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Daily Discussion Thread - Wed Jul 03 2024
  • Happy cake day, Brisbot πŸŽ‚

  • Queensland LNP promises to increase pokies cap for clubs with more than two premises
  • Good soundtrack while you read the article:

    https://music.youtube.com/watch?v=4nJOQA3ZP3M

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andy_Lewis_(bassist)

    Andrew Joseph Lewis (16 June 1966 – 12 February 2000) was the original bassist of Australian band The Whitlams.

    He battled a gambling addiction and committed suicide in February 2000, aged 33, after losing an entire week's pay in a poker machine.

    "Blow Up the Pokies", co-written by Tim Freedman (The Whitlams) not long before Lewis' death, is a comment on the destruction that Freedman saw in Lewis' life because of his gambling. It was awaiting release as a single at the time.

  • Daily Discussion Thread - Tue Jul 02 2024
  • The rain and the cold makes today a perfect day to be snuggled up at home in bed I reckon

  • Runner Tim Franklin ends 576-day run around the world in Brisbane
  • It would take me more than 576 days to run around Brisbane tbh

  • www.abc.net.au Laws to ban live sheep exports by 2028 pass parliament following lengthy debate

    Laws to phase out Australia's live sheep export trade by 2028 pass parliament, despite last-ditch attempts by opponents to put the brakes on the legislation.

    Laws to ban live sheep exports by 2028 pass parliament following lengthy debate

    > In short: > * Live sheep exports by sea will be phased out over the next four years, after laws banning the trade passed parliament on Monday. > * Earlier in the day, opponents met with the prime minister to request a Senate inquiry into the legislation.

    > What's next? > * WA Premier Roger Cook says he will continue to negotiate for additional support for farmers affected by the laws.

    Sky News and other similar conservative whinge rags are already posting the anti-Labor and anti-Greens headline as a response.

    Personally I think its great news. Keep the value add in Australia (processing), and remove the cruelty of long ship travel followed by questionable processing practices in other countries.

    5
    www.abc.net.au Queensland LNP promises to increase pokies cap for clubs with more than two premises

    The state opposition will take the policy to the looming Queensland election, arguing an increase to the cap will throw a "lifeline" to smaller clubs facing closure.

    Queensland LNP promises to increase pokies cap for clubs with more than two premises

    > In short: > * Queensland's LNP opposition wants to increase the cap on poker machines that can operate at clubs with more than two premises. > * The gaming machine cap for a club licensee with three or more sites is 500, but the LNP wants to lift that to 700.

    > What's next? > * The LNP is taking the policy to the looming October state election, arguing that the proposal would benefit smaller clubs facing closure.

    ... Don't these statements contradict each other?

    -> Applies only to businesses with more than two premises

    -> benefits "smaller clubs"

    ???

    Also I love the related stories:

    !

    8
    Chinese Brands Will Sell A Third Of The World's Cars By 2030: Study
  • willing to burn through public funds in order to gain geopolitical advantages over their adversaries.

  • Daily Discussion Thread - Mon Jul 01 2024
  • If you were on wages, you could work for 80 hours AND get paid for it!

    Salary not so much. Probably best to do the bare minimum.

  • Chinese Brands Will Sell A Third Of The World's Cars By 2030: Study
  • So why aren't other governments doing something similar?

    Our government (Australia) basically told the last couple of brands that manufactured locally to piss off. So they did. So now we have literally zero local manufacturers.

  • ASX200 dives as inflation clocks in at 4% – higher than 3.8% consensus
  • Inflation is caused by excess spending, right?

    Who the heck has all this spare money to spend?

  • Daily Discussion Thread - Mon Jul 01 2024
  • Are you on a wage? If you are, I have good news!

  • Daily Discussion Thread - Mon Jul 01 2024
  • Monday, more like FUNday amright? Finally that horrible weekend is over and we can get back to work πŸ‘·β€β™‚οΈ

  • JJ SPEEDBALL - SOUTHSIDE ROCKS

    You never see a song called "Northside Rocks", that's all I'm saying 😎

    1
    Daily Discussion Thread - Sun Jun 30 2024
  • I can't handle Snapchat, TikTok, Facebook Reels, YouTube Shorts, Instagram, etc

    It's just all short term dopamine hits with no longevity or effort.

    People posting inane shit to get those likes and hearts. Anything that could be potentially useful jump cutted and sped up to suit the short attention span of their viewers so it's functionally useless to try and use to learn anything from.

    I'm so glad I grew up pre-social media. Kids gonna be ADHD as fuck.

  • www.theguardian.com Queensland claim Women’s State of Origin series in historic decider against NSW

    Queensland have won history’s first women’s State of Origin decider 22-6 in Townsville to secure their fourth shield in five years

    Queensland claim Women’s State of Origin series in historic decider against NSW

    > This year’s series was the first to be played across three games, in a milestone acknowledged by Maroons captain Ali Brigginshaw after the match. β€œWe’ve wanted this for so many years, and finally, for both teams, we’ve been able to achieve it,” she said.

    First ever decider, and a sell out crowd to boot

    Women's footy is on the up and up.

    1
    It's winter. so what is your favourite icecream / gelato / frozen yog flavour?
  • Pretty much anything in the dipping cabinet at Miss Sophia's Gelateria in Stafford (Brisbane).

    Double Espresso is a good one, as is Milo, Vanilla, Pavlova, in fact they're all good.

    Ice cream in winter is one of the perks of living in Brisbane.

  • Daily Discussion Thread - Thu Jun 27 2024
  • Went and saw the comedian we recently saw in Melbourne again last night (... in Brisbane, this time).

    Took the lads from work and their partners so I reckon we represented close to 10% of the audience. They enjoyed it I think, even if it meant missing the first half of State of Origin (which in hindsight was probably for the best anyway).

    I enjoyed seeing it again, even if I knew some of the punch lines. I've said before the dude could read the dictionary and make it hilarious though. He's got a gift.

  • www.theguardian.com Brisbane to introduce Airbnb permits for property owners amid housing crisis crackdown

    Mayor Adrian Schrinner says property owners would now need appropriate planning approvals, body corporate support and a 24-7 property manager for short-term rentals

    Brisbane to introduce Airbnb permits for property owners amid housing crisis crackdown

    > Mayor Adrian Schrinner says property owners would now need appropriate planning approvals, body corporate support and a 24-7 property manager for short-term rentals

    Hard to argue tbh.... Is there a negative to something like this I'm not aware of?

    Personally I think Airbnb is the stupidest thing going. You pay more than hotel rates, to live in a house you have to clean and tidy yourself and then pay cleaning fees on top, and its often a hassle if anything goes wrong as there's no responsible party you can approach - Airbnb shrug their shoulders, and the host just hides behind a mobile number they can conveniently turn off.

    Have used them a couple of times in the past purely because we had pets and I hated it.

    13
    Daily Discussion Thread - Wed Jun 26 2024
  • Never mind, I'm a dickhead... I can just stack a fixed resistor and a potentiometer in series

  • Daily Discussion Thread - Wed Jun 26 2024
  • Anyone know much about electronics?

    I have an NTC probe that reads 9K @ 0C and I want to add a mechanical offset as the controller does not have this functionality.

    If I throw a 32K resistance in parallel I should get my +5C offset at 0C which is perfect.

    BUT... I'm feeling a little greedy and I'd like to trim it a little each way, and I reckon between 25K and 50K would be a perfect amount. If I throw a 50K potentiometer in there, it's variable between 0 and 50,000 which is not ideal. Is there such a thing as a potentiometer or similar that provides between 25K and 50K resistance?

  • Daily Discussion Thread - Wed Jun 26 2024
  • I love the initial dive in to a cold bed. Then you create your warm little cacoon and get all snug and its so nice to sleep in. And then the alarm goes off and its work again :(

  • Julian Assange flies out of UK after release from prison: WikiLeaks | ABC News
  • You're going to have to throw down a few more facts. Preferably with proof of some kind, not just unhinged rambling.

  • www.abc.net.au 'I signed up to be a b****, not a criminal': Australia's 'most-hated' TV villain speaks

    Olivia went on Australia's biggest show to find love, but lost almost everything. She says she got a "villain edit" β€” so do they exist?

    'I signed up to be a b****, not a criminal': Australia's 'most-hated' TV villain speaks

    tl;dr - fuck "reality" tv

    > In the reality TV production process, after the casting of villains and the baiting for villainous behaviour, comes the editing.

    > It's in the post-production suite that a villain edit can truly come to life.

    ...

    > The editor says there are a few techniques to achieve these characterisations. The simplest one is being selective in what gets included.

    ...

    > The second technique editors use is amplification β€” finding a moment amongst what the editor calls the "boring crap" that can be boosted into a storyline.

    > In the show, it's spun as a major conflict.

    ...

    > And then, the drama is further enhanced with a technique called "frankenbiting".

    > Like Frankenstein creating his monster, editors will mix together unrelated elements from the footage to make their own beast.

    ...

    > When the show finally goes to air, the final phase of a villain edit begins: controlling the narrative.

    > Now, program makers try to ensure that no narratives that contradict the edit make it into the media.

    > "They would remind me in a very threatening way before every single media interview that I had signed a [non-disclosure agreement]," Olivia says.

    This becomes a problem for Olivia, because when the show goes to air, the backlash is swift.

    8
    www.theguardian.com Does the Coalition’s case for nuclear power stack up? We factcheck seven key claims

    Cheaper electricity, less emissions and ready by 2035 are some of the Coalition’s core promises on nuclear energy, but are they backed by evidence?

    Does the Coalition’s case for nuclear power stack up? We factcheck seven key claims

    > Cheaper electricity, less emissions and ready by 2035 are some of the Coalition’s core promises on nuclear energy, but are they backed by evidence?

    tl;dr - no

    15

    Eat City - Browns Plains (2023)

    music.youtube.com Browns Plains - YouTube Music

    Provided to YouTube by Ditto Music Browns Plains Β· Eat City Browns Plains β„— Eat City Released on: 2023-07-15 Featured Artist: JJ Speedball Auto-genera...

    Browns Plains - YouTube Music

    An ode to the greatest suburb in Brisbane

    1
    www.abc.net.au Roadside cameras to make $94 million less than Queensland government expectations

    The state government had forecast its Camera Detected Offence Program would make more than half a billion dollars this financial year, but is set to fall well short.

    Roadside cameras to make $94 million less than Queensland government expectations

    > In short: Queensland has a range of roadside cameras to detect offences such as speeding, mobile phone use, and not wearing a seatbelt. > The government has significantly revised how much it expects to make from cameras with revenue in 2023-24 tipped to fall $94 million short. > What's next? The cameras are now projected to make $409 million in 2023-24, followed by $465.8 million in 2024-25.

    Brace yourself for a reduction in tolerance. Government relies on that speed camera income so if there's a shortfall they'll stop dropping the percent tolerances until we hit the 1kph over fines they hand out in Victoria.

    13
    www.abc.net.au Keeping pet cats indoors would save millions of native animals and billions of dollars. So what's stopping us?

    Broader adoption of keeping cats safe at home would have large benefits for cat welfare, human health, local wildlife and even the economy. So, should cat owners be required to keep their pets contained to their property?

    Keeping pet cats indoors would save millions of native animals and billions of dollars. So what's stopping us?

    > Broader adoption of keeping cats safe at home would have large benefits for cat welfare, human health, local wildlife and even the economy. So, should cat owners be required to keep their pets contained to their property?

    The answer to the question is obviously "yes".

    117

    Cant park there mate

    !

    On the plus side, if anyone needs a doctor they're close by I guess.

    4

    Do you need to have a "business" account, for services like electricity to a business?

    Our workshop electricity bill is constantly insane, despite relatively low consumption.

    If I plug in our residential rates against our workshop usage, it would be at least 30% lower for the same consumption.

    Is there an actual need for a "business" account at a business address? My understanding of business accounts is that they offer higher levels of support and a faster resolution time, but when poo has hit the fan (such as flooding) we're not restored any faster than the houses nearby anyway.

    Seems bollocks to pay quite a bit extra as a business when the usage is comparable to a residential address.

    This also applies to internet which is more expensive for a business account with no difference in SLA.

    2

    Recommend me a music streaming service?

    I've had YouTube Music since it was Google Music, but the price has recently doubled and at the same time I've started noticing my "Radio" keeps playing the same dozen songs over and over again. Started to feel like I was listening to Triple M.

    Yesterday was the final straw as every song played on repeat until you manually skipped which is just... wtf? How does that even happen?

    I have jumped on to Spotify for the minute, but find it is too heavily focused on "pop" music - it seems to choose songs that are broadly more popular, but aren't really the same as what I'm choosing to play. I somehow always end up back with top 50 chart artists in the queue, even if I started on like bluegrass or hillbilly or something. Also if I select a song or artist and choose "Radio", it always the same 50 songs and then just stops which doesn't seem like what "Radio" should be at all.

    What other options are there that are accessible from Australia, and preferably have a decent amount of Australian local content? I have zero interests in podcasts being jammed in, I just want music. And preferably music that I can just say "play stuff that sounds like this" and it'll go on a deep dive to focus on things I haven't heard before.

    Critical:

    • No ads
    • Able to actually choose the music and skip and what not, so not Sirius or similar
    • Good catalogue of Australian artists
    • Android and Desktop clients
    • "Family" plan or similar for 2 people

    Budget not really an issue.

    24
    www.abc.net.au Two people dead, one critical after three-vehicle crash in Brisbane tunnel

    Queensland police are investigating a crash in Brisbane's Legacy Way tunnel that has killed two people and left another in a critical condition.

    Two people dead, one critical after three-vehicle crash in Brisbane tunnel

    > Two people have died and a woman is in a critical condition after a three-vehicle crash in the Legacy Way tunnel in Brisbane's inner-west on Wednesday afternoon.

    > Queensland Police said preliminary investigations indicated a black Audi S3 was travelling north in the tunnel when it crashed into a silver sedan, which subsequently crashed into a small truck.

    > The driver and sole occupant of the Audi, a man in his 50s, died at the scene.

    > A woman in 20s, who was a passenger in the silver sedan, also died at the scene.

    > Police said the driver of the sedan was taken to the Royal Brisbane and Women’s Hospital in a critical condition.

    > The driver of the truck was taken to hospital with non-life-threatening injuries.

    1
    www.abc.net.au Sustainable town scrapped as one of Australia's biggest green energy projects reconsiders environmental impact

    Are major renewable energy projects being unfairly targeted by federal environment laws asΒ some groups claim? We take a look at the numbers.

    Sustainable town scrapped as one of Australia's biggest green energy projects reconsiders environmental impact

    > In short: A new North West town for 8,000 people will no longer be built as part of a massive renewable energy project when it re-seeks environment approvals. > The federal environment law has been criticised for rejecting more renewable projects than fossil fuel ones. > What's next? The proponent behind the North West energy project expects to submit an environmental application this year.

    ...

    > It would have been halfway along the lonely stretch between tourist mecca Broome and the iron ore shipping capital of Port Hedland.

    > A new town for 8,000 workers, their families and all the services and additional people you would need for such a population in Australia's remote North West region.

    > A town built using the latest in sustainability principles to service one of the world's largest renewable energy projects which covers more than 6,500 square kilometres of spinifex-dominated sand plains.

    > With a 26 gigawatt capacity β€” which is enough energy to meet a third of Australia's demand in 2020 β€” the Australian Renewable Energy Hub wind and solar project would have created green hydrogen and ammonia for export.

    > Well that was the plan.

    0
    www.abc.net.au Qantas investigating reports customers have access to other passengers' information on app

    Qantas is investigating reports of customers having access to other passengers' information on their app.

    Qantas investigating reports customers have access to other passengers' information on app

    > Qantas is investigating reports of customers having access to other passengers' information on their app.

    > In a statement issued this morning, the airline said it would provide more information as soon as possible.

    > "Qantas is investigating reports of an issue impacting the Qantas app this morning," a spokesperson for their airline said.

    > The scale of the issue has not yet been confirmed.

    Luckily I can't afford to travel anywhere so this won't affect me, but probably will others.

    3
    www.abc.net.au The government ordered an investigation into last year's Optus outage. Now its findings are in

    Telcos will be forced to share real-time network information during outages and set up a body to take charge of Australia's triple-0 system, in the wake of last year's Optus outage.

    The government ordered an investigation into last year's Optus outage. Now its findings are in

    > The report found a key cause of the outage was a problem with Optus's 3G network.

    > During the outage, Optus's 4G and 5G towers shut down, meaning emergency calls were diverted to other network's towers β€” known as camping on.

    > But the network's 3G base towers did not shut down, so those calls got lost along the way.

    > "Some devices … attempted to make emergency calls via those [3G] towers (rather than look to camp on to another network), even though no mobile service was being supplied by the Optus network," the report said.

    ...

    > The recommendations include:

    > * Obligate telcos to shut down their towers during outages, allowing triple-0 calls to be carried by other networks > * Establish a "Triple Zero custodian" whose sole responsible is to make sure the system is working > * Force telcos to share real-time information about outages with emergency services organisations and authorities > * Force telcos to file a timely post-mortem on major outages to the regulator and the government β€” including what caused it and steps being taken to resolve it, with a clear and detailed timeline > * Review the government's contract with Telstra to run the triple-0 system, with any changes to be made within a year > * Introduce an industry-wide approach to responding to consumers affected by large-scale outages > * Establish an agreement between telcos requiring them to help each to manage and resolve outages > * Review all legislation and regulation relating to triple-0

    10
    www.abc.net.au Hundreds of properties bought after Queensland floods start new life as green space

    The collective size of the new green space being added to Brisbane's suburbs in the wake of 2022 floods is the equivalent of about 25 rugby league fields.

    Hundreds of properties bought after Queensland floods start new life as green space

    > Rocklea, on the city's south side, had the most buybacks of any Brisbane suburb, with 72 properties spanning more than 50,000 square metres acquired.

    Can confirm - houses around here have been disappearing like a Thanos finger click.

    I actually feel a little bit sorry for some people... In the period after the flood but before the buyback was completed, there were properties hitting the market and being sold at insane prices for what was essentially floodplain. All of a few months after people were moving in to their new home, the properties either side are getting demolished and turned in to green space.

    Imagine buying a house and committing to a 30 year mortgage, only for both your immediate neighbours properties to be considered useless for housing and turning into tiny parks. On the one hand - hooray! No neighbours! But on the other hand... You're kinda isolated and perched in the middle of public space on a property that council considered so bad for housing (in a housing crisis!) that it's better off as a lawn.

    6