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Thank you! The original Connections is one of my favorite series of all time, and I had no idea there was a reboot.


Came here to say this. I have really been enjoying this channel since it popped up about a month ago.


If you're tall and have the budget, I would recommend getting a 4-leg desk rather than a 2-leg one. I switched from a 2-leg Autonomous to a 4-leg model (DeskHaus Apex Pro) it's so much more stable, even when raised.


Believe it or not, it's proportional to the fourth power (!) of the axle load: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fourth_power_law


Yeah, that doesn't work, though. It makes no sense mathematically and can be shown by a simple experiment to break down in practice.


Is “nah I don’t think so” really a powerful counterargument to a page with a list of academic and government citations offering support of its claims?


Well, it's very very simple.

Does a sharp pointy thing poke a hole in a surface more easily or less easily than a big flat thing?

The "list of academic and government citations" is all just finger-in-the-air unscientific "we think it works like this because it fits our primary school child view of the world".


I'd be interested to hear about the experiences of someone who has gone through that Berkeley program or a similar one.


I saw it the other day. Its home is MoMA, but it is currently on loan at the Met through August 27th.

I just went the other day, and it was definitely worth seeing.

https://www.metmuseum.org/exhibitions/van-gogh-cypresses


BetterTouchTool can do this! I too would go crazy without it.


> Not that you should go out of your way to be hurtful, but any genuinely useful advice/suggestions should be given without regard for emotion. You're at work, not a social club.

I agree that this could be useful advice and that you should _not_ hesitate to give it if you think it will be useful. However, I think it's rather extreme and short-sighted to say that such advice should be given entirely "without regard for emotion."

Here's the thing. Your co-workers are human. Humans have lizard brains, and sometimes get defensive. In order to maximize productivity and harmony in the workplace, you want to avoid that.

There's this thing called tact. Use it.


I have a hard time empathizing with this. I understand the principle, but here's where I come from/my experience:

When many of my coworkers message me on Slack for example, they don't just leave me a message asking for what they want, they say "Hey, how are you", or "How was your weekend", or some other silly thing.

I know they don't care about the answer to my question. Now, instead of being able to asynchronously answer their question, I have to spend my own energy (I'm slightly autistic, so it doesn't come easily to me) coming up with some reply to this, so that they THEN ask what they actually want to know.

  > [03 AM] COWORKER: Hey gavinray, how was your weekend?
  > [10 AM] gavinray: It was decent, what about yours?
  > [11 AM] COWORKER: Good. Hey, about ISSUE-123, do you...
Now they have wasted both of our time and drained me of my lifeforce. Sometimes there are hours of delay between this/we are in different timezones.

Just ask me for what you want, I know you're only talking to me because you want something.


This can be a cultural thing. In particular, if I understand correctly, in India it is considered rude not to make small talk before jumping into work. (I'm slightly autistic too but it's not completely useless. I ended up taking a trip to India at one point, and such trips are much easier if you've put in the effort to understand the culture, and your coworkers everyday lives.) I would suggest trying not to be so brief. Ask about their family, their commute to work, etc - get to know them a little better.


Coming from India, we do not talk like that in our native language. I am guessing it is because we have been repeatedly told that is how americans talk (reinforced by movies and TV shows). Now, I start with just a greeting and jump to the issue.. "Hey P!! Good morning.. I just want to check about issue XXX". It sounds less rude, but does not ask the banal questions.


So it seems we have found a self-referencing loop of assumptions about each others' culture! Interesting.


Spreading https://nohello.net/ around your company may help. I have it set as my status message.


This rocks, thanks for sharing


The feature is called Universal Clipboard: https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT209460


25%? Like, one-quarter of the mass of the salad bowl? Not parts-per-million?


yes, PFAS based chemicals are the replacement for wax in 'waxed paper' style products.


Why not just stick to wax?


¯\_(ツ)_/¯ it wasn't actually my decision


Source?


"Paper/paperboard food packaging: PFAS may be used as grease-proofing agents in fast-food wrappers, microwave popcorn bags, take-out paperboard containers, and pet food bags to prevent oil and grease from foods from leaking through the packaging."

https://www.fda.gov/food/chemical-contaminants-food/authoriz...


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