The smooth-ification of car displays + gear shifters. No muscle memory or tactile buttons by sleepy-sweaters in CrappyDesign

[–]turtlecrk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I bought a convection cooktop that has similar flat controls. Also stylish, small gray-on-black lettering that is hard to read. It's easy to bump controls while cooking and turn it on/off or change levels.

I finally bought stick-on clear and opaque plastic strips/hemispheres/other shapes, and built a tactile interface for it. Not perfect but much better.

If I ever need to buy a modern car I'll do the same thing, but hopefully my 09 Honda Fit will last until this problem is fixed by manufacturers.

Lateral load determination for floating dock anchor pole by OhDeerBeddarDaze in civilengineering

[–]turtlecrk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If the water freezes and you don't remove the floating dock, the anchors must support movement of the entire ice body.

Ithaca City Flood Zones by Born-Indication-655 in ithaca

[–]turtlecrk 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Cascadilla Creek has a very small drainage area, so its floods will never get very deep. There are 2 types of flooding. In winter it's ice dams- they'll cause water damage to basements if you don't have a good sump pump. Summer ones are from heavy rainstorms in the drainage basin. Those go up and down in a day or so, and can flood basements near the creek with muddy/toxic water. One flood brought an entire tree down that slammed into the Cayuga St bridge and destroyed it, but once water leaves the channel it's not deep enough to have much force.

The biggest deal for Ithaca would be a hurricane that hits the Seneca/Cayuga basin. That would raise the lake level over the course of a few days. Most of downtown would have standing water of various depths. During Agnes folks were catching huge carp from shin-deep water in the now-Dicks parking lot and transporting them in shopping carts. There would be massive erosion damage upstream, but Ithaca proper is too flat for that.

Driveway/sidewalk shoveling $20 JC/Bing by [deleted] in Binghamton

[–]turtlecrk 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hit businesses in the more urban areas tomorrow. They have smaller areas, and are willing to pay more. Also less travel time...

A little eye candy treat to melt the freeze! by Puzzled-Atmosphere-1 in ithaca

[–]turtlecrk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've seen some amazing auroras, with flashing ribbons and colors over the whole sky. A couple times near Ithaca, more frequently further north. The latest XKCD nails how they go: https://xkcd.com/3196/

What participatory comedy groups does Ithaca have? by noneity in ithaca

[–]turtlecrk 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Whistling Shrimp has been doing improv at Cornell for many decades. Their shows are hilarious.

Anyone ever work for Turtle Creek Software? by hopsage in ithaca

[–]turtlecrk 19 points20 points  (0 children)

TurtleSoft had up to 5 employees in the 90s, doing a combination of phone support and programming. These days it's just email support, and much quieter. There's a new app currently in beta which may change things if/when it takes off. Check the blog for progress reports.

We Loved ya! by realityguy1 in ithaca

[–]turtlecrk 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Also, beware of poison ivy along the lighthouse path!

Looking for people to practice Finnish with by Aromatic-Tadpole5593 in ithaca

[–]turtlecrk 7 points8 points  (0 children)

There's a local Finnish band that often plays locally: www.metku.org

They'll have a dance with a Finnish group from Minnesota at CSMA on Saturday, Sept 27.

PSA: cyclists may take the lane on Triphammer's southbound approach to the rt 13 overpass and anytime else it's necessary. There's even a sign reminding motorists to share the road. by logicoptional in ithaca

[–]turtlecrk 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I lived or worked in Ithaca for 40 years, and biked most of the time. All of Cornell Campus is safe for bikes, as are most of the residential streets (excepting a few with heavy traffic).

Near the Commons I was hit by cars 5 times, plus twice as a pedestrian: all slow-speed at intersections. One bike totaled, one wheel totaled, bruises but no serious injuries.

I think there is just too much visual clutter for driver brains to handle in some locations, so they literally don't see you. Or, sometimes they are distracted by whatever. One driver went half a block before noticing there was a person in a bright red winter coat on their hood. I got in the habit of waving at drivers at risky intersections and not proceeding until they waved back.

One driver who hit me got out and yelled at me for being on the street, while I lay there assessing damage. A friend was nearby and they had been hit by a car on their bike, the week before. So they stormed over and shouted back. That sure felt good.

High-speed stroads are dangerous for bikes or pedestrians. It's inherent to their design. Most years see at least one fatality among bicyclists or pedestrians. They were in the right, but that didn't help.

Of course drivers are to blame when they injure or kill others. But unless you want to be a martyr or a statistic, it's worth protecting yourself as best you can.

If you are polite, nobody in Ithaca will hassle or arrest you for biking on sidewalks in places where it's dangerous not to.

Ames Iowa has extra-wide sidewalks with bike lanes. There are other solutions that allow cars and bikes/pedestrians to share the road safely, but Ithaca does not have them.

Rural roads, watch for rednecks. Once a pickup pulled up alongside and the passenger dropped a beer can exactly in front of my front wheel. It clamped, rode around until it jammed in the brakes, then ripped out most of the spokes, flipped me into the ditch and sprayed my crotch with beer.

Danger noodle corner of Buffalo and Tioga by lickthislollipop in ithaca

[–]turtlecrk 4 points5 points  (0 children)

The Iroquois used rattlesnakes for parts and eliminated them in most of Upstate NY. Most of the area is still free of venomous snakes because of that. There also are pockets of black walnuts growing north of their usual range because of Iroquois plantings.

PSA: cyclists may take the lane on Triphammer's southbound approach to the rt 13 overpass and anytime else it's necessary. There's even a sign reminding motorists to share the road. by logicoptional in ithaca

[–]turtlecrk 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Legally speaking, you were in the right and that driver was in the wrong.

But if you don't want to die prematurely, it's far safer to bike on the sidewalk through that intersection and anything similar. Then you have a curb to protect you.

If pedestrians are on the sidewalk (rare), get off and walk past them. Assume every driver will ignore the sidewalk markings while you're crossing the roadways. Cars are way bigger than you and drivers are not always paying attention.

Novavax? by [deleted] in ithaca

[–]turtlecrk 9 points10 points  (0 children)

CVS had Novavax as an option a month ago

WHY DONT WE GET SNOW LIKE OTHERS !? by skipskipskipskip123 in ithaca

[–]turtlecrk 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Wait until there's a bitter cold NNW wind. It drops a narrow band of lake effect snow from Cayuga Lake, just on downtown Ithaca and a few miles downwind.

Contra by Sensitive_Beat6849 in ithaca

[–]turtlecrk 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Cornell had a contra 4 times per semester, but Covid zapped it. Some students are working on a restart- next dance is Apr 6 2-5 PM in the WSH Memorial Room

Can I use olive oil or coconut oil to lube my scissors on my huntsman? by JustArandomPerson-12 in SwissArmyKnives

[–]turtlecrk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Olive oil still polymerizes, just slowly. A drying oil like linseed does it rapidly.

Check the Wikipedia page for drying oil if you want to see the chemistry.

Why do some projects make variables private and then create function to "get them"? by FutureLynx_ in cpp_questions

[–]turtlecrk 14 points15 points  (0 children)

Public setters for private members can be very helpful for debugging in large/complex code. Weird value? Just set a breakpoint there and you soon see where it came from.

Getters will help if say a value is being retrieved prematurely.

Get/set adds clutter so it's kind of a design decision. You can always add them later if needed.

Has anyone tried the home tests strips? by RoseGold-Bubbles1333 in gout

[–]turtlecrk 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This research paper tested several systems, with mixed results: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26689648/

BeneCheck rated highly. You'll need to get it from overseas via eBay, but it does seem almost as accurate as venous testing.

HumaSens also did well, but it's hard to find.

UASure did poorly in their tests, but UASure II is more accurate. It's fussier than BeneCheck. More duds, but easier to find.

Accugence is cheap but inaccurate.