gnu

joined 10 months ago
[–] [email protected] 32 points 2 weeks ago (12 children)

The hunter gatherer lifestyle works nicely until you get injured, have teeth problems, get sick, or get pregnant. It also helps to be male and both physically and mentally able, so if you aren't good luck with that.

As someone who's had wisdom teeth issues I'm quite happy to have modern medicine rather than being in the stone age and just having to deal with a broken tooth section rubbing against a nerve...

[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 weeks ago

Barn doors on the back is a good sign, but I have to wonder how seriously they're taking the cargo van part with that weird stepped floor at the rear - I'm not sure you'd even get a Euro pallet in that gap and a standard Australian pallet definitely would not sit on the floor (might awkwardly sit on the step between the floor and wheel arch, but you lose height that way).

The height looks a bit tight for my recreational use too - I didn't see an door height measurement but to get a dirt bike in the back I like close on 1300mm to work with. They should have been able to make a pretty low floor though with an electric design so it might just squeak in. Not that I'm going to be looking for an electric van to replace my Transporter any time soon (way too expensive to justify) but it'd be nice to have options in 10 years or so when the secondhand market might be affordable.

[–] [email protected] 13 points 1 month ago (2 children)

My brain first interpreted SQL as 'squirrel' and that now refuses to relinquish its claim as default pronunciation in my mind.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 month ago

I think a wombat would be cool to have around the place, assuming domestication allowed for some level of trainability.

One of my old uni lecturers was very keen on the idea of domesticating the spotted quoll. He reckoned they would make a great pet for those who would otherwise get a cat (a convincing argument actually).

[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 month ago

The number of people who would even know how to change a tyre is unfortunately decreasing. Manufacturers therefore have less reason to include something that requires allocating space, carrying extra weight, and a small extra cost for each car, because they know not enough people are going to care about the loss of a spare to make a difference to sales. I'd wager this is particularly true for EVs as they seem to attract a lot of people who are scared of basic maintenance. It's pretty poor of a company to not include a spare on something that's advertised for use on dirt though, even if the model in question doesn't actually seem like something that its buyers will actually take off the tar.

I personally would want a proper full sized spare in any of my vehicles, though I'm prepared to make an exception for my motorbikes due to the obvious logistical problems. Space savers are better than nothing but then you have to deal with speed restrictions and having to change wheels twice if you get a flat on the front. It's rare for me to get a puncture but it's nice to know that I can just quickly change wheels and carry on even if I somehow managed to put a big gash in a tyre or bend a rim. Even for just a basic puncture in town I can't imagine wanting to faff around on the side of a road for ages waiting for roadside assistance to come and fix something I could have done myself and been back on the road in 15 minutes.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

My unicorn phone would be one that is both small enough to use with one hand (currently have a Zenfone 10 largely for this reason) and has a secondary camera lens that's a telephoto rather than an ultra ultra wide.

It bugs me that phones with a long lens are so comparatively rare, it's always just wide (verging on ultrawide) as default and when a second lens is added it's even wider again because people love distortions or taking photos in tiny rooms or something. Sometimes I just want to take a photo of something further away than a few metres and actually have it visible without zooming in, I'd even take a normal lens FoV as an improvement over ultrawide. Those phones that do have one tend to have it as a third lens and also tend to be huge, so get disqualified by the 'usable with one hand' criteria even before I reach the massively expensive part.

I'd also like an Instax back for the Hasselblad V series that was cheap enough that I could actually justify the cost of buying (say ~$200 AUD or less) though I will admit that's a pretty niche thing to be after.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 month ago

The only time I've resorted to the screwdriver technique (due to not having enough room to tighten and then turn a strap/chain wrench) the screwdriver shank just tore through the filter when I tried to turn it, a broader tool like a wide chisel might have a better chance of success.

What I ended up using that time was an air hammer with a broad headed chisel (pushing on the side where the impact would unscrew the filter). The angles wouldn't work well for this in OPs case but if you have enough side access to get the air hammer through it's a decent last resort.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 months ago

My primary school bought one of these, I thought it was a pretty cool camera back then. It wasn't the best image quality available even at the time and writing to the floppy was slow but being able to swap to other disks easily was a big thing (a stack of floppies was a lot cheaper than memory cards) and being able to just stick the floppy in any computer and see the images was a real game changer compared to dealing with camera drivers to download images.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (1 children)

The societal reaction though would be very different and in favour of the woman. For an example a few months ago some English tourist was in Sydney, got annoyed at some guy waving a flag around her, sucker punched the guy in the head from behind, and received one punch back plus a free broken jaw as her prize.

Now check out how it was reported - it's all about how bad it was for the man to punch a woman and the pretty important fact of her assaulting the man before getting said punch is mentioned once in passing (and it being a punch from behind with the man not aware is not mentioned at all, which is relevant because this is normally highlighted as a 'coward punch' in Australian media).

[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 months ago

I am also not opposed to banning x links - appreciate wider feedback on this though

I would generally prefer to see a screenshot of a xitter post rather than having to follow a link to it, for both my own ease of use and for reducing traffic to their site. However I do think a link to said xitter post should be able to be posted in either the body text under the screenshot or in a comment as a way to show the source of said screenshot.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Because men are statistically more likely to commit violent crimes.

So you're saying it's ok to make negative statements about a subset of people as long as they are statistically more likely to commit violent crimes?

[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 months ago (1 children)

That's pretty rough - one breaking that quickly is annoying but could just be unlucky, two breaking quickly should definitely not happen considering they're not cheap tools.

What part(s) broke on yours? Did they replace the second one as well? I'd hope so, though I could understand only wanting a replacement to sell and get some money back at that point.

 

This knife had been in my pocket for around 5 years with regular use (and sometimes abuse). Would recommend, it's a good selection of actually usable tools to have on you for those times when you aren't carrying a toolbox. Sometimes I've used the pliers even when I do have my toolbox with me, which is not something you would consider with a lot of cheaper multitools.

Over time the casing did become more silver than black and I did manage to break a few things - the can opener didn't like taking a chain link clip off, the precision screwdriver didn't like being used to pry at something (part of inside a door lock from memory), and the large flathead failed when popping a partition cover port off. I thought that last one wasn't something that should have broken the tool so after a few months I finally got around to sending it back for warranty over that and they replaced it without question.

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