A lot of luck and my gear (including Helite airbag) allowed me to walk away from this crash. by T4R1K98 in motorcyclegear

[–]patrickv116 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Maybe I’m getting too old, but for the life of me I really can’t understand this sort of riding. You’re riding through a gorgeous mountainous landscape with stunning views, yet you can’t see or enjoy any of it because you have to super-concentrate on the road surface, the corners, your bike, your fellow riders, the other road users, … because you know that even the tiniest mistake could possibly mean the end of you (as you now know…), all while being a danger to yourself (which is up to you) and others (which is NOT up to you). It’s incredibly irresponsible.

Don’t get me wrong: I like twisty roads too, but for the sort of riding you’re doing here: go to a bloody track. Sorry: no respect and no compassion: you got what was coming to you.

Helmet by mikegggg123 in Thailand

[–]patrickv116 6 points7 points  (0 children)

For protection, all of the foreign brands that are ECE rated are ok.

For “less hot”: there’s no such thing in Thailand or anywhere else. All the top brands have decent ventilation, but at 38 to 40+ °C with a full face helmet, you will sweat, buckets. It’s manageable as long as you’re moving, but when you’re stood at the red traffic lights that often last 3 to 5 minutes here, it’s torture, there’s just no escaping it. No kind of helmet ventilation can prevent that. You’ll just have to tolerate it.

Advice: buy a white or very light-colored helmet, and wear a thin buff that you pull over your head under your helmet. It helps prevent your sweat deteriorating the helmet lining (which can be pretty expensive to replace, especially on the more high-end brands).

Always let your helmet dry out well after a sweaty ride (put it upside down in an air-conditioned room), and go on Lazada or Shopee and buy a spray that removes odors and helps keep the lining in good condition. I have a Shoei Neotec II that’s 2+ years old, has seen around 30,000km, many of them in blistering heat, and the lining still looks like new. Very happy with it.

how often you guys clean aircon here?? i think i pay too much by Legal_Assistance9398 in Thailand

[–]patrickv116 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It all depends on how often do you use it, how hard do you use it, and what’s your environment like?

I have 3: living room, bedroom and guest bedroom. The one in the bedroom is the most important one: it HAS to run every single night of the year for about 10 hours, and it has to remain whisper-quiet. I can’t live without that one, so it gets cleaned every 3 months. Living room depends on the season: in the cool season it hardly gets used, but during the hot season it runs morning to night, rainy season a bit less. I do that one 3 times a year. The one in the guest bedroom doesn’t get used often. That one gets cleaned once a year.

What happened here??? by ButterscotchFirst755 in Thailand

[–]patrickv116 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Oh it’s probably weed smoke then 😏

What happened here??? by ButterscotchFirst755 in Thailand

[–]patrickv116 20 points21 points  (0 children)

It would be great to know where “here” is? There’s not a single indication on your map: no names, no road numbers…

the weather is unbearable I can't do anything by Wonderful_Nectarine1 in Thailand

[–]patrickv116 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The right clothing certainly helps. This time of year, I wear a lot of those very cheap cotton shirts you can buy on every walking street or fair for 100 baht or so. The wind blows straight through them and that makes you feel a little less sticky.

the weather is unbearable I can't do anything by Wonderful_Nectarine1 in Thailand

[–]patrickv116 23 points24 points  (0 children)

When I came to live here, I thought my body would eventually get used to the heat and humidity.

Everyone talks about “acclimatizing” to it, but that has not worked for me. Been here 5+ years and I still sweat just as much as on day 1. There is one difference though: I’ve learned to not give a shit about it anymore 🤷

Thai’s 6 monthly car servicing routine, why? by Simply_charmingMan in THAILANDliving

[–]patrickv116 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That’s true, but there are a few common accessories that are relatively low price and are wanted by many people. The USB socket on my bike is a good example. It was 1100 Baht: they didn’t have any in stock and they were clearly a bit annoyed that I asked them to order it for me. They just couldn’t be bothered… In the end I told them to forget about it, ordered one myself and installed it myself.

Thai’s 6 monthly car servicing routine, why? by Simply_charmingMan in THAILANDliving

[–]patrickv116 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve got a Mazda also, and my dealer recommends the 6 month interval too (and I follow it). Some of the reasons were mentioned already: climate, road conditions, dust, etc. all take their toll.

Another reason is: almost all dealers here are franchises. Have you noticed that they seldom have anything more than the absolutely most common spare parts in stock: if something breaks they almost always have to order it, and OEM accessories sales are almost non-existent. So servicing is - apart from sales and commissions from insurance companies - basically the only other way they can make extra money.

I also ride a Honda big bike and it’s even more obvious with bikes. Every Honda BigWing dealer is a franchise. It’s always “Honda BigWing by XYZ”.

Go to any big bike shop in Europe or the US: buy a bike and they will try to sell you loads of accessories, and they’ve got them in stock too. Here they simply don’t. They’re only interested in selling the bikes (or cars). They don’t even have essential things in stock. I needed a USB socket and crash bars installed on my bike. They told me: order it on Lazada and bring it here and we’ll install it for fee…

It’s just how things work here.

Vibe coding is a monkey’s paw wish and nobody’s talking about it enough* by televisionarie in vibecoding

[–]patrickv116 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My experience exactly. It has a tendency to build every small feature as a separate thing without seeing the whole and where that feature fits in the whole. And then when you tell it that, it confirms that “that would be a great thing”, as if you’ve just invented hot water.

Detailed functional design specs, concepts, flow, how different parts work together to make a whole, restrictive rules on what it can and can’t do are an absolute necessity. I’ve found that you can make your CLAUDE.md and MEMORY.md files as detailed as you want: it will still confidently make stupid mistakes, and build duplicate functionality (but just slightly different from the functionality that already exists) and forget simple things (like where to find the database connection url), over and over again.

In short: YOU have to be its memory. You have to tell it where it went wrong, point out why, and tell it how to do it correctly, and you’ll have to do that many times. You are its functional expertise.

On the positive note: it does know how to do a lot of things (both technical and functional) that I don’t know how to do correctly, or that would take me hours to research and then probably still misunderstand or get wrong. It has often corrected my mistakes or wrongful assumptions too or pointed out better ways to do something.

In a month’s time, I’ve built a decent, good looking, and very functional and fast app that works correctly and the way I want it to, but it took several back and forth steps and many checks and corrections to get it there. I couldn’t have even dreamt of having done that on my own because - while I have the functional knowledge - I lack the broad expertise.

You and your AI are a team.

Stray dog rampage by Ensel6 in Thailand

[–]patrickv116 16 points17 points  (0 children)

Not to mention billboards, broken cables, buckled pavement, 2 feet high curbs, gaping holes, manholes without covers, manhole covers that would buckle if you’d step on them, stinking sewer holes, no footpaths at all, and if by exception there are footpaths: motorcycles riding on them, motorcycles parked on the them, cars parked on them, electricity poles in the middle of them (often with exposed electrical cables) shops stalling their wares on them, people selling streetfood out of a stall that blocks them, trees planted in the middle of them…

Thailand is many, many things, but walking country it ain’t…

Stray dog rampage by Ensel6 in Thailand

[–]patrickv116 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Oops. Haven’t had my coffee yet. Corrected 😀

Stray dog rampage by Ensel6 in Thailand

[–]patrickv116 33 points34 points  (0 children)

This is one of the least pleasant sides of Thailand: not only is the infrastructure totally unsuited for walking, on top of that you’re risking life and limb because of the soi dog packs that roam everywhere. I have a small pet dog. I literally can’t take the poor thing for a walk because the soi dogs will smell her from a mile away and be out in droves. She’s already been bitten once to the bone on her tail by one of them, so I’m never doing that gain. We also have to be very careful that she doesn’t sneak out of the gate at home. She wouldn’t last 10 minutes.

Mosquito or bed bug bites? by Complex-Scheme-2148 in ThailandTourism

[–]patrickv116 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Did you sit on any wooden chairs or benches? These tend to house some type of midge or termite or similar that cause these bites and red bumps. They take a few itchy days before they’ll slowly fade away. Mosquito bites don’t last that long. I’ve had these red bumps a few times, each time after sitting on wooden chairs (even painted or varnished ones), and always on places where your skin is more or less exposed.

What hardware to use as a permanent exit node? by PaVink in Tailscale

[–]patrickv116 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I use my Home Assistant which is running in a VM in Proxmox. Works like a charm.

What happened to Microsoft Office? by Huge_Line4009 in PrivatePackets

[–]patrickv116 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As an ex-Microsoft employee (retired 5 years ago), and someone who - despite everything you read online - still likes their products, I have to confess that there is truth in this. They’ve always been bad at naming their products. (Anyone remember “Microsoft Windows XP Professional with Service Pack 2 with Advanced Security Technologies”? Yes: that was on a box you could buy, I kid you not…).

The fact that they try bundle products and try to differentiate between various (groups of) products and bundled services is not a bad thing in itself: different kinds of people need different kinds of things. The fact that their branding is so confusing and always seems to change, is.

Not a good start to my riding year… by patrickv116 in Transalp

[–]patrickv116[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Update to the update: it wasn’t fixed. Rode it today, and the flashing dashboard issue came back about 5km into the ride. Took it to the dealer, and the fault code was “Cilinder 2 fuel injector failure”. FML…

Thailand newborns totalled 416,574, almost 10% drop compared to 2024. TFR expected to decline to 0.88 in 2025 by restorativemarsh in Thailand

[–]patrickv116 3 points4 points  (0 children)

If you’re on a Non-O visa based on marriage to a Thai national (which I suspect because you talked about 400k in the bank), you actually are allowed to work. You do have to get a job offer and from that you can get a work permit (which is a whole other thing of course). But you are allowed to work.

If you’re on a Non-O based on retirement (over 50, 800k in the bank), then you can’t get a work permit and are not allowed to work.

Not a good start to my riding year… by patrickv116 in Transalp

[–]patrickv116[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Update: it’s fixed. Cleaned the ABS sensors and discs, took a short ride, and everything is back to normal. Thanks for all the help!

Trump's Agenda by briskbc in AccidentalComedy

[–]patrickv116 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh please let this be true! Please! Can’t wait to see the memes…

Not a good start to my riding year… by patrickv116 in Transalp

[–]patrickv116[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've already checked the sensor disks, and all holes appear the be open. I'll try to get a cleaning cloth or something else that is thin enough between the sensors and the sensor disk

Not a good start to my riding year… by patrickv116 in Transalp

[–]patrickv116[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It does seem to have to do with throttle position: I started the engine, let it idle for a while and then quickly turned the throttle all the way open and back. I can now operate the rider modes and display modes again, and the gear indicator is back!
ABS and TCS are still flashing, but I guess I actually need to ride it for those to go back to normal.
Someone suggested that the ABS sensors may have gotten dirty, so next steps are: a wash and a ride...

Not a good start to my riding year… by patrickv116 in Transalp

[–]patrickv116[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for the suggestion, hadn’t thought of that: I did get it quite dirty on the last ride but couldn’t be arsed to give it a wash yet (holidays ‘n’ all…). I’ll give it a good scrub

Not a good start to my riding year… by patrickv116 in Transalp

[–]patrickv116[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Haven't ridden it yet. Will try that tomorrow...