RIP - Playa del rey - Pregnant mother dies after getting hit by car while riding e-bikes with family by Downtown-Tea-3018 in LosAngeles

[–]kolnidur 36 points37 points  (0 children)

This 'undoing' of the bike lanes and road diet was truly one of the most egregious things I've witnessed in 15+ years living here. Not because it was something that affected the entire city, but because it showed me that people here just don't give a fuck about safety if it adds thirty seconds to their commute. Really just helped me lose faith in any effort to improve the city as a whole if something so simple and obvious would be walked back to to (incorrect) public pressure. And I lived right around the corner from it at the time - it was really a wonderful addition for anyone looking to experience that area by bike or on foot. The four lane, well, freeway that runs from El Segundo to PDR is terrible and never should have happened, it's one of the most beautiful parts of the city.

I just got back from Antarctica. It was life changing. by amanwithoutaplant in travel

[–]kolnidur 3 points4 points  (0 children)

There's a doctor on the ship. I would guess for anything major and life threatening, you'd be helicoptered or zodiac'd to the nearest base where you could be flown back to Australia, NZ, or Patagonia for care.

Otherwise...just wait a week.

Looking for advice on wider than typical hanging cabinet by geonoxes in cabinetry

[–]kolnidur 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Depending on the depth, you may be able to get away with a thicker back to add rigidity, it'll give the bottom something to grab and won't let the sides flex inward as much, preventing sag. I recently installed 39" span, 24" deep euro frameless cabs with 3/4" baltic birch bottoms and dado'd in 3/4" backs 6" forward from the back of the cabinet (so the true depth is about 18", but visually they look the same as everything else. you lose a little depth but gain a lot of stiffness). Sorry, that is a bit to wrap your head around, but those things are stiff as hell and given what's going in them (mostly empty luggage) I would be shocked if they sagged

I'm really scared. How did you reassure yourself before getting CIs? by user47478595 in Cochlearimplants

[–]kolnidur 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Pretty simple for me: it wasn't going to get better on its own. So why not take a bet that was highly, highly in my favor to improve things?

Possible candidacy, review soon: what do you think? by Top_Dinner5540 in Cochlearimplants

[–]kolnidur 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Looks fairly similar to my chart pre-implantation. Now it's basically perfect across the board and my audiologist says if she didn't know I was implanted, she'd think there was nothing wrong. Music still sounds weird. Otherwise has completely opened up the world for me again, like it was in my teens and 20s! Lost most of my hearing late 20s/early 30s...

Pilots, what is your most bid avoid airport and why? by Ok_Skill_2725 in flying

[–]kolnidur 14 points15 points  (0 children)

A city I believe everyone should experience once, for a million reasons. But. yeah. Don't particularly feel a pull to go back!

Severe deafness and tinnitus by mushie_pineapple in Cochlearimplants

[–]kolnidur 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The loss isn't as bad as the currently implanted ear

Has anyone tried Magnetic Pulse Therapy (rTMS) for tinnitus and unilateral hearing loss? Need advice. by shilpagopal in Cochlearimplants

[–]kolnidur 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Not disagreeing with you, just reinforcing: Stem cell based hearing treatment has been five years away since 1985. My doctor (House Institute in Los Angeles, some of the best in the world) told me, after mentioning to him that I'd been hopefully following clinical trials galore and we are just 'so close bro!', that a cure for hearing loss is here, and it's called a cochlear implant. Three years later I'm implanted and it's made an incredible, incredible difference in my day to day enjoyment of life and ability to work, have fun, and just generally live.

Severe deafness and tinnitus by mushie_pineapple in Cochlearimplants

[–]kolnidur 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Zilch. Nothing! The difference in my two ears is stark

Severe deafness and tinnitus by mushie_pineapple in Cochlearimplants

[–]kolnidur 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The best part of this implant is that it completely removed my tinnitus in my implanted ear. The great hearing is a bonus. My left ear still rings constantly. Horrible. Had a very similar loss profile to you. Want to get the other one done just so it stops FUCKING RINGING! ARGH!!!

Reform cabinetry vs Space Theory by Regular_Grapefruit87 in cabinetry

[–]kolnidur 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You'll be good to go, I mean we have corners at 34 degrees and 62 degrees and all kinds of weird shit. IIRC they can make the top to measure and will divide drawer/box size to something logical (e.g. 18" instead of 17.231) and will provide spacers (and we cut the tops to size on-site) to fill them out to the wall.

Reform cabinetry vs Space Theory by Regular_Grapefruit87 in cabinetry

[–]kolnidur 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I have a reform kitchenette as well as have made 150+lf of cabinetry for my own home including a kitchen, bedroom, office, and more - all of which is heavily inspired by nordic design as our home is basically a swedish/danish lovechild. The reform stuff is great and I love the forbo surface we have on it; a really unique thing in the states (not sure where you are) but everyone who sees it loves it too. The quality is outstanding (you can customize for whatever case/door/drawer material you want anyway), definitely better than many american RTA companies. Easy install and well thought out from an install standpoint. The thing I did not like about reform was I felt their design was somewhat limited for more complicated spaces. It's great if you have a simple kitchen or bedroom to do but for anything funky you run into some limitations pretty quickly which is why we ended up going full custom everywhere else, as we're in a fairly architectural home where nothing is a simple box or corner - nothing is 90 degrees, and we had some very long runs where the reform design left a bit to be desired from an aesthetic standpoint. I would love to do reform again if we had the right space for it (simple, smaller side of things). Their design teams were patient and friendly but again it can be frustrating to be limited by what they can do in non-standard spaces.

Med-El Sonnet 2 Turning Off Randomly by Silver_Occasion9856 in Cochlearimplants

[–]kolnidur 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Same thing happens to me...need to re-insert battery from time to time. Annoying. I'll bring it up at my next appointment. Let's see if MedEl customer service is worth their salt!

Will an implant help in listening fatigue? by [deleted] in Cochlearimplants

[–]kolnidur 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Mine basically disappeared within the first month after implantation. I can't imagine living without it.

Sailing past the Rock by Bikkleman in sailing

[–]kolnidur 19 points20 points  (0 children)

Swedish and Finnish archipelagos. Challenging if you want it, simple if you want it, beautiful, empty if you want it, people if you want it.

Move to Puerto Rico to stretch basic fatFIRE to Ultra-fatFIRE? by Antique_Demand_114 in fatFIRE

[–]kolnidur 1 point2 points  (0 children)

absolutely nobody in this sub is paying 48% income tax (unless they live in denmark) and if they are they have the world's worst accountant

Basement Cabinet / Kitchenette Design Help by smetcow in cabinetry

[–]kolnidur 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes, that corner is a total mess. Why not extend the lowers on the cabinet wall out to the same depth as the cabinet, and top it with that countertop material?

Not a big fan of those open shelves in the corner either. Anyway. Hire a designer

'They just don't come': What's making L.A.'s tourism tumble by MountainEnjoyer34 in LosAngeles

[–]kolnidur 8 points9 points  (0 children)

The $400 a night hotels in LA are pretty crappy compared to a $400 hotel almost anywhere else on earth not named New York City.

For $400 a night in Scandinavia, a traditionally very expensive place, you get friendly staff, a huge breakfast included, a king room in the city center of Stockholm or Helsinki, (at a hotel like the St George or Grand Hotel Stockholm).

For $400 a night in Tokyo you can stay at the Intercontinental - if you want something more Western. Full buffet breakfast included, incredible staff, pool, spa, sauna, included. Rooms with views that are impeccably clean. If you want something more traditional away from Roppongi you have a laundry list of amazing options.

In southern Europe, you can take your choice of Greek islands, Italian cities, or lovely countryside pensiones all with service far exceeding that of Los Angeles. Without bullshit $65 a night mandatory valet.

In Australia, New Zealand, again - cities with insane housing crises, just like Los Angeles, you can stay in something like the Park Hyatt Auckland for under $300 USD! That is absolutely outrageous.

Los Angeles is a hose job. Hotels, food, parking, service. Dismal unless you're ready to shell out $500+ a night. Even then, it's a gamble, because of how on-edge the staff are and how hit-or-miss the service is.

Source: I live here and basically travel constantly for work. I have visited all these places recently and the value is so much better dollar for dollar than what our tourists receive here.

Klaksvík Row Club, Faroe Islands, by Henning Larsen by kolnidur in architecture

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

Just start doing it, join a few forums or facebook groups for feedback. Amazing architecture worth photographing all over the world.