MrVilliam

joined 2 weeks ago
[–] MrVilliam@lemm.ee 16 points 1 week ago

They could certainly try, but the trump appointed judges will throw that shit out. I would love to be optimistic, but how could anybody have faith in the judicial system that got us here to reverse course to achieve actual justice in any capacity? It's hard to win against cheaters when you adhere to playing by the rules. "When they go low, we go high" will be the death of us all.

[–] MrVilliam@lemm.ee 6 points 1 week ago (1 children)

I had nothing but headaches from my old gas/oil weed whacker. When I replaced it with a battery one, the only issue I had was that the included battery didn't last nearly long enough. 1.5Ah battery included, but I fixed the problem by buying a compatible 4.0Ah battery, and the 1.5 was still available for the little leaf blower included (double pack for only like $100) to clean up after if the main job totally drained the big battery.

Soon, we'll see lawn mower roombas get affordable enough for more people. I'm looking forward to that. Fuck yardwork lol.

[–] MrVilliam@lemm.ee 4 points 1 week ago (2 children)

That's roughly my current commute. New mid budget ($40kish) EVs seem to generally have a range of like 300 miles, and that's only a little less than my car's range yet still plenty for my needs if I can charge at home every night or maybe every other night.

That 500e sounds like it was designed to be more for people with a <15 minute commute. It'd be great for people who live and work within one city and have everything they need within 20 miles or so of home.

[–] MrVilliam@lemm.ee 31 points 1 week ago (12 children)

I think it's probably too early for this to mean much of anything. Most people who bought an EV bought it new within the past ten years and probably haven't needed to replace their car yet. I don't doubt that the vast majority of EV buyers will choose an EV as their next car, but over 99% would be an incredible statistic if that's what we see ten years from now.

I bought a gas RAV4 in 2016 because I didn't think the tech was quite there yet and I couldn't sit around on a waiting list even if I was ready to trust the tech yet. But even then, I said to myself "this is the last gas powered vehicle I'll ever buy." Just a few weeks short of 9 years later, I believe that now more than ever. If my car dies today, I'm shopping for an EV, probably a Ford if they're still doing that incentive to throw in the upgraded home charging station installation or whatever that promo was. And once that infrastructure is in somebody's home, why go back to using gasoline? Even without that, charging on a standard outlet overnight is plenty for most and is already a massive change in habits and routines that people won't want to change back from. I don't like having to stop at a gas station every few days. I don't like oil changes. Who would choose to go back to all this bullshit after tasting life without that level of hassle? Especially now that the gap in cost between ICE and EV has dropped so much.

[–] MrVilliam@lemm.ee 6 points 1 week ago

The generation that raised you will say "yeah, duh, it's common sense" without a hint of introspection to realize that it was their job to teach you this kind of shit.

Between the Technology Connections channel on YouTube just being legitimately interesting and having just bought a house, I'm speedrunning a lot of information about DIY maintenance to mitigate the disasters. When it comes to knowing how your water heater works or where your main water valve is, better late than never. Routine stuff like cleaning your dishwasher filter and running the machine properly will have immediately recognizable effects that greatly benefit your life. And unlike other people who you've heard shit like that from, I'm not selling anything lol.

[–] MrVilliam@lemm.ee 10 points 1 week ago (3 children)

Oh good, that's me. 9/11 in middle school, wars through high school, '08 housing crash in the middle of college which pushed me to pivot to an AA instead of bachelor's, COVID wedding at 31, insane inflation through now. We finally bought our first house a few months ago and I turned 36 a few days ago. Things were starting to seem like they might turn out okay after all. Serves me right for having a whisper of optimism in my brain for once.

Pensions in this country are nearly non-existent. Without social security either, only the wealthy can retire. Thankfully, I've had retirement accounts for years, but they'll be wiped out by the first late life medical emergency I experience. Without social security to look forward to, I think a lot of people would rather live through total societal collapse than give their everything just to prop up this system that gives nothing back. It's a bad fucking deal.

[–] MrVilliam@lemm.ee 6 points 1 week ago

8 year olds still have a lot of potential to grow. This piece of shit has shown a track record of about 70 years of non growth. Imagine getting rewarded for a behavior for 70 years straight. Even if he had the humility and intelligence to do it, he doesn't have the time left it would take to rewire his brain against that kind of conditioning.

To be clear, I'm not excusing him. I'm explaining that his brain is irreversibly fucking broken. Anybody holding on to hope that he changes in any meaningful way, don't you think that getting shot at would've been a humbling moment if ever there were to be one? By being a disgusting, hateful, stupid predator asshole consistently for his whole life, he's gotten absurd wealth, a model wife, an army of cultist followers, and he got to be president. Twice. When was he supposed to have learned that he should really take the time and energy necessary to do some growing?

[–] MrVilliam@lemm.ee 25 points 1 week ago (1 children)

I took my now wife window shopping for rings when we were getting close to engagement time so that I'd know what she would want. It was clear that the answer was gonna be yes no matter what, but I knew she'd have a ring preference anyway. She saw prices and explicitly said that she'd like white sapphire on sterling silver. I found a bridal set that she adores which very much did not cost a month or two of salary.

Because we didn't blow a ton of money on engagement/wedding shit, we've had much more resources to support the marriage itself. I've heard of regular everyday people spending $3-4k on a fucking ring. We spent 9 days in a few different places in Spain for about that cost instead lol.

[–] MrVilliam@lemm.ee 117 points 1 week ago (4 children)

I for one believe that the question of whether a food service establishment has rats is very relevant to the business.

The character of the staff and clientele as well as the financial state of the staff as a direct result of how stingy their employer is can also be very relevant. Do you want to eat somewhere if the people preparing your food there will sell their morals and decency? Kinda seems likely that I could pay somebody there $100 to put their pubes into your quarter pounder.

[–] MrVilliam@lemm.ee 16 points 1 week ago (3 children)

I don't think they want the identity of the rat getting out. I'm willing to bet that there are plenty of people who really want to publicly remind everybody that snitches get stitches. Word on the street is that this rat can suddenly afford a $60k hospital bill, unlike UHC customers whose claims get denied every day.

[–] MrVilliam@lemm.ee 13 points 1 week ago (12 children)

As a rule of thumb, it's good to clean that filter roughly every month. Since you're using rinse aid, I recommend just cleaning the filter every time you top that off. To minimize how much the filter catches, give dishes a little rinse before loading to at least knock off the bigger stuff.

There are a few things that most people don't know to do for optimal dishwasher effectiveness:

  • Don't use pods. Ideally use dry detergent, but liquid is good too. You have no control over pods.
  • Don't cram it full. Give everything space and have it all face down and/or toward the center where the jets of water will come from.
  • Don't put big shit in there that will block the spinning arms from spinning.
  • Put a little detergent on the detergent door for a little assistance in the rinse cycle.
  • You probably don't need to fill the detergent door (unless you're doing a heavy load of stubborn shit), and overdosing the detergent could be contributing to cloudiness on your dishes. Obviously, close the detergent lid. If not, you're throwing all of your detergent away in the initial rinse cycle.
  • Run hot water through your kitchen sink until it feels hot before you start your dishwasher. Your machine doesn't use much water, so it might just grab cold water from the pipes instead of hot water from your water heater if you don't do this. And everybody knows that hot water is better for cleaning most things.
  • The dishwasher takes like 3-4 goddamn hours to run, but it uses way less water and soap than if you handwashed that shit yourself, plus it can run while you work or sleep.
  • Most things can go in the dishwasher. The only stuff I don't run through there are knives, my cast iron cookware (including Dutch ovens because they're just cast iron coated in enamel), and things that explicitly say that they're not dishwasher safe.

Follow those simple steps and your dishwasher will work better and you'll feel like you reclaimed a bunch of time compared to handwashing or rerunning the dishwasher.

[–] MrVilliam@lemm.ee 12 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

Their opinion on your opinion is more interesting than your opinion. Ratio, my dude.

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