art-not's comments

art-not | 1 year ago | on: The case against morning yoga, daily routines, and endless meetings

During Covid when my entire routine process was disrupted by work from home where I couldn’t do my daily thing I basically became the least productive person on my team. On days where my morning is severely disrupted basically the whole day is shot.

I generally can adapt to long term new situations by inventing new routines but I fall apart without structure.

I’ll be the first to acknowledge it’s a bad thing but it is what it is. I’m sure the commenter above is similar

art-not | 1 year ago | on: Why Bad CEOs Fear Remote Work (2021)

The poster is creating a purposefully difficult situation to indicate the lack of interest they have with returning to office. In other words, they’d only return to office in a fantasy world

art-not | 1 year ago | on: Raspberry Pi Connect

Free as in “free beer”. You don’t own the rights to the beer, you don’t have the ingredient list, but it costs no money

art-not | 1 year ago | on: The Myth of the Second Chance

I'm not sure. Since I've never seen a situation where millions of people earnestly try for something they want, I would only be theorizing on the outcome. I think certainly there'd end up with more than 2 or 3 success stories, which is mainly my point though

art-not | 1 year ago | on: Airbnb bookings for the solar eclipse reach astronomical levels

Huntsville is a 2 and a half hour commute to my in person job, limiting me to only remote work(there’s not exactly a booming tech economy in Huntsville). I would have to commute 5 hours a day to live in Huntsville.

I had family members who bought in “mixed income” neighborhoods in Toronto where you’d have broken piping, excessive mold in the attic, and meth heads ringing your doorbell at 2am to see if anyone’s home so they could break in. That 2 bedroom bungalow is selling for around 850k.

On top of all this houses even in Huntsville regularly close for between 50-200k over asking depending on location and the insanity of the buyer

No offense but based on this conversation I get the impression that you don’t really have enough context to comment on at the very least cost of housing in Canada.

art-not | 1 year ago | on: Airbnb bookings for the solar eclipse reach astronomical levels

I'm Canadian for what it's worth. My mother who had a GED was able to purchase a house by my age. I can't purchase a house anywhere in southern Ontario at the moment. This fact is echoed across the majority of the country. My brother had to move to northern Alberta to be able to afford a house that had enough capacity for his family. And that naturally also changed the availability of social and job options

art-not | 1 year ago | on: Airbnb bookings for the solar eclipse reach astronomical levels

I love the lack of sympathy for tech workers across North America or perhaps even globally, when tech hub salaries still don’t allow tech workers to even have a middle class lifestyle. Very few people I know get paid enough to buy a starter home within 2 or 3 hours of where they work. I get paid more than my non tech peers yet still functionally have less spending power than a 25 year old from 30 years ago, despite being a fair bit older than 25

art-not | 2 years ago | on: EP–133

You can unquantize actually! at the very least you can with midi input.

I use my po 33 a lot. It's something between a toy and a full fledged device. I've used it 'live' when hosting a pen and paper event i wanted custom music for. Usually though it's something I enjoy using when I want to do something musically without being too 'committed'.

I think there's a lot of value from an item being easy to use and evoking the concept of play. It makes it easy to keep up 'good habits' like music making on days where I dont want to or cant do more.

art-not | 2 years ago | on: EP–133

i use my po-33 constantly. it's one of my favourite things I've ever owned. it's crazy how good they are at making little devices feel easy to use

art-not | 2 years ago | on: Humanity 101: The Syllabus of Frankenstein's Monster

I think the story is moreso the moral implications of being withheld from love or community. Hence the second act focussing on the doctor, starting with him being accused of murder, and shunned by society. It's also effectively the entire plan of the monster. The technological development aspect of the story as far as I'm concerned is set dressing for everything else.

art-not | 2 years ago | on: Are we doing this again? Yes, we're doing this again

As someone who did activism work involving working my provincial government in Canada, sorta ya. For a lot of people, you’re basically navigating the nearly kafka-esc political process, but from the perspective of a ‘normal’ person, as opposed to a politician who gets paid to do so 8 hours a day or whatever.

Also surrounding oneselves with like-minded people who all believe they’re, to some extent, ‘saving the world’, does in fact make you a bit pompous(if only temporarily haha)

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