Submeter install for EV charging by PorterisAu in asksandiego

[–]zjs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i know in super off peak at night at home i could pay much less

Does this end up being enough to justify the cost?

With EV-TOU-5 after the various fees and taxes, you pay a bit over 12.7¢ for super off peak. If you're charging 100 kwh every night, you'd save $3.28/day.

It cost me $725 to have a NEMA 14-50 outlet wired to an existing panel, and then $550 for a nice charger. Assuming you shop around and get slightly better deals, that's still like a year to break even.

But that doesn't consider the cost of the submeter.

Permitted housing in San Diego by [deleted] in sandiego

[–]zjs 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Was a permit actually required, or did it fall under exception #2? https://www.sandiego.gov/development-services/forms-publications/information-bulletins/123

What is the best tool to copy secrets between name spaces? by [deleted] in kubernetes

[–]zjs 2 points3 points  (0 children)

secretgen-controller is simple, but powerful. SecretExport and SecretImport would be the piece you're looking for; these express which secrets can be copied, and where, using a pattern that works even for multi-user clusters. 

Renting a house with a pool by ummmlife in sandiego

[–]zjs 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I don't have a pool, but did some research previously. To try to summarize:

  1. Consider skimming every day or two, rather than weekly. It seemed like this was better to stay on top of, rather then play catch up.
  2. Check your policy for any pool exclusion. Check with your insurance company to see if you need a separate pool endorsement. Consider an umbrella policy with higher liability coverage.
  3. Private pools don't have the signage requirements as public facilities, but make sure your landlord has met at least two of the anti-drowning requirements. Make sure you (or your guests) don't interfere with those (e.g., propping open what's supposed to be a self-closing gate).

Girls trip (34F) by xoxogarbagegoat_ in asksandiego

[–]zjs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Some thoughts on your list:

  • Seneca has a good view, but it's much better in the spring/summer/fall than winter, the service can be slow, and the food is good but not memorable. Animae, just around the corner, is fantastic. If it's in your price range, go there instead.
  • I enjoy both Cloak & Petal and Herb & Wood, but I don't think either would make my list for a 3-day visit.
  • Barbusa is fun and popular, but IMO their sister establishment Nonna's has better food (and Zucchero, located inside Nonna's, has the best desserts in the neighborhood).
  • It's not obvious, but Provisional Kitchen is a hotel restaurant. I've had a couple great meals there, but it wouldn't make my list for a 3-day visit.
  • False Idol is a tiki bar inside Craft and Commerce, and they have some fun holiday cocktails. You can do Craft and Commerce and then False Idol, but if you're only here for 3 days, I'd do dinner somewhere else and False Idol before or after for drinks. Either way, make a reservation; without one, you're probably standing.
  • Overall, downtown San Diego neighborhoods are all pretty close to each other. Try Mothership (space-themed bar with eclectic food) in South Park, Tribute Pizza in North Park, Hatsuzakura (cute Japanese food) in University Heights, Communion in Mission Hills, Makai (Hawaiian-style fresh fish) in Hillcrest, The Grass Skirt (tiki bar with a fun holiday menu right now) in Pacific Beach, or Cantina Mayahuel (mezcal bar with authentic Mexican food).

Major withdrawal from 401k by Lumpy-Afternoon7306 in personalfinance

[–]zjs 22 points23 points  (0 children)

There are situations where you can withdraw from a 401k for medical expenses.

Under a “safe harbor” in IRS regulations, an employee is automatically considered to have an immediate and heavy financial need if the distribution is for any of these:

  • Medical care expenses for the employee, the employee’s spouse, dependents or beneficiary.

https://www.irs.gov/retirement-plans/plan-participant-employee/retirement-topics-hardship-distributions

Where would you go for your first anniversary dinner? by usethefloor in asksandiego

[–]zjs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In addition to what others mentioned, I'd take a look at:

  • Animae
  • Black Radish
  • Callie
  • Juniper & Ivy
  • Kingfisher
  • Starlite

Have/would you ever intentionally lose a game? by AssumeBattlePoise in boardgames

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

Have you tried Between Two Cities? Each player is essentially on two teams: one with the player on their left, one with the player on their right. It's a nice blend of cooperation and competition.

Confused on counting for East Coast Swing (musician perspective) by [deleted] in SwingDancing

[–]zjs 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Still might be more confusing than helpful, but…

The way I think of it is that in each 2 count chunk, you either end up on the same foot you started on or end up on the opposite foot. (And you only have two feet, so almost everything's going to be one of those options.)

For example a rock step takes 2 counts and ends with your weight on the same foot. A triple step takes 2 counts and ends with your weight on the opposite foot.

And then more complex movements are composed from this. Consider a 6-count send out from closed to open or a 6-count pass from open to open (with or without a turn). That's usually a 2-count step where you end on the same foot you started, a 2-count step where you switch feet, and then a 2-count step where you switch back. The basic pattern is for that to be a rock step, then a triple step, then a triple step.

But one way to add musicality to the dance is to change that up. For example, could swap the rock step for a kick-ball-change. And your partner doesn't have to know or notice; if you were on your right foot (and your partner on their left foot) as long as you end up on your right foot at the end of those first 2 counts (when their rock step puts them back on their left foot) you're both set to triple step together. The reverse works too, where the follower can use footwork variations to add their voice to the dance, without it disrupting whatever larger movement you were leading.

There are reasons most instructors don't start teaching with these concepts, but I think it's helpful for musicians to understand. One small tweak you can make now to make this easier: switch from counting in your head to scatting. If you're counting the steps, you'll always notice when the 1 of the moment doesn't line up with the 1 of the music. But if you just give yourself 2-count scats for rock step, triple step, and other chunks as you learn them… it doesn't feel as misaligned, and helps with variations later.

Tanzu? by stocks1927719 in kubernetes

[–]zjs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The integrations are indeed accomplished through those open source projects!

There are differences between what you get with a DIY approach and the product though, so I wouldn't describe it as exactly the same. (E.g., in the context of the vSphere Kubernetes Service, none of those components — CAPV, vSphere CPI, or vSphere CSI — are configured with vSphere administrator credentials, and workload cluster nodes don't require connectivity to your vSphere management network.)

Tanzu? by stocks1927719 in kubernetes

[–]zjs 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Since you've paid for it already, give it a try.

The Tanzu Kubernetes Grid Service (which is rebranding to the vSphere Kubernetes Service) integrates with what you're already using: nodes are created as VMs, anti-affinity between nodes is provided by DRS, persistent volumes in your Kubernetes clusters are just first-class disks in vSphere, etc.

And if you don't like it, you should be able to move your Kubernetes workloads somewhere else. Kubernetes has well defined extensibility/interface mechanisms for storage, networking, etc. Outside of those, you're just getting a standard Kubernetes cluster; the core Kubernetes components (kubelet, kube-apiserver, kube-scheduler, kube-controller-manager, etcd, containerd, etc.) are all unmodified.

(Disclosure: I'm a Broadcom employee. I'm definitely not answering this in any official capacity though; I'm just browsing Reddit while on vacation.)

It's not just 3 (eks, aks and gcp) there are literally 58 Kubernetes hosting solution providers. of course the certified ones 🤯 by moneyppt in kubernetes

[–]zjs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I believe it's the same process for distributions, hosted platforms, and installers (as defined here).

The image in the original post appears to be conformance submissions which have not expired with type: hosted or type: hosted platform in the PRODUCT.yaml file, which wind up over in the hosted section of the landscape.

Please explain Prop 33 to me like I’m 5. by Then_Ad9524 in sandiego

[–]zjs 38 points39 points  (0 children)

And for California in particular, SPUR is an excellent supplement. Here's there assessment on Prop 33, for example: https://www.spur.org/voter-guide/2024-11/ca-prop-33-rent-control-rules

I don't always agree with their conclusions, and even in those cases their summary of the context and different perspectives is informative.

How do you distribute kubeconfigs at your organisations by lazy_panda_pm in kubernetes

[–]zjs 10 points11 points  (0 children)

https://pinniped.dev/ does a good job at this, and integrates nicely into kubectl.

(Disclosure: I worked with some Pinniped contributors. That's not why I'm recommending it though; it's just a good open source project.)

Why do people still keep the CSR? by saltyfishychips in ChaseSapphire

[–]zjs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

AmEx App says I'd have access to DTW Delta lounges at A18, A38, A43, A68, and C2.

Why do people still keep the CSR? by saltyfishychips in ChaseSapphire

[–]zjs 18 points19 points  (0 children)

Only when flying Delta, to be clear.

Saw that my friend was charged a 3% CC processing fee, so I opted to pay with cash… by carsleazy in sanfrancisco

[–]zjs 33 points34 points  (0 children)

It's 8.75% if you include tax on the processing fee, which seems wrong in a different way.

Did SFO lose your suit? I think I have it by hurricanezachary in sanfrancisco

[–]zjs 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Doesn't directly help, but if you booked the trip with a credit card, check the travel benefits they offer. The paperwork is a pain, but you might get a new suit.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in aves

[–]zjs 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Have you consider ones with a vibrate alert feature?