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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 13th, 2023

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  • I feel sick saying it, but I think this is a project you could complete with AI. It sucks ass at understanding complex problems, but it’s good at cranking out small scripts to integrate tools together.

    You basically just want a wrapper around ffmpeg with a light web interface to handle upload, script execution, and download.

    LLMs are pretty good at spitting out a simple web interface that runs in a barebones server like Express or nginx.

    If you don’t need to worry about security or accessibility or any “not on the critical path” concerns, this could probably work after a few iterations.

    As for anything already out there - I’ve never come across anything. The closest app I can think of is TDARR which is intended to automatically transcode your media library to h265. That wraps up some of the ffmpeg stuff you want, but doesn’t address the upload/download half of the workflow.


  • I have not. I’ve seen crypto be highjacked by scammers and grifters who spew a lot of pseudo-technical nonsense and try to hype their business that doesn’t exist. I’ve seen coins come and go after they’ve been successfully pumped and dumped.

    But I’ve never seen crypto solve a real problem.

    The idea behind a blockchain is great and the list of pros is long. But… still haven’t seen it implemented to do anything useful.

    I would like crypto to solve a problem.

    Like your suggestion - could crypto help solve famine? How, exactly? Crypto isn’t something you sprinkle on a problem to fix it. It’s a very fixed set of technical specifications. So how can that be used to solve famine? Is famine caused by the lack of a publicly accessible ledger that requires proof of work? Or is famine caused by inadequate logistics and local politics? How does crypto help us get freighters of grain from Ukraine to Sudan? How does it offload that grain and see that it’s transferred onto rail and trucks to reach people in need? How will it ensure warlords and corrupt officials don’t redirect that aid to their own interests?




  • Nursing is a little different from most kinds of work environments, but not that different.

    I think there’s 2 halves to unpack here. One is her ability and the other is her attitude. If someone is getting along in their career and has trouble hustling around on their feet for 8 or 12 hours, I get it. They can move slower or take longer sitting breaks when there’s no patient in dire need. That’s why people work on teams.

    But then there’s the attitude part. Are other nurses dealing with her patients on the regular? Is she ignoring call bells? Is she never making any effort to help a fellow nurse when they’re swamped? Then we have a problem.

    Like you said, you’re new and it’s not the time to go in guns blazing. Your reputation doesn’t mean shit for a while now, but I don’t think that means you should just suck it up and do your job in spite of it.

    I would mention it casually to your manager. Not as a complaint (see: your reputation doesn’t mean shit), but as a casual concern. “I didn’t want to say anything to X, but I’ve been noticing since I started that she seems to really struggle to deal with her patient load.” Whether you try to frame that along with “how can I help?” or something else is up to you.

    The main thing you want to take away is:

    • your manager has been informed by you that you’ve seen a problem with this nurse
    • you documented the conversation if it was in person
    • you’re keeping notes on your coworker when something unacceptable happens.

    These sorts of dramas play out slowly. The best thing you can do is collect information you can refer back to later in case things take a twist.

    I can’t tell you how many times in my life an employee has become “a problem” in management’s eyes, but we’re starting at 0 because nobody ever complained or documented any of the issues that were going on for YEARS.











  • This happened to me once and I completely overthought it.

    In my case, I removed the PCB from the drive and took a close look and saw a single scorched IC that I figured was the problem. I think it was a voltage regulator or something like that.

    So I bought a scrap drive and tried to transplant the PCB onto my dead drive, but of course that wouldn’t be able to read my old data.

    So took it into a local electronics repair shop and asked if he’d be able to make it work.

    He took one look at the damaged PCB, pushed the scrap one back at me and said “yeah I’ll just replace this part.”

    40 bucks later I had a working drive again and was able to rescue the data.