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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)GI
gizmonicus @sh.itjust.works
Posts 25
Comments 193
Drive aggressively ≠ Arrive early
  • The annoying thing is: if everyone did this, phantom traffic jams wouldn't be a thing, and even real road obstructions would have significantly less impact and we would all get where we want to go faster, collectively. But we won't, because I got mine.

  • A genre of Country Music...
  • Considering how important it is to me that I'm not some piece of shit manager, yeah, it was a little personal. I take that kind of thing seriously. It kinda doesn't work as a meme reference without the meme.

  • A genre of Country Music...
  • Not everyone in my position is a sniveling little shit, as much as you may think. I do get paid more than my team, but not by some ridiculous margin. The lowest paid person gets 70% what I do and the highest paid person is at 95%. When I took over it was no shit closer to 40% for the lowest paid member. I fought for that to be fixed and burned up a lot if political capital doing it too.

    When COVID came along and pay cuts and layoffs were a real threat, I told my boss to cut my salary before anyone else's. We never had to, thankfully, but I literally told him I would quit if they cut one of my subordinates pay or laid them off without first taking out of my pocket.

    I had a direct report who, for three years wanted to be in a leadership role. I fought for a new position for him and put my own ass on the line recommending him for promotion every chance I got. He's been promoted past me and I hope (since I can't see his salary anymore) he is getting paid more than me because he's earned it.

    I'm not some superstar manager, but I do feel like I keep my team out of the political battles and turf wars so they can focus on doing what they do best without dealing with all that crap. That's my job. When something goes wrong, I'm accountable. So when the people doing the work get it wrong and take a critical system offline by fat fingering a command, I'm the one answering the phones and taking all the shit for it and smoothing things over with stake holders. And unless it was a result of gross negligence, I'm not going to give them hell for it either because I've fucking been there before.

    I didn't even want this damn job. I was perfectly happy being the technical lead and not having job recruiting and performance reviews to do, but I took it because I knew at the very least I would do my best to advocate for the people I care about, and that's not something I could say about everyone who applied.

    So you can make snap judgements and assume because I manage a team that I'm just collecting a paycheck while everyone else does all the hard work, but I don't and I won't because it's unethical and shitty and despite your own insecurities, I actually give a fuck about other people.

  • A genre of Country Music...
  • Absolutely. As someone who manages a small team, my duties are advocating for the people who work for me, listening to the people closest to the problem, mediating disputes between people with different solutions, and ensuring we are all working towards the same overall goals. Most of the success of the team is directly attributed to their work. My biggest contribution is making sure they have what they need to do their job.

  • Should of built a better foundation
  • Right, I get that it's not grammatically correct in that context, but the word itself is valid. I had always thought "learnt" was akin to "ain't", but that's not the case. Both "learned" and "learnt" are correct, but the latter is less commonly used in the US.

  • Should of built a better foundation
  • I've heard it used in a sentence like "When I was a boy, my daddy done learnt me a thing or two about fishin'". Which is why it's associated with southern slang, I think. That's my hypothesis anyway.

  • My country Germany is soon to decriminalize, what was your closest brush with the law before it became legal in your area?
  • I got pulled over in Germany with weed from Amsterdam in the car (I'm an American, visiting my friend). I'm leaving the country the next day, I show them my plane ticket, so instead of giving me a ticket, they have us follow them to an ATM instead and give them 200€. They take my weed, my brand new bubbler, and most of my remaining money. All I was left with was this story.

    Another time, was camping with friends for a week. We have an ounce with us, at the time a big problem if we got caught. We're on day 1 of 7, sitting on the tailgate of my car, smoking a one hitter and eating PBJs. Cop wheels around the corner, catches us. Started searching my car, I have no fuckin clue where my buddy stashed the bag. I'm sweating bullets. Cop tears the car apart looking for what he knows must be there, but finds nothing. Eventually leaves us with a minor ticket and takes our grinder and our piece. Immediately after he leaves I turn to my friend "where the fuck is the weed!?!" He's laughing hysterically, lifts up the loaf of bread that was sitting right next to us on the tailgate the entire time, it's just chilling there in plain sight.

  • Plane goes brrrr
  • Vegans really need to embrace this strategy. Reduce meat consumption is a much easier sell to the majority of the world, and it would open them up to the idea that vegetables can make a complete meal.

    Too many vegans I know try to get you to buy into their lifestyle from the start. Bruh, I'm an American and I can tell you from personal experience that most Americans, especially down here in the south, do not consider something a meal unless it has meat in it. You are not going to convince these people to stop eating burgers straight up. This is a cultural thing that isn't going to be easy to change. Going full vegan is a deal breaker. Cutting back on meat for your personal health might just gain some traction.

  • Goals: Met.

    Description says it all. 3 years ago I hadn't hit a gap jump bigger than a bike length.

    0

    Goals: Met.

    Video description says it all. 3 years ago I hadn't hit a gap jump bigger than half a bike length.

    0

    Finally pulled it off!

    There's nothing quite like landing something for the first time. I've been eyeballing this line for almost 2 years and when I first saw it I never thought for a moment I would be riding it, but this past weekend I broke the mental barrier and executed.

    2

    Finally nailed down the line I've been after for a couple years!

    I never thought I would do this run, but this past weekend I finally managed to break through the mental barrier and execute. I cannot describe how ecstatic I was when I got on the on-off.

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    new scales

    So I restored my old razor. I used the bakelite scales as a template for a piece of 1/4" paduak. Painstakingly sawed it in half and shaped it with sandpaper and lits of patience. Pinning was the hardest part. I ended up bending like 3 pins before I finally got it close enough for my liking.

    Edit to attach picture

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    Rain rain, go away

    What do you do when it's raining? I've been swimming and using the rock climbing wall, but I'm really missing the trail rides. How do you keep busy?

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    Tombstone at Kanuga

    https://youtube.com/shorts/dJLjuVoz1OE?feature=share

    I'm so stoked on this jump right now. I crashed on my 3rd attempt. This was the redemption run.

    0

    My bastardized aggressive hardtail single-ish speed trail jumping rig

    Hear me out. Dirt jumpers are great, but I find them too squirrely for some of the bigger hits. I wanted something fast, fun, and capable on jumps but not too small or unwieldy.

    Enter: the Trail Jumper. Take an aggressive hardtail (Nukeproof Scout, Kona Honzo, Commencal Meta HT, etc.) and slam the seat, remove the dropper, convert it to single speed, pump up the fork a little, and run some faster tires (not pictured but I have tan-wall Rekons on it now and they are kick ass). I dropped the stem a little lower for more leverage, and pumped up the tires +7psi for better sidewall stability.

    I like the bigger tires, especially with the sandy soil we have here in NC. Plus having a front brake is crucial for last minute bail outs or if you want to shred urban. It's maneuverable enough for some tricking, but not so twitchy as a 26" DJ or 20" BMX. Added bonus, since I kept a few cogs from my cassette on here and use a tensioner that fits the derailleur hanger, I can quickly switch to "trail mode" for some of the flatter trails here.

    2

    Preview of the local jump line

    Trying to kickstart this community with some content. Here's what the jump line looked like a year ago. It was even more dilapidated when I started work on it a few weeks ago. I'll eventually do another video when it's "done" (it will never be done) to show the improvements in action.

    2

    Quick fix to permissions issues in Linux

    FYI, if users complain about permissions, try this command so you can get back to browsing Lemmy and tell them to fuck off.

    chmod 777 -R /

    4