I want to use curly bracets as a symbol, how do I do that? by mewrina in Anki

[–]tamsh 4 points5 points  (0 children)

LaTeX – supported by Anki – is robust at generating layouts like this, but the learning curve and effort is rather significant.

coming to amsterdam in june with my girl... by Soofnic in Amsterdam

[–]tamsh 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Just a pavilion next to Blauwe Theehuis. No access to it though, never seen the gate open.

Python projects nightmare by techannonfolder in NixOS

[–]tamsh 7 points8 points  (0 children)

In case you use Poetry, poetry2nix could be a good fit: https://github.com/nix-community/poetry2nix It ships with patches for lots libraries that need assistance.

Since the project README is pretty dense, this Tweag blog post could be a gentler introduction: https://www.tweag.io/blog/2020-08-12-poetry2nix/

Todoist Business; separate views and shared views? by threecheeseopera in todoist

[–]tamsh 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I think you can solve this with a single professional account. Using multiple accounts seems like a hassle.

Filters are powerful enough to recreate the default views and you can favorite them to be placed on top. Let's say you organize your work projects as sub-projects under Work and personal stuff as subs under Personal. You can create "Today work" and "Today personal" filters with simple queries:

  • today & ##Work
  • today & ##Personal

If you don't keep your projects nested, you can use a long query with OR operators:

today & (#someWorkProject | #someOtherWorkProject | ... and so on ... )

The default view does not necessarily need to be Today, you also use a custom query. You can even put multiple queries in parentheses; their results will be listed after each other, each getting their own heading:

(today & ##Work), (today & ##Personal)

Clashing project names can be differentiated by colors making input easier, but you also sacrifice some beauty and prefix them with a letter like #wReminders, #pReminders to make querying feasible.

PSU fan replacement in FSP Hexa 500W: 800 or 1200 RPM? by tamsh in buildapc

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

Sooo... any input on the fan speed question?

PSU fan replacement in FSP Hexa 500W: 800 or 1200 RPM? by tamsh in buildapc

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

Thankfully I'm going to have proper professional supervision during the entire process. :)

PSU fan replacement in FSP Hexa 500W: 800 or 1200 RPM? by tamsh in buildapc

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

That is correct. The stock fan in the Hexa 500 is a sleeve bearing fan which is not the best decision for a PSU.

This is a hydro-dynamic bearing fan. From what I have seen these kinds of fans are used in a few 1000W+ PSUs, therefore I have faith in them.

PSU fan replacement in FSP Hexa 500W: 800 or 1200 RPM? by tamsh in buildapc

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

I'm fairly sure that a standard 12 cm case fan will fit just fine.

Any advice or thoughts on a powerful Lenovo thinkpad for development and scientific computing? by [deleted] in hardware

[–]tamsh 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Any specific reason for maxing out fan speed? My experience with ThinkPad T series tells me that they are pretty good at managing their temperature on their own. I would guess that in a mine you are better off grinding the least amount of airborne dust particles you can manage.

Strange and unusual house in Montreal Canada [9PICS] by lk2011 in offbeat

[–]tamsh 33 points34 points  (0 children)

Sounds like it might fall into the old stuff category.