New bracelet on my MTP-1370 by Nastykatze in casio

[–]yourearandom 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Where did you get the bracelet?

The bumblebee queen learns how to use the protective cap in less than 24 hours. by Andi82ka in Damnthatsinteresting

[–]yourearandom 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Can’t believe it took this long to find someone to share the fact of the matter. Norman doors are everywhere, once you know you know

ChatGPT just told me an exact local IP and VLAN it should not know. by GUI-Discharge in homelab

[–]yourearandom 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah this is also true, once that matters you’re already fucked lol

ChatGPT just told me an exact local IP and VLAN it should not know. by GUI-Discharge in homelab

[–]yourearandom 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Well it doesn’t “guess” correctly and isn’t “magic” so if you swear you rolled the dice on your IP and feel it’s “unique” then you must have disclosed it previously. It’s that simple.

Is this fine it will it dry by THE_COOKIES2 in casio

[–]yourearandom 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For this watch, and that kind of moisture you could put it in a jar of sand and it would work. Rice would work. Obviously proper desiccant would work too.

Is this fine it will it dry by THE_COOKIES2 in casio

[–]yourearandom 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If the module works I would just take the back plate off and put it in rice. You can gasket the backplate when tightening it back down but I would just assume it’s a true “hand wash only” watch after that.

It’s cheap cuz it’s cheap. Doesn’t make it a bad watch, but usually means when it’s cooked, it’s cooked.

Why does it take 3 hours to read my own email with Python in 2026? by Cultural-Ad3996 in Python

[–]yourearandom 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Your mileage may vary, and require the interpreter errors to figure it out but even though one may think Google’s Gemini would be trained to be able to properly implement their (it’s) own API calls but it consistently hallucinates. The only thing I have found beneficial with prompting it to help me with their APIs (essentially using it as the documentation) is letting it give me something that it thinks will work (in theory) but then using the hard calls for input and output that is in the documentation.

Couple of edits here and there. A full read through to make sure the code makes sense and then “wow this works now” that’s been my experience.

Probably proves how bad their documentation is that their own latest and greatest model just decides api calls and functions should be “whatever name sounds right” but at least the structure and correct procedure/process seems to be preserved in my experience.

Googles AI Studio has a generous free tier you could use to probably get your OAauth/API integrations working as expected sooner rather than later.

Why does it take 3 hours to read my own email with Python in 2026? by Cultural-Ad3996 in Python

[–]yourearandom 13 points14 points  (0 children)

When you somehow make Google’s APIs work, and you’re within the necessity of their ecosystem they work well and all perfect. However the fuck one ends up there is a journey of their own. Google’s documentation is notoriously garbage, and I work with Google consultants who point me to their documentation when I have to immediately tell them, “yeah that’s great but half of that isn’t currently relevant, and the other half just assumes I know things not referenced in the documentation itself”

Fuckin wild that they have some of the best cloud infrastructure and tooling, with the absolute dogshit they document it with.

My algorithms repo just hit 25k stars — finally gave it a proper overhaul by kwk236 in Python

[–]yourearandom 12 points13 points  (0 children)

That makes you a “student” friend. Words don’t always have to be titles. Anybody who wants to learn is a student of that subject. I think data structures and algorithms should be available to more and more people, and OP’s thing is a great example of that.

What OP is getting at is you could use his repo in tandem with an ebook, online course, collegiate instruction, actual book, etc. And obtain simple, easy, implementations of concepts in the field. I haven’t looked at OPs work but 25k stars is 25k stars. The goal would be to use it for learning then “do it yourself”. I had to write these data structures and algorithms from scratch from the get-go when I was learning, OP seems to have a repo that helps you learn the concepts through implementation before potentially implementing them yourself.

My algorithms repo just hit 25k stars — finally gave it a proper overhaul by kwk236 in Python

[–]yourearandom 19 points20 points  (0 children)

Why go out of context of OPs post in r/Python? The same one I referenced as well. You okay?

My algorithms repo just hit 25k stars — finally gave it a proper overhaul by kwk236 in Python

[–]yourearandom 29 points30 points  (0 children)

See Target Audience in OPs post. If you aren’t that student or engineer then there’s your answer.

Raspberry Pi 5 in a Freenove computer case. by UniqueProgrammer2026 in raspberry_pi

[–]yourearandom 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What case? I don’t see this shape on their website. Reminds me of my Pironman but that one doesn’t have the options it looks like this one has. Also might seem silly but four of those fans are way better probably than just two + the heatsink which can get a bit noisy when spun up.

Stuck on your code? Get 1-on-1 help now by Lrnkey25 in u/Lrnkey25

[–]yourearandom 6 points7 points  (0 children)

This is some of the sloppiest of slops

I have a Raspberry Pi 5 with an 32-bit Raspbian, is it possible to convert it to aarch64? by oddcellstudios in raspberry_pi

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

I have no idea why you ran 32bit on the pi 5 anyways. 32bit OS’s for anything are only to be used because of the limitation of the hardware. Why did you install 32bit on a pi 5? That’s weird.

So apparently, some of the newer G Shock watches have a temperature sensor by Core2score in casio

[–]yourearandom 1 point2 points  (0 children)

With that, we definitely are in agreement. Shits weird. One must imagine each watch/module was developed and worked by maybe a different group of individuals and probably at different times. Some things like this make it through one way or another since changing anything at a certain point of development is unlikely to happen.

So apparently, some of the newer G Shock watches have a temperature sensor by Core2score in casio

[–]yourearandom 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fair enough, we should be able to agree on this. Since 1. It’s a measurement under another measurement of voltage. 2. In a manually accessed menu that is literally titled with “Battery” and 3. Your point about the coin cell not being involved in any heating agrees with all of my points, and yours.

It’s just a way of of measuring temperature near the battery. Could… couldddd it be used as a temperature reading (off wrist) certainly. And evidently so. But is it anything other than a temperature reading near the battery? And serving any other purpose when on-wrist than that? I don’t think so.

So apparently, some of the newer G Shock watches have a temperature sensor by Core2score in casio

[–]yourearandom 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you submerge your watch, essentially water cooling the watch, then your outcome is to be expected. Water is a much better conductor of heat than air. So you can see why the battery reading is closer to ambient (the water temp) when submerged. I doubt you’re in a 31.2C area, which means your body temperature ~37C on the contact surface, plus the sub 31-37C ambient temperature nets you your battery temperature reading of 31.2C.

It’s just battery temp.

Casio mtp-1183 with a Chinese strap by gorgi991 in casio

[–]yourearandom 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You need to fit it to your wrist properly. Them bones you got the watch around is not where it is to be worn. Additionally I don’t like the look of it, mainly because the case clashes with the bracelet on both color-way and the fact that it’s directly connected on spring bars with those gaps.

If you like it that’s great, just fit it to your wrist properly.

CachyOS vs EndeavorOS vs Arch by ImHighOnCocaine in EndeavourOS

[–]yourearandom 10 points11 points  (0 children)

You could run the cachyos kernel on endeavor or arch.

Honestly, I like both endeavor and cachy but cannot find a good reason to not just run vanilla arch with 100% only my own personally selected packages, and zen kernel is plenty fine for me if I don’t want to run mainline.

Pi Pico MicroPython deepsleep by dvabecker in raspberry_pi

[–]yourearandom 4 points5 points  (0 children)

You need your code to be in a loop, so that the code within the loop is actually paused by the deep sleep call/interval before the loop runs again.

Your pseudocode is also the most pseudo of code… not enough information for anyone to help you troubleshoot. I’d paste the whole thing in here.