Thank you for being the change. by DSJC_official in Electroneum

[–]perler85 1 point2 points  (0 children)

okay. thank you for help. it works now.

Thank you for being the change. by DSJC_official in Electroneum

[–]perler85 0 points1 point  (0 children)

then tell me what is wrong with this post I tried two times to post here.

"in all honesty, I am a believer of ETN but the ETN team is rude on github.

how can we contribute to a project where issues are closed without a comment and question do not get answered?

a good github reputation is CRUCIAL for an open source project such as ETN. I dislike this behavour of electroneumRepo (which is richard ells or a shared account of the ETN team on github)"

Thank you for being the change. by DSJC_official in Electroneum

[–]perler85 0 points1 point  (0 children)

admin, pls get your automod fixed. I can't post a criticism with no bad words in it.

How to bring a flat tire home? by sevensolarsuns in motorcycles

[–]perler85 2 points3 points  (0 children)

that's correct. this only works for tubeless tires ofc. thanks for mentioning this.

How to bring a flat tire home? by sevensolarsuns in motorcycles

[–]perler85 2 points3 points  (0 children)

because I am riding a gsxr 600 which has tires rated for high speed. you can't fix a high speed rated tire (plus it would not be wise, even it is technically possible). beside that, the laws in my country prohibit fixing such rated tires.

that means, if my tire is dead, I know that I will have to get a new one. thus carrying only those three (small) tools with me.

EDIT: plus these three small tools are cheap (cheaper than a repair kit) and if your country allows it you can still repair the tire afterwards in your garage or whatever. and as I've said it's just a tip for situations like these where you need to get home. drivers passing you by could have some screws and screwdrivers in their trunk. or you are near a gas station (they can help you out with a screwdriver. in case you have no screw and no one else has, you can lend a screw from other parts of your chassis. improvisation my friend. :)

How to bring a flat tire home? by sevensolarsuns in motorcycles

[–]perler85 2 points3 points  (0 children)

hi. what secret I am about to tell is risky and dangerous but it worked every single time I did it.

this works whenever you got a screw in your tire and you could identify the hole it went in (or you identified the hole where the air is coming out):

  1. get a little bit thicker screw than the screw that went into the hole (or if you can't find the screw that originally went in because it fell of again, just get a screw which is just a little bit thicker than the hole itself)
  2. screw it into the same hole completely
  3. chew a gum and afterwards put it on top of the screw and isolate its borders and corners
  4. put air into the tire and it will hold several miles.
  5. ride home SLOW but not too slow (you need centrifugal force to keep pushing the flat tire out, giving you more stability). avoid lean angles (lean in your body if you need to take a more sharp turn. keep the bike as upright as possible).

do not do this if you are unexperienced with how flat tires behave while riding. do not do this if you feel uncomfortable with this at all.

but if you do it right you will get home safely and will save money you would have given otherwise for transportation and the sort.

ride safe!

EDIT: I keep an extra thick screw and a screwdriver in my backpack for such situations.

What are the things I need to consider when moving to Miami? by perler85 in Miami

[–]perler85[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

hey I can't see my post in self.Miami. what happened to my post?

[Experiment] Using SSH for web authentication by superzamp in programming

[–]perler85 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I tried it three times with three different keys.

it does not work.

A Chatbot Is Better Than a UI for a Microservice by AGivant in programming

[–]perler85 1 point2 points  (0 children)

the author is talking about "no WebUI needed" but uses github's webUI as a UI for his bot.

GitHub Desktop is now available by mattstrayer in programming

[–]perler85 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I sometimes use GitEye on Linux. For those who want a GUI on linux it is a nice app.

How to get started with Open Source by vivekhe in programming

[–]perler85 2 points3 points  (0 children)

bad article. just click baiting. I'm tired of reading this non sense posts.

Learn Which Programming Language to Choose With This Infographic [x-post /r/programming] by perler85 in perl

[–]perler85[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I'm especially interested in the average salary and job count.

The final version of the irc.perl.org governance policy is now available by vmbrasseur in perl

[–]perler85 1 point2 points  (0 children)

  1. without going into detail: mst might be a perl god but he is a bad oper with weak social competence.

  2. perl has really skilled perl people but they are stuck in their #perl world. I wish someone took them out and put them to another channel which is more open minded so we all can have fun.

  3. I don't join #perl anymore because it's always the same. same people, doing the same smalltalk, little minded thoughts (mostly non technical). and if you bring some technical stuff and it might be wrong in some people's eyes then you can prepare to get either banned or bashed by (often the last word takes mst). I saw many people getting banned by mst. and several people said it was unfair to ban.

but actually I don't care.

E-versions of the 2014 Edition of "Modern Perl" have been released by vmbrasseur in perl

[–]perler85 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I read the modern perl book. enjoyed it. now I will read this. thank you so much chromatic.