Baku

joined 2 years ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] Baku@aussie.zone 4 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Works for me too! It's displayed very prominently on my client (Boost)

Honestly I think it's displayed a little too prominently. Might need to go through my user settings and see if I can make it tone down the highlight a bit

[–] Baku@aussie.zone 25 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (6 children)

If OP and coworkers normally start at 8 and finish at 5 (9 hours of work), if you assume they ordinarily make $10/hr (for the sake of an example), they all made $90 for their work on Friday. If they came in at 8am on Saturday to be sent home at 12pm, then even at time and a half, they only made $60 for their work on Saturday

Completely legal, sure, but I wouldn't want to drag my arse out of bed at 6am on Saturday to earn less than I do on a regular work day

[–] Baku@aussie.zone 15 points 2 months ago

Why are you so angry lol? Most of your post history is just you yelling at random people on the internet. It's weird.

 

Any big plans for 2025?

[–] Baku@aussie.zone 3 points 2 months ago (1 children)

I bought a really nice, high quality, very fast charging and data transfer cable, and there's one device I own that it will not charge at all. My assumption is that it probably doesn't have a charging control chip or something else required to work with that cable. It doesn't work with any other USB-C to C cables I own either. It has to be charged with the USB-A to C cables included in the box

[–] Baku@aussie.zone 1 points 2 months ago (1 children)

I wonder, would this law also cover if, say, the company manufacturing the toothbrush decided not to supply a power cord with the dock, and just stuck some proprietary cable port on it (not even a DC barrel jack or anything like that)?

[–] Baku@aussie.zone 2 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Even knowing this and the grand plan, I feel like I get sucked in, too. It starts as "wanting to stick it to the man" by taking them up on whatever overly generous deal they feel like offering. "I know they'll get rid of it eventually, but there's no harm in abusing it while I can". But any "good" company won't just instantly quadruple their prices and sack all of their customer service staff on the spot. It'll always start off slowly. They'll offer promotions that are 5% less generous, they'll start to charge bag fees or service charges. They'll impose minimum transaction amounts. Etc.

By the time it becomes obvious, it usually too ingrained in your life, and the lives of many others to easily ditch. I saw this happen a lot with uber eats and Doordash. During COVID, they were paying people to stand at train stations and hand out flyers. They'd be offering like 50, 60, 70,.sometimes 80% off your order. Some of them were one time use only, but the lower value ones like 40% were usually reusable if you got a new code. Eventually by this point where you have to sign up for a monthly subscription to get any discount, it's already kinda ingrained in my life and once or twice a week when I "can't be arsed cooking" I end up just ordering something in and blowing 20 or 30 bucks on a meal rather than just keeping a pizza or some salad or other easy meals in the freezer

I could rant for a long time about the uberification of food delivery. Even places offering "in house" food delivery usually end up using on demand uber eats drivers anyway. Then they'll have the audacity to mark everything up 30%, charge a card surcharge, service fee, bag fees, priority delivery fee, on top of a delivery fee. Places that manage their own deliveries with hourly employees, not "iNdEpEnDeNt CoNtRaCtOrS" goes in my good books

 

Things like washing machines, fridges, higher end (or mid range) vacuums, or other things you'd feel pretty bummed about dropping a bit of money on just for it to turn out being shit

I'm considering subscribing some time next year before I make some bigger purchases after tax time. I'm always morbidly worried about either buying something that does its job poorly, or just isn't good value for the feature set.

From the couple of reviews/rankings I've seen, they seem to be a lot more scientific than random "what is the best x lists". I feel like when you google reviews for any midrange products, most of the reviews are just "oh well yeah it's okay but actually nah if you spend three times the price you could get 5% better performance so it's actually bad and you shouldn't buy it. Just buy the more expensive version instead!"

The minimum 3 month subscription term is the only thing that's making me pause. If they offered single month subscriptions, I'd probably be more inclined to subscribe. But I'm interested in hearing opinions from anyone who either is a member, or has been in the past. Worth it?

[–] Baku@aussie.zone 4 points 2 months ago (1 children)

I really wish my autocorrect would stop doing that. I can count on one hand the amount of times I've actually wanted to write "PowerPoint". I couldn't even count on 10 hands the amount of times it's assumed I'm some kind of idiot that doesn't know "PowerPoint" is a single word when I type "power point"

[–] Baku@aussie.zone 5 points 2 months ago

Ah, no worries! I'm not sure if it's even universally agreed upon across native English speakers. Where I'm from though, a powerboard (or power strip in other parts of the world) has one plug that then leads on to usually 4 or more additional power points/sockets. An extension cord on the other hand usually only allows a single device be connected to it (whether that's another extension cord or something else)

[–] Baku@aussie.zone 4 points 2 months ago (3 children)

Awesome answer - thank you!!

Although I guess a more general question - why aren't all power boards and extension cords mandatorily fitted with their own circuit breakers/overload protection circuits? I guess it's cheaper to just tell people never to daisy chain, but at the same time, when you factor in overall costs incurred by anybody (or insurance companies, etc) from people unintentionally overloading them and causing them to melt and burn down houses, wouldn't it be in everybody's best interests to raise the price a few dollars and include a resettable overload protection system?

[–] Baku@aussie.zone 18 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (5 children)

This, along with hotels that hide their only power point behind the bed but have 50 bloody phone jacks, are my pet peeves. But it kinda makes sense when you consider they were mostly built before the days of having a ton of devices in the bedroom. A lamp and alarm clock, maybe a TV if you're well off, would've been perfectly fine for a lot of people

[–] Baku@aussie.zone 4 points 2 months ago (2 children)

I think that would be more relevant to power boards than extension cords. Unless nomenclature is different elsewhere, extension cords here generally only have a single plug. Although there are usually warnings to not run things like clothes dryers or portable stovetops through an extension cord because it can apparently melt the cable. Truthfully, I don't entirely get that either, as I would've assumed they'd be built to the same standard as internal wiring

 

"never plug extension cords into extension cords" is probably the most common piece of electrical related advice I've ever heard. But if you have, say, 2 x 2m long extension cords, and you plug one into the other, why is that considered a lot more unsafe than just using a single 4 or 5 meter cord?

Does it just boil down to that extra connection creating another opportunity for the prongs to slip out and cause a spark or short circuit? Or is there something else happening there?

For that matter - why aren't super long extension cords (50 or more meters) considered unsafe? Does that also just come down to a matter of only having 2 connections versus 4 or more on a daisy chained cord?

Followup stupid question: is whatever causes piggybacked extension cords to be considered unsafe actually that dangerous, or is it the sort of thing that gets parroted around and misconstrued/blown out of proportion? On a scale from "smoking 20 packs of cigarettes a day" to "stubbing your toe on a really heavy piece of furniture", how dangerous would you subjectively rate daisy chaining extension cords, assuming it was only 1 hop (2 extension cords, no more), and was kept under 5 or 10 metres?

I'm sure there's probably somebody bashing their head against a wall at these questions, but I'm not trying to be ignorant, I'm just curious. Thank you for tolerating my stupid questions

[–] Baku@aussie.zone 6 points 2 months ago

It's a little button that pops up in the bottom left corner when you've rotated your phone but have auto rotate off on newish versions of Android. If you push it, it rotated to landscape or portrait depending on what you're already in. It's animated and shows an icon of a phone rotating, which can be quite distracting at first or on certain flavours/brand implementations of Android. It animated about 3 times in stock Android before sticking around for a few extra secs then vanishing until you rotate back to your chosen orientation and back

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