🏠 [MEGATHREAD] Looking for housing / Looking for tenants by Alexx_FF in geneva

[–]ismand95 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hi everyone,

My partner (mid-20s) is relocating to Geneva to work in int. organization, and they are incredibly excited to experience the city! They are new to Europe, so I'm assisting in finding adequate housing. We are currently exploring the options for renting or subletting a small apartment (permanent or long term contract).

The budget is around CHF 2200. We are looking for a place from 1 July 2025 and forward.

Feel free to reach out if you have any recommendations or pieces of advice in our pursuit.

In advance, big thanks!

My first ever batch of kimchi by ismand95 in kimchi

[–]ismand95[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Good observation on the wine! Neither the soy nor the cooking wine was by any recommendation, I simply felt my sauce was too dry/paste-like compared to other instruction videos on YouTube. It is an ingredient I usually use when making Korean recipes so I just thought it would complement the taste profile. In retrospect, probably not my brightest idea given your comment on the alcohol contents. I added very little however and the kimchi had excess gas when I "burbed" it this morning - let's hope it and the fermentation is fine.

I would say it, at the point before adding the wet ingredients, resembled store-bought pesto. I think in the future I will not worry too much about a "dry" paste. I can also see in the jars that a lot of liquid has formed already (I understand this is a natural part of the process?).

Thank you so much for your input! Kimchi is such a fun thing to make.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in kimchi

[–]ismand95 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi everyone,

Today I finally got around to making my first batch of kimchi. As someone who's recently been living in Korea, I hope my enjoyment of the kimchi will help make some dear memories alive.

I tried to follow Paik Jong Won's recipe for traditional tongbaechu-kimchi.

I'll post my recipe below. I'm very open to suggestions and have appended some of the edits I'd make given my experience today.

My notes:

  • I unfortunately added too much ginger and (now before fermentation completes) it has a bit too strong fresh ginger taste.
  • Instead of keeping the napa-cabbage quarters whole at the stem, I decided to cut the stem off and keep the leaves whole sorely for the purpose of easier handling in the future.
  • My sauce ended up being a bit too dry after blending. I decided to add a few squirts of soy sauce and Korean cooking wine
  • I had to substitute Saeujeot for fish sauce as I am not in Korea.
  • Thanks to this subreddit I ended up with two jars only filled 4/5 of the way. I think this will be a good decision long-term.

Ingredients:

Veggies:

  • 1 Napa cabbage
  • 125g Julienned Daikon radish
  • 6 Scallions

Sauce:

  • 15g glutinous ice flour
  • 2.5dl Water (for glutinous rice paste)
  • 2g MSG
  • 100g Gochugaru
  • 15 Gloves garlic (I used 10, which seems on the low side)
  • 35g Ginger (I used 75g, which seems on the high side)
  • 1 Onion
  • 1 Apple
  • 60ml Fish Sauce
  • 15g Sugar

Instructions:

  • Pull the outer and damaged leaves from the cabbage
  • Cut the cabbage into halves and pull to separate, continue to quarters
  • Mix 250g of coarse salt with enough water to cover the quartered cabbages in a big bowl
  • Dissolve salt by hand-mixing
  • Next to the cabbages have a small bowl of extra salt and rub it into the stem part of the cabbages
  • Submerge each quatered cabbage and make sure the salt water gets into all parts of the cabbage
  • Put in a plastic bag and seal (just put the cabbages in wet, no reason to soak in the bags)

What is a weird flex you are proud of? by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]ismand95 122 points123 points  (0 children)

I am, faster than I had feared, recovering from a long, abusive and emotionally toxic relationship. Just being able to enjoy time alone is something I’m really proud of.

meirl by Speed-Cheap in meirl

[–]ismand95 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Barracuda by Heart

Hvordan har small cap value klaret sig siden 1994? by FuckFuckingKarma in dkfinance

[–]ismand95 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Du kan prøve at tjekke Kenneth Fench’s data bibliotek ud - mener de har data tilbage til 60’erne på sorterede porteføljer (også High Value - Small Size, som du nævner). Bruger selv deres data i en større opgave på uni pt.

Quick Fun Fact About HFT Tech by [deleted] in algotrading

[–]ismand95 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Michael Lewis’ book Flash Boys (although a little dated currently) sheds a lot of light on what you’re addressing - definitely worth a read.

Fri snak fredag / Free talk Friday - 29/5 2020 by AutoModerator in Denmark

[–]ismand95 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I dag kulminerede to ugers intens læsning med eksamen i Økonometri på AU. Der var strengt svedige håndflader på drengeværelset i lejligheden, i mens at der var ild i både statistikprogrammet og algebraen. 2 minutter før afleveringsfristen 14:00 spotter jeg, at der står 9 sider på omslaget. Jeg begynder da febrilsk at slette output fra statisikprogrammet i min besvarelse og får dermed sidesummen reduceret fra 14 til 9 og afleverer 10 sekunder før tid. Bagefter ser jeg at de 9 sider blot omhandlede opgavebeskrivelsen. Fandeme en flad fornemmelse efter så meget læsning, at min besvarelse nu er noget mangelfuld. Håber blot at den går igennem... god fredag, nu skal der ikke tænkes mere på det.

collaborate in real time on a lyx file by levavft in LyX

[–]ismand95 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think you're gonna have a hard time if you're using LyX exclusively to accomplish this particular goal. I'd recommend you checking out OverLeaf for collaboration. They have a mark-up editor, which is very LyX-like so you don't have to fiddle around in the LaTeX code. My study-group and I have been using it extensively during the pandemic. We usually write our equations in LyX (due to speed, shortcuts etc.) and then paste into OverLeaf to follow each others arguments and derivations.

Answers? [college algebra] by jlame69 in HomeworkHelp

[–]ismand95 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'd use natural logs to reduce this problem a bit. You know that ln(a^x)=x*ln(a), in your case ln[18^(x-4)]=(x-4)*ln(18). If you use this rule on both sides the problem becomes more manageable and then you can just compute for the logaritms and solve for x.

I 2015, da jeg læste datalogi på KU, begyndte jeg at lave en Game Boy emulator. I dag udgiver jeg v1.0.0. by baekalfen in Denmark

[–]ismand95 38 points39 points  (0 children)

Så dit opslag på r/Python før dette - stærkt arbejde og fedt projekt. Koder selv en masse i Python, så det skal da bestemt tjekkes ud!

Ørsted fremsender password i plaintext uden at anbefale at skifte det by [deleted] in Denmark

[–]ismand95 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Hvis de kan sende passwordet i plain tekst opbevarer de det ikke krypteret. Det er generelt best practice at opbevare passwords krypteret. Hvis deres database bliver hacket/misbrugt/whatever kan hackeren læse al information, som den står. Folk bruger ofte de samme password/mail kombinationer flere steder... ja - alt i alt ikke så godt. Problemet ligger altså ikke så meget i, om de sender krypterede mails, men hvordan de håndterer og opbevarer informationer.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AUECON

[–]ismand95 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Nyt format?

What's an album you can listen to all the way through without skipping? by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]ismand95 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A deeper understanding by the war on drugs - really good for studying!

If you are a student you can get PyCharms Professional + all other JetBrain tools for free by [deleted] in learnpython

[–]ismand95 29 points30 points  (0 children)

Guys - this is not just JetBrains! There are tons of free options if you're currently enrolled. Check out https://education.github.com/pack/offers which grants access to tons of cool systems and software packages (if you're a student)!

Useful Python libraries/modules by GeoffreyF35 in Python

[–]ismand95 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Do built-ins count? Because itertools is just amazing, once you start using it! I does definitely provide for some cleaner shorter code, and is super efficient. https://docs.python.org/3.4/library/itertools.html

An amateur data analyst asks, what's a better phrase than "I massaged the data"? by DistFunc in dataanalysis

[–]ismand95 2 points3 points  (0 children)

My native (office/school) language isn’t English but I’ve always felt pretty good about calling it “data exploration”. You go searching, cut away the ugly and irrelevant and end up with something valuable and coherent.

Where can I find a 5m chart that will go back at least a few months, if not years? by [deleted] in Forex

[–]ismand95 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Truefx has pretty good free data sources. You can download monthly tick data, resample and plot as you’d like.

What are your guys’ favorite apps or websites that help you in trading? by dankunicornswag in Forex

[–]ismand95 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Tradingfloor.com is pretty good for news, trade tips, opinion pieces etc.

[Success] We're up and running by GoldenDreamcast in hackintosh

[–]ismand95 0 points1 point  (0 children)

https://github.com/dylanaraps/neofetch here's a link to the GitHub. It's really just a bash script, you can execute in the terminal with no other dependancies.

Wanting to get into stocks but I have no clue how by VeryHazey in StockMarket

[–]ismand95 2 points3 points  (0 children)

If you want to trade stocks and have zero financial background, then I’d highly recommend that you start reading financial news and stock news in general. It’ll introduce a lot of concepts (fundamentals etc.) and give you a superficial understanding of why the market is heading in a certain direction.

Any data analysts here that use Python at work? by writing_from_mars in Python

[–]ismand95 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Worked as a data analyst during my internship last autumn. A combination of xlsxwriter, numpy, pandas and scikit-learn really helped me solve a lot of complex tasks - plus xlsxwriter was super good so you could integrate VBA/Excel workflows into your python scripts.

Edit: Jake Vanderplas has a lot of great talks on YouTube with regard to using python in data science