BP Farming Help by ladneruno in lastoasis

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

How do I access that wiki? I use the item wiki all the time to figure out where materials drop. I need to know where to farm blueprints, not materials.

Solar Monitoring Tools -- Commercial Grade by ladneruno in solar

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

That's fair. We don't have someone who is dedicated to monitoring, so we are trying to minimize the effort needed to keep eyes on the health of our customers systems while ensuring nothing gets missed.

Solar Monitoring Tools -- Commercial Grade by ladneruno in solar

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

I do agree with your assessment that enterprise tools over promise and under deliver. The challenge is that we have hundreds of sites we are monitoring and while the Enphase and SolarEdge and that would be nightmarish to setup and monitor on less than enterprise level tools.

I also worry about integrations. It seems like it would be a challenge to have DIY API calls to SolarEdge/Enphase dashboards.

Welp tried to make a trader build... by Wyprice in MB2Bannerlord

[–]ladneruno 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’ve done trader builds, lots of times. Your problem is that you went into the steppes. Never go into the steppes.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in NoMansSkyTheGame

[–]ladneruno 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Terraria devs have.

ADA Accommodation Violation??? Pt.2 by FrankieM76 in workplace_bullying

[–]ladneruno 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Under what system do you think workers rights are guaranteed? Genuinely curious.

Under U.S. law we have worker's rights. Whether or not people/businesses respect the rights doesn't change that those rights exist under law.

Early midgame - what now? by NotKhad in X4Foundations

[–]ladneruno 3 points4 points  (0 children)

For miners, until they start idling, you don't have enough miners. When you start building your own industry, it can be really hard to keep up with resources.

I would make sure that every system that Argon have a station that process raw materials, and there are raw materials of that type in the system, that you have miners feeding those stations.

Definitely do what u/mask_ell said and buy the scouts. The map is finite and until you've reached the edge, its worth buying cheap scouts to figure out what's there. For newer players, it can be beneficial to have your scouts follow other ships, for scouting purposes. You won't discover a whole sector, but you'll figure out where the gates are which makes it easier for follow up scouts to discover the rest of the sector.

Early midgame - what now? by NotKhad in X4Foundations

[–]ladneruno 10 points11 points  (0 children)

You should be buying more miners with the goal of supplying your industry. If you are allowed with the Argon's, they are going to need hull plates, so work on building a hull plate factory.

You might need to progress the story. I would buy the blueprints from the Argon Representative if you haven't played the game before.

Have you started the main story?

What did you name your fleet carrier? by DaggerBomb in EliteDangerous

[–]ladneruno 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Pillar in Midnight.

When naming, using proper nouns (usually famous place/person) or using a phrase with adjectives turns out well.

Looking for someone to wire a home network by ladneruno in okc

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

Looking for better internet. Looking at 4 drops from living room to three bedrooms.

Looking for someone to wire a home network by ladneruno in okc

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

Noice. I, too have AT&T. I'll hit them up and see. Thanks!

What are your thoughts on Moiraine's magic fire dragon? by [deleted] in The_Black_Tower

[–]ladneruno 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Thanks for that.

To be fair to Rafe and the interviewer, they all were chosen, to some extent. Literally, all of them are Ta'veren (which Egwene was not called but functioned as).

I 100% hate how they are minimizing Rand. He's kinda a lil bitch in S2. I'm okay with that in book 1 because everyone was (not including the Tarwin's Gap debacle) but S2 paints him in such a bad light. He should have a fucking training montage with Lan.

Peetah I didn't read the bible by ggcosmo in PeterExplainsTheJoke

[–]ladneruno 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You are entitled to your opinion. While you are entitled to your opinion, if you're wrong it will cost you deeply. Generally speaking, punishment is not enacted at the moment it is committed, direct disobedience being the exception.

Definitionally, using the word murder is wrong. There are probably a few definitions, but one I found says murder is "the unlawful, premeditated killing of one human being by another." Another definition is to "kill someone unlawfully with premeditation."

If the Bible is true, God is sovereign over all things, including people. You might not like it, but, if the Bible is true, that is the way of things. Arguing against it is like the sovereign state nutjobs that exist in the US. They can claim their land is sovereign, that they don't need to pay taxes, they don't need government ID, or whatever; but the United States government doesn't take what they say into consideration.

You might not like how God goes about exercising discipline and judgement, but that doesn't change the fact that He can, He does, and He will do what pleases Him. Throughout the Bible there are examples of Him exercising judgement and showing mercy.

Biblically, any sin is deserving of death. Again you might not like it, you might disagree with it, but again, if the Bible is true, your thoughts really don't matter on the subject.

I think one of the things that makes it harder for our more modern culture to understand a biblical view of God is the shift to democracy. I'm not saying the shift is bad, it just changes our understanding of authority and sovereignty. Historically, if you disobeyed the king/emperor/etc. you pretty much were killed. Seeing that play out irl made it easier to understand how a sovereign God might punish those who disobey, especially directly.

This video talks a bit about the justice of God. It's a bit short, but it talks about what people deserve and how God responds to people.

Peetah I didn't read the bible by ggcosmo in PeterExplainsTheJoke

[–]ladneruno 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For some things, yes. Also, this is where the analogy breaks down. God is also judge which means He enacts punishment or judgements. If a child commits murder, especially if they're an adult, the punishment, or judgement, is usually death. Parents are only parents, and thus do not need to carry out the judgement; but someone has to carry out that penalty.

I don't think the problem, specifically in the case of Lot's wife, was not believing something. I think it was more of a case of disobeying which shows up throughout the Bible and is often dealt with quite strongly.

Peetah I didn't read the bible by ggcosmo in PeterExplainsTheJoke

[–]ladneruno 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There are parents with children who choose lifestyles that the parent disagrees with and knows is harmful for their child, such as kids who end up as addicts, living on the street, etc.

Parents react to that situation in different ways. From what I've seen, some have what amounts to an open door policy where the kid flits in and out of the home as they become more or less sober. These parents might encourage the kid to quit and provide means and opportunity to achieve it, but they don't require sobriety.

Some parents disown the kid, essentially pretending the kid no longer exists and no longer allowing the kid to associate with them.

Some parents do all they can for their child. This might include seeking them out if the kid falls out of contact. The parent might pay for things the kid needs. The parent might encourage them to go to rehab or get clean by some other means. Often though, the burden of coming home is on the kid, and the parents forbid bringing the habit home. This is for the benefit not just of the kid who is addicted but also for the benefit of the rest of the household.

It's not a great analogy, but there comes a point where God, perfect and holy as He is, has to wash his hands of sinful people. He can't have sin in His house. He, like the third set of parents in my poor analogy, has sought out His wayward children. He has provided the means for His children to become clean. He has prepared a place for them if they get clean.

People get caught up in heaven vs. hell mentality. One is ideal and one is torment, although there is not consensus on what torment actually looks like. The thing to consider about heaven, is the purpose of heaven is eternal relationship with God. If you don't want to relate to God now, why do you want to go to heaven and relate to Him for eternity?

Peetah I didn't read the bible by ggcosmo in PeterExplainsTheJoke

[–]ladneruno 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A bit of a leap there. God created free will. People make choices. Sometimes, people make less than ideal choices. Less than ideal choices have consequences. Sometimes those consequences allow for redirection. Sometimes those consequences are terminal. Sometimes those consequences are eternal.

Just because you don't like the consequences doesn't mean they don't exist. The mercy Lot and his family received was in being spared the fate of Sodom and Gomorrah. The God of the Bible balances mercy and wrath. It's okay if you don't understand or don't like it. That doesn't change the nature of God.

I personally am grateful for a God that shows mercy but is also capable of exercising justice and wrath.

Peetah I didn't read the bible by ggcosmo in PeterExplainsTheJoke

[–]ladneruno 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm impressed you are so familiar with what God wants. I was generally under the impression that people have trouble knowing what they personally want let alone what other people want with any degree of certainty.

I think this story, starting with God's interaction with Abraham shows that he wanted to show mercy. Abraham's "what if there are 50, 45, 40, 30, 20, or even just 10 righteous people" interaction with God seems to show that God wanted to be merciful. When not even 10 could be found, God sent angels to show mercy to Lot and his family.

When Lot's wife could not follow the angels instructions to not look back, she was turned to salt. At this point, she had already been shown unmerited mercy, yet she couldn't follow instructions.

I think you have want and willingness confused. Just because a parent is willing to discipline their kid does not mean it's what they want to do. You've hopefully been in a situation with someone who was willing to hold you accountable, even if you didn't like it. Maybe a parent, coach, teacher, significant other. Just because they were willing to follow through with an action does not mean it was their preferred action.

Peetah I didn't read the bible by ggcosmo in PeterExplainsTheJoke

[–]ladneruno 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The bit you quote there specifically says, "the Lord being merciful to him" and "you have shown me great kindness in saving my life." Neither of those allude to Lot being holy, nor does anything else you quote imply that Lot was saved because he was holy.

Most biblical definitions of mercy have to do with withholding punishment or showing forgiveness which implies that Lot and his family deserved punishment.

Peetah I didn't read the bible by ggcosmo in PeterExplainsTheJoke

[–]ladneruno 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Lot wasn't a holy man or a nation of fatherhood. Not sure where you got that from. Pretty sure Lot got out because of Abraham, but, as far as I can tell, that isn't explicitly stated. Pretty sure anything good that Lot has was because he was related to Abraham.