robotsonic | 7 years ago | on: Instead of Writing a Thousand Words, Part One: Ideas
robotsonic's comments
robotsonic | 7 years ago | on: Ask HN: How do you become the best at something?
Being top-percentile in communication is nothing to brush off. It's about finding where to use your top-percentile skills that can be the challenge.
I could be in the top 1% of people who grow green tomatoes, but if I'm not using that skill for something, does it matter? Maybe skill-for-the-sake-of-skill does matter on some level, but maybe I should find a way to use my mastery for something.
robotsonic | 7 years ago | on: MH370 Was ‘Manipulated’ Off Course to Its End, Report Says
robotsonic | 7 years ago | on: Creating a Unique Beer “Koozie” and Growing to $1.1M/month
robotsonic | 7 years ago | on: Everyone Has an Accent
robotsonic | 7 years ago | on: The Gallery of Regrettable Food
robotsonic | 7 years ago | on: A legend reborn: Microsoft brings back the iconic Classic IntelliMouse
robotsonic | 8 years ago | on: A Criminal Gang Used a Drone Swarm to Obstruct an FBI Hostage Raid
robotsonic | 8 years ago | on: The Posh Pen Paradox: when writers and artists fear their tools
I'm also unsure if the order of operations is: 1) I treat my phones poorly, thus I should get a screen cover. OR 2) I have a screen cover, so now I can treat my phone poorly.
robotsonic | 8 years ago | on: Loneliness on the Job: Why No Employee Is an Island
2) I've never worked anywhere with free food, so I don't know if that would change things, but have worked at places with a full-service cafeteria, a lunch/break room, and no break/lunch room. The place that only had the lunch room seemed to have the most socialization, with all levels/types of staff bringing their lunch and chatting as a group. Even people who didn't bring a lunch would still pop in. Surprisingly, no real cliques ever formed (even people who came, sat and never said a word seemed very welcome).
The cafeteria workplace seemed to only attract those who needed to purchase food. Though, it did seem like more of a social place around morning coffee break (again, mostly people purchasing coffee).
The place without a lunchroom pretty much had everyone either eating at their desks or leaving for lunch. I found this pretty abysmal and I'd classify myself as an introvert. Compared to the lunchroom situation, I certainly knew less about what everyone actually did in their jobs, so it really was a net loss even in terms of productivity.
3) That's a hard one. I think it's okay for people to be left out if they choose to, but I think if your culture relies on cliques, then it will eventually drive out anyone who doesn't fit (and I'm sure at some places, that's seen as a positive).
robotsonic | 8 years ago | on: $560M Powerball Winner Can Keep Her Name Private, Judge Rules
robotsonic | 8 years ago | on: Lab-grown diamonds threaten viability of the real gems
Hockey sticks tend to be carbon fiber.
<s>I think the baseball wood/aluminum debate can't handle another metal </s>
Snowboards and such do benefit from being able to bend. I could see it more in alpine snowboard equipment, but again, I'm not sure that carbon fiber wouldn't be the better bet.
robotsonic | 8 years ago | on: The Dirty Secret of ‘Secret Family Recipes’
robotsonic | 8 years ago | on: The Dirty Secret of ‘Secret Family Recipes’
There's definitely a need to measure well, but that third class of failure you mentioned is probably better to pay attention to. If you know your ingredients and operating conditions, you'll definitely fair better.
On the topic of measuring, I do wish more new recipe books went back to using weights. Baking with a scale is so much easier/faster/less clean up. It surprises me how many people I know who think it is too much work to use a scale until they see me do it and how little effort it really is.
robotsonic | 8 years ago | on: Judge rules Seattle homeless man’s truck is a home
1. No, you can't have an abortion for any reason (rape, abuse, etc.). OR do you mean you can have one, as long as you can afford it.
2. You can't have rehab for any reason it's your fault for doing something dumb. OR is it that you can go to rehab only if you can afford it.
3. You can't have healthcare for any reason. OR is it that you can have healthcare if you can afford it. OR is it only free if you aren't overweight, sit too much, stand too much, floss twice daily and only ever eat fruits and veggies.
4. Financial assistance should only be accessible to the rich. Or is it meant to be accessible to the poor, but they must pay for it?
Certainly, most people, even gasp liberals, tend to ride some middle ground.
robotsonic | 8 years ago | on: Wounds taking weeks to heal on skin disappear in a week inside the mouth (2013)
I'd be curious if this is a recent* change in methods, or a recent* push to ensure people are doing it.
*recent being the few years between when I've taken first aid courses.
robotsonic | 8 years ago | on: I've never felt less in control of my own hardware
I agree with the comment below about this being an argument for delta updates.
robotsonic | 8 years ago | on: I've never felt less in control of my own hardware
To stick with the Uber example, I don't live in a city with Uber, but have it on my phone for when I am. Why do I need to be burdened with using my data to constantly update an app I use once a year. This applies to a lot of apps (airlines, games, etc.). Games are really the worst offender as they tend to be quite large. Where release notes are provided in the app store, I will update if it is related to a critical security vulnerability, or something legitimate, but find it hard to rationalize constantly downloading 100+MB apps doing this for minor bug fixes that impact 0.001% of an apps user base.
robotsonic | 8 years ago | on: Scientists In Alaska Find Mammoth Amounts Of Carbon In The Warming Permafrost
1) to get to the warmer temperatures, you need to pass through the room temperature stage first. Things might change quickly, but not THAT quickly, meaning whatever is lurking in the soil can cause havoc/mutate/etc. before hitting it's upper temperature limits.
2) The areas where permafrost is generally found see summer temperatures generally at or below 'room temperature' now.
I do agree, that their tests could have been more thorough and included future scenario temperatures, but may underestimate the problem by not allowing mutation time.
robotsonic | 8 years ago | on: The screen that set off the ballistic missile alert on Saturday
<H2> Testing </H2>
...
<H2> FOR REAL </H2>
...
It's not perfect, but at least the test alerts and the real alerts are not mixed together.
What blows my mind is that I knew it was going to be this before clicking through entirely based on your comment.
The service provided by ESRI is handy for those with minimal knowledge to make something decent, but it's also easy for people to get carried away and use all the features. This is like the modern equivalent to marching ants, I guess.