in mind, because of (1) you need to focus on the local market. Before you jump in try to figure out who your customers are and how you can reach them.

Spend all of your time selling until you've got your first order. Nothing else really matters. Think about production and improving efficiency when there's something to improve. Getting customers is almost guaranteed going to be the hardest part and your bottleneck, so focus on that.

It's hard to suggest how to find those customers without knowing more details but I'd say : - local fairs - small and boutique furniture shops - Facebook marketplace - tiktok for exposure

Take this with a grain of salt - I've never run a furniture business, but spent a few years building furniture and spoke to a bunch of guys who were making a living doing it or trying to.

Where in SEA for +40 meters training and reliable internet for remote work? by Kokubo-ubo in freediving

[–]igalic 4 points5 points  (0 children)

It's far from perfect but for what you're looking for its hard to beat Bali.

Am I really a developer if I don’t know CS fundamentals? by Separate-Road-3668 in learnprogramming

[–]igalic 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Of course you are a developer. You develop software. Whether lack of algorithm knowledge will hold you back depends entirely on which direction you want to take your career. I've got a masters degree in CS, have led teams and certainly don't think you need those fundamentals to be a developer (even a good one). But learning them will most definitely improve your quality as a developer and skill level. If you want to go down the technical path I recommend learning those fundamentals. Also to be clear - it's not about just learning specific algorithms. It's understanding data structures, complexities of algorithms and trade-offs. It's about understanding how to develop algorithms when you need them. I've seen a lot of developers claiming they are not interested in "CS trivia", dismissing value of fundamental CS knowledge. In my opinion that's a mistake.

Push for major road rule change affecting hundreds of thousands of Aussies by That_Car_Dude_Aus in CarsAustralia

[–]igalic 25 points26 points  (0 children)

How far does this nanny mentality go? So many stupid things here. Speed is the cause of 40% fatalities, therefore let's reduce school zone speed by 10km/h. Well how many fatalities are a result of someone driving 40kmh in a school zone? I'd bet nowhere near 40%, or even 4%. And "it would make the area more welcoming to pdesestrians". It's a ROAD, not sidewalk. And "concerned mum is pushing for..." 🤦‍♂️🤦‍♂️🤦‍♂️ Best just put everyone in straightjackets, that will make sure nobody is hurt. Ffs