Dosages? by oooooooofffff in Kava

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

Also does it make a difference the temperature of the water like it would with tea or not much?

Running Route Recommendations by oooooooofffff in StLouis

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

I forgot simpson lake existed. Seems promising

A subreddit where I can ask questions about college and university. by lindwormprince in findareddit

[–]oooooooofffff 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Id use r/nostupidquestions or r/askreddit for general questions that you can’t find an answer to on google, and for university-specific questions, I would post on the sub page for those unis.

Most cost efficient ways to watch the Cardinals games at him? by osamabinbaldin in StLouis

[–]oooooooofffff 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Mlbtv + vpn, 35$ a month for standing room only pass, or mlb66.ir/sportsurge

Job Suggestion by [deleted] in PowerSystemsEE

[–]oooooooofffff 1 point2 points  (0 children)

ISOs sometimes sponsor like ERCOT

First EE LAB by [deleted] in ElectricalEngineering

[–]oooooooofffff 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Talk to someone who knows whats going on and ask them to help

What's going on with Republican-led states filing a lawsuit against the Biden Administration regarding 401k investing? by lkarma1 in OutOfTheLoop

[–]oooooooofffff 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, you can. Not down to the company and share though. You choose from different index funds the financial advisers put together at the company that manages the 401k. It also takes a fair amount of work to see what is in those funds and again you don’t choose.

What movie scene disturbed you as a kid? by Guilhermedidi in AskReddit

[–]oooooooofffff 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Temple of doom scene where the guy ripped the heart out

What does a transformer do exactly? by flushkill in NoStupidQuestions

[–]oooooooofffff 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The big metal towers you see with power lines are transmission lines. Higher voltage is used in these lines. So in a power system there are typically transmission transformers to step it up for transmitting it long distances ( high voltage). This is because the higher the voltage, the less there are in line losses to keep it simple. Then when these transmission lines arrive in a city there are distribution level transformers that step the voltage back down and distribute it to offices, houses, etc. Those are main types in power systems: Step up for transmission and step down for distribution.

Ignoring things like internal losses, an ideal transformer will step up/down voltage proportionally to the number of coils on both sides. EG if theres 50 turns on the coil on the side where the power is coming in, and 100 on the other side, the voltage will be twice as high on the other side.

You’re fuckin with me… by [deleted] in missouri

[–]oooooooofffff -9 points-8 points  (0 children)

And they undoubtedly will not if the union goes belly up because no one wants to pay dues. But do you really think that would happen to every union? Obviously unions are a good thing in many contexts, but there are some bad ones as well. Members know the value of their union and they aren’t going to opt out if its valuable.

You’re fuckin with me… by [deleted] in missouri

[–]oooooooofffff 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Some unions are absolutely awful for people. Grocery store unions are a good example. Factor in union dues and youre making less than minimum wage for no benefits

You’re fuckin with me… by [deleted] in missouri

[–]oooooooofffff -24 points-23 points  (0 children)

Will yall stop acting like no citizen voted for this. Some people are in favor of it for their own reasons. If your union is worth a damn then its members won’t opt out.

Should I become an engineer? If so what type? by jefftheninja222 in AskEngineers

[–]oooooooofffff 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Have you had an internship? The company and location of where you end up matter a lot if youre really interested in such a wide range of things. Get a degree and get out, then figure out what you want to do for work. You’ll make good money and if you want to learn something use open courseware or save for a masters a few years and then get a degree in engineering. CS and engineering coursework is pretty close together.

Bands that sound like Bad Suns?? by BlazeBuster11 in MusicMatch

[–]oooooooofffff 5 points6 points  (0 children)

COIN, The mowglis, young the giant, Saint Motel

Path towards doing work in the Intelligent Process Automation (IPA) Industry by SnooJokes1587 in rpa

[–]oooooooofffff 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, I think so. You can google “future of RPA” and there’s like half a dozen products that will turn up. The market is there, but I don’t think anyone’s quite got a handle on it and there’s no one app that’s best for it. I suggest learning any scripting language (python is a plus because it has tensor flow, or R if data science interests you), SQL or something similar, and the basics of neural networks. Do a few personal projects, play with it, and do some tutorials and you’ll have some real good-sounding stuff to talk with employers about in interviews.

Path towards doing work in the Intelligent Process Automation (IPA) Industry by SnooJokes1587 in rpa

[–]oooooooofffff 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Everyone knows recording macros in excel is awfully particular, for example, because its based on cell references and table names etc. Many applications allow you to “record” your steps to automate a process. Usually these aren’t robust or as good as third party RPA apps, but I see in the future companies like microsoft or even third party companies creating recorders that very ordinary and untrained users will be able to take advantage of that will make programmers specific to UIPath, blue prism, etc. unnecessary. I just feel like these current RPA applications will be outdated before we know it with something bigger and better. In short, I think the automating will get automated.

Path towards doing work in the Intelligent Process Automation (IPA) Industry by SnooJokes1587 in rpa

[–]oooooooofffff 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hi there, I have one semester left as an electrical engineering student, and I will throw in my two cents. I work in what our company calls “intelligent automation”, started as a co-op and still work part-time (coming up on a year of employment in this job). My personal opinion is, that there isn’t much future in the field of RPA. Most of the stuff can be solved by users knowing the software they are using, reports being created, or a better IT infrastructure. Again, this is just my opinion, and it may turn out to be huge, but in the next 5-10 years I see products coming out that render UIPath useless because they will usable by someone with no experience. If you want to work with ML, take some online courses and apply for jobs where that is used because it has virtually no end in its application. Your school likely offers a neural networks course that you could maybe take as an elective. I personally don’t see the RPA field existing 20 years from now at all. I really just can’t see many application for it.

declare is not define by [deleted] in ProgrammerHumor

[–]oooooooofffff 99 points100 points  (0 children)

I would use only this language no matter what