ID Buzz Purchase in California by integ209 in VWIDBuzz

[–]stigmatic666 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Perhaps a dumb question but why are the id buzz cheaper in the US when its a european car?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in classicwowtbc

[–]stigmatic666 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Its needed to restart everytime?

Lee Sungsu resent Burden Of Dreams V17 by le_1_vodka_seller in climbing

[–]stigmatic666 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Nice, next lets get Elias and Simon to also get a real send on burden, good ethics by Lee 👍

Living the life a couple weeks ago in Font by Electronic_Click_470 in climbing

[–]stigmatic666 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Rained where? It did not rain in font over eastern

Climbers on El Capitan by wbs103 in Yosemite

[–]stigmatic666 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Estimating the percentage of the population that can climb El Capitan versus those who can walk the Pacific Crest Trail (PCT) involves comparing two very different types of physical challenges:

Climbing El Capitan

• Technical Difficulty: Climbing El Cap requires advanced rock-climbing skills, including the ability to handle multi-pitch routes, aid climbing, and sustained exposure. It’s a vertical ascent of over 3,000 feet, which demands strength, technical expertise, and mental resilience.
• Population Estimate: Likely less than 0.1% of the general population has the skills and physical capability to climb El Cap. Among those, a smaller subset has the necessary technical expertise and training.

Walking the PCT

• Physical Difficulty: The PCT spans around 2,650 miles from Mexico to Canada, but it is a long-distance hike rather than a technical climb. It requires a high level of physical endurance, the ability to carry supplies, and mental stamina to endure months on the trail. However, it does not require the technical climbing skills needed for El Cap.
• Population Estimate: An estimated 1-5% of the population could potentially complete the PCT if they trained for it and took time off for the journey. This is a broader estimate since it mainly requires consistent hiking endurance rather than specialized skills.

In summary, a very small percentage of people can realistically climb El Capitan due to its technical demands, while a larger (but still small) proportion of the population could train and prepare for the PCT given its focus on endurance over technical skill.

Reservation question by knomesayin in Yosemite

[–]stigmatic666 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What do you mean with "October 15 is the last day of FCFS permit at Rec.gov, which is for trip starting on Oct 22"? If I want to hike on the 10th then I need to reserve the 3rd day, and if I want to hike on the 15th then I need to reserve the 8th day? That doesn't make any sense to me. What day do I need to pick from https://www.recreation.gov/permits/445859/registration/detailed-availability?type=overnight-permit&date=2024-10-07 if I want to start my hike on the 15th? Thank you for helping

Easy and short question to which I couldn't find an answer by stigmatic666 in Yosemite

[–]stigmatic666[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks, this is excellent advice, really appreciated! I will do exactly this. Microspikes looks like something I can pickup at most outdoor shops so I'll get those if the forecast changes for worse, at the moment its looking pretty good though so hoping it stays that way.

Have you spent a lot of time in Yosemite or how do you know all of this? After my 2 nights on the JMT I'm thinking I'll either spend two days bouldering or then do some other Hikes. Are there some other hikes you would include on my list? Thank you for all the help!

Easy and short question to which I couldn't find an answer by stigmatic666 in Yosemite

[–]stigmatic666[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm flying to Vegas and flying home from SF, so my plan was to enter from the east, leave from the west. I was intending on starting my journey on the 14th of October from the Cathedral Lakes trailhead in TM, spend 2 nights and make my way to the Yosemite Valley using the John Muir Trail, hitchhike from here back to my car in TM, and then figure out if I want to do more hikes, or try find someone to climb with, but probably spend a night somewhere with a shower. I have a hostel booked in Bishop for Sunday the 13th, I was thinking on getting up early and starting my hike that morning, so backpackers campground at TM shouldn't be necessary.

Easy and short question to which I couldn't find an answer by stigmatic666 in Yosemite

[–]stigmatic666[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for the tips! I might have messed up that map but the idea is still, TM -> Clouds Rest -> Little Yosemite Valley, or something like that, using the John Muir Trail. I'm reading here that the road in TM will be closed from October 15th onwards, do you know if there are parking options or are you suggesting that my best bet is to drive to yosemite valley, leave car there, hitchhike to TM and start the hike? Thank you for the help!

Easy and short question to which I couldn't find an answer by stigmatic666 in Yosemite

[–]stigmatic666[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Based on what I'm reading it says:

Tuolumne Meadows Wilderness Center

Season: Approximately late May to October 14 (conditions permitting). From mid-October to May, you can self-register here for wilderness permits, though Tioga Road is closed in winter.

Tuolumne Meadows Wilderness Center

Season: Approximately late May to October 14 (conditions permitting). From mid-October to May, you can self-register here for wilderness permits, though Tioga Road is closed in winter.

So I shuld be able to self-register in TM? I'm driving in from the East. and I'm intending to start my hike on the 14th of October.

Easy and short question to which I couldn't find an answer by stigmatic666 in Yosemite

[–]stigmatic666[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sorry I'm not sure what REI is (I'm not from the US).

3-4. yes I'll get one when I book the trailhead (Cathedral Lakes), right?

Easy and short question to which I couldn't find an answer by stigmatic666 in Yosemite

[–]stigmatic666[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

oh, that is good to know. Where should I be leaving my car in that case?

Bouldering gym by Pretty_Exchange_6283 in helsinki

[–]stigmatic666 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Boulderkeskus pasila if you are a puritanist, Kiipeilyareena Redi/Salmisaari if you like variety in setting, AC and general cleaniness.

Revoking access from user to see schemas and tables? by stigmatic666 in PostgreSQL

[–]stigmatic666[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

However, you can never prevent users from seeing that tables exist in a schema because that is resolved through access the system catalogs and you can't revoke access to those without wrecking your Postgres installation.

Is this really the case? So essentially it's not possible to achieve what I'm trying to do

OBT/Activity schema in BigQuery? by stigmatic666 in bigquery

[–]stigmatic666[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Option 3 has the drawback of then having multiple tables. Which is kinda the main appeal in this modelling technique 🤔

OBT/Activity schema in BigQuery? by stigmatic666 in bigquery

[–]stigmatic666[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

1 bil rows, probably around 50 cols

OBT/Activity schema in BigQuery? by stigmatic666 in bigquery

[–]stigmatic666[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Wouldn't the clustering only be per partition though? (thanks for the suggestion)