stealthdawg
stealthdawg t1_jdhzf7f wrote
Reply to comment by ismaelvera in LPT: Use your calendar as your to-do list. Assigning dedicated time to tasks increases the likelyhood of you acting upon it. by human_marketer
more power to you if that's what works for you.
The GTD methodology separates these two things. Rather it opts for one bucket of 'next actions' that one is meant to use as their only source of "what do I do now." That can be refined with various contexts (location, time of day, etc), and then there is a separate activity meant to refresh new tasks onto the list based on incoming sources.
So in the case of GTD you'd just always have a todo list with you giving you those same pending tasks without having to port them over from day to day.
stealthdawg t1_jdhgn9l wrote
Reply to comment by CavediverNY in LPT: Use your calendar as your to-do list. Assigning dedicated time to tasks increases the likelyhood of you acting upon it. by human_marketer
GDT specifically recommends against putting things that are not datetime bound events or tasks on the calendar.
The risk is that you don’t do the tasks in the assigned blocks (because the time-pressure is contrived) and then the calendar itself loses its impact, you stop paying attention to it, and end up ignoring it to the detriment of actual time-bound events.
The foundational tool of GTD for unbound tasks is really just a running list that you crank through.
stealthdawg t1_jcc8u8d wrote
This might work:
https://www.bicycleheaven.org/products/bicycle-speedometer-drive-stewart-warner-vintage-nos
Otherwise looks like its permanent and you'd need to hammer it out.
stealthdawg t1_jc7llqs wrote
Would like more seamless integration between devices. If I'm browsing something on my phone and want to switch to my pc monitor I should be able to swipe or some very easy action to get it there.
Chrome's is almost perfect but could be better and is limited to browser windows
stealthdawg t1_jc7lb50 wrote
Reply to comment by WEN_QONHIUNG in What would you like to see for the future of cell phones? by ItsOk2PeeSittingDown
Have you tried enabling one-handed keyboard? It does just that bias to whichever side you choose.
stealthdawg t1_ja95mio wrote
Reply to comment by megamagex in LPT: Don't cite Wikipedia articles, but do use their sources. by codenamendgo
I mean, same thing now as a 'blanket ban.'
Wikipedia isn't a valid source, but you didn't need permission to follow the citations
stealthdawg t1_ja8z01h wrote
You're not wrong...
they teach this in like 9th grade
stealthdawg t1_j9vkr6f wrote
Reply to comment by neildmaster in LPT Request: how can I avoid capital gains tax (20%) on land sold (<$500,000)? by ScrollinMyLifeAway
1031*
stealthdawg t1_j8ioopi wrote
Reply to [image] The happiness equation by crm_expert
Happiness = Reality - Expectations
if Expectations are greater than Reality, you have negative Happiness (Disappointment).
If Reality exceeds expectations, you're happy.
So keep your expectations low and you'll always be happy.
​
Tat's the instantaneous effect, so really:
H(t) = R(t) - E(t)
But over time, our expectations can also shape our reality right? As our expectations increase, our reality generally does as well:
E(t) = A*t
where t is time and A is some factor by which our expectations rise. Lifestyle creep, could be one example.
and R(t) = mE(t) + C
where C is your reality spawn-point (trust fund kid vs inner city slums kid, perhaps?), and m is the factor by which your expectations are able to influence your reality.
You'll note time (t) isn't in this equation directly. Some might disagree, but I don't think it makes sense to include time as a contributing factor If your expectation of reality doesn't increase, your Reality won't either.
But we know that expectations can't drive reality linearly, at least not forever, and eventually our reality will level off even as our expectations continue to rise. In fact, each increase in expectations is likely to lead to a smaller and smaller increase in reality (diminishing returns).
R(t) = a * E(t) / (E(t) + n)
where 'a' represents your reality 'cap' and n is a factor that affects your ramp-up speed.
And at the end of it all, if reality tops out but expectations continue to grow, then as reality falls further and further short of expectations, happiness continues to increase.
Limit[H,E->∞]= -∞
​
Don't ask me why I decided to write this out.
stealthdawg t1_j7r88mp wrote
Reply to comment by NomDeGuerrePmeDeTerr in Imagine a future in space where pellet-beam propulsion systems speed up travel to other worlds, pipelines on the Moon transport oxygen between settlements and Martian bricks grow on their own before being assembled into homes. Researchers will delve into these ideas and more using NASA grant funding by EricFromOuterSpace
it's not a zero-sum game
stealthdawg t1_j508ewj wrote
Reply to Watch Boston Dynamics' Atlas humanoid work at a 'construction site' - The Robot Report by Gari_305
IMO the salient points are:
Atlas is an amazing specimen for robot physiology. Balance, articulation, movement, recovery, etc. This is the real showcase.
The movements are choreographed using motion capture tech. These are not showcases of any type of AI, decision-making, etc.
That said there are real world applications even at this level. Think human pilot in a VR rig piloting this guy into extraneous locations (Surrogates, anyone?).
stealthdawg t1_j4vv1v0 wrote
Reply to [Image] Who is the driver of you by AvantgardeSavage
imo its more like my concious mind's role is to shape/train my unconcious as well as my environment to produce the desired results for my self/life.
As in, my typical behaviour is a running engine that I need to tune, upgrade and direct, and I also need to set up my surroundings to optimize. I don't control it, but rather guide it and provide course correction.
stealthdawg t1_j25hrw8 wrote
Reply to comment by kami_oniisama in Trashy Moment at the Kennedy Space Center by [deleted]
KSC being in FL doesn't mean visitors are from FL.
You might be surprised to find that most of the people that visit tourist attractions are, in fact, tourists (i.e. not locals).
stealthdawg t1_j254tkv wrote
Stop spamming this repost across multiple subs: https://www.reddit.com/r/GPT3/comments/zoq2ju/joke_designer_why_differentiate_about_man_and/
stealthdawg t1_j24fwi4 wrote
Reply to comment by RPC3 in What would food look like if we could scale up lab grown meat? by sandcrawler56
Nobody will 'attempt' to make it too expensive. And by 'it' I mean non-mainstream, non-muscle, items like organs and other animal tissue that are ecclectic.
It will become too expensive because lab-grown meat will dissociate the supply of regular meat from those other items, and it will cost more to raise an animal at lower quantities.
Nobody is saying there won't be small-batch farmers raising animals for these markets, but in agregate the supply is, imo, going to be severely reduced.
And tbh yes I think wayyyyy down the line (100s of years perhaps), if we can synthesize all the products of an animal, there will be valid discussion on banning animal slaughter.
stealthdawg t1_j21z72x wrote
Reply to comment by RPC3 in What would food look like if we could scale up lab grown meat? by sandcrawler56
There is certainly a breaking point between how expensive the item becomes and how strong of a tradition it is.
Cultures use odd things like organ meat because they have to use the whole animal, not as the primary product.
Those ingredients will be substituted for something else when they become too expensive to acquire.
stealthdawg t1_j1zrg1n wrote
Reply to comment by RPC3 in What would food look like if we could scale up lab grown meat? by sandcrawler56
I think pricing on things like organ meat will drive the extinction of those related dishes.
The most common meats are arguably the easiest to lab-grow (eg. ground beef).
Basically 50% of the meat from a cow goes to ground-beef. Luckily in the US that corressponds to how much beef is eaten overall vs steaks.
I'm not sure how the beef industry will reconcile this, because you can't grow a steak-only cow.
stealthdawg t1_j1zpsdl wrote
Recipes using 'ecclectic' ingredients are borne out of necessity. You have the animal, you want (if not need) to use all of its parts, so cultures create these recipes to incorporate those ingredients.
These recipes of course, range from delicious to barely tolerable, and even that scale shifts between cultures and individuals based on familiarity and such.
That's all to say, I don't think it's a bad thing if recipes with unpalatable ingredients go extinct. Conversely if we discovered a new plant/animal, we may create new recipes around its components.
In the meantime, markets for those products would still exists and they would probably become much more expensive to acquire, driving the markets into the ground. So what?
stealthdawg t1_j0z1uwn wrote
Reply to comment by SpielbrecherXS in How realistic is “The future of” on Netflix? by alakeya
iirc the idea was storing the data in DNA, not in the plant structure, so-long as the plant has any viable cells the data would be intact, theoretically. DNA is supposedly extremely data-dense.
stealthdawg t1_jdvoqhe wrote
Reply to Which MagSafe power bank brand are you choosing for your iPhone 14? by AptCovering
depends on your application I suppose i.e. when do you think you're going to need to use the powerbank and in what conditions?
induction charging is 75% as efficient as plug in.
Between improved phone battery life and the ubiquity of available power, I find myself very very rarely needing a power bank and the old Anker one I bought years ago serves that well enough.