OfficeMonkey

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 2 points 5 days ago (1 children)

... Bourbon??

My universe has just expanded.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

I gave my at-the-time eight-year-old my older Ticwatch. They had no interest in the step tracking or even what time it was -- they used sleep tracking as an excuse to wear the watch to bed and play games on it.

If the Syncup has some sort of parental controls, or if your child has some sort of impulse control, you might not suffer the same fate. BUT the question I'd ask is why a watch, smart or otherwise. Will the kid actually set and listen to alarms, do you want to be able to send them messages, have they benefitted from knowing what time it is? (parenting hard, I am not a professional, do what works for you and yours)

[–] [email protected] 37 points 1 month ago (2 children)

Small correction, only discovered when I moved across the country: there are two factories producing Girl Scout Cookies -- and the recipes have overlap, but each production company has a few unique ones. So sometimes I have to order from my niece rather than my neighbor.

Some of them are the same everywhere, though.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 3 months ago (1 children)

This is what I get for not defining my acronyms.

 

I just received an unexpected SLA printer from what I had assumed was a failed Kickstarter for the "Coolsiga FinderOne" or C1 or Classic. The manual is clearly intended for someone who has some context, but my past experience has been entirely FDM based.

I'm not claiming it's a good manual by any stretch of the imagination, nor am I confident that it will work -- but is there an "Dummies Guide to SLA Printers" I can read through to at least know what it's talking about?

 

Hi - Tenlog TLD3-Pro, printing with branx new Overture PLA+, printing an OpenSCAD exported STL sliced with Cura 5.7.1 (most recent as of yesterday).

I'm printing first level at 0.3mm thickness, but the print is irregularly too thick in height -- and not by a little bit, a lot. I've lowered the temperature to 190. I've physically lowered the bed to the point that the skirt didn't print, then raised it just barely back. I've reduced the flow rate to 85%, and I'm still getting the same results. I've lowered the build plate temperature, no change.

The skirt might be a tough high in spots, but I'm ending up with the first level of a prime tower that looks like this.

Any ideas? What else can I try?

[–] [email protected] 6 points 6 months ago (1 children)

... What did I just read? Wow.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 6 months ago (1 children)
JUSTIN BAILEY
------ ------

Original NES Metroid was the second game I ever beat, after Super Mario Bros. 3.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 7 months ago (4 children)

The Republicans will obliterate the fillibuster the day they want to, claiming the Democrats are forcing them to.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 8 months ago

I'm currently conducting a lot of phone screens for a senior engineer position and I've definitely seen InterviewSort lately.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 8 months ago

Warner shelved Acme and instead we get the worst Chris?

[–] [email protected] 3 points 8 months ago (2 children)

Good luck! I hope your baby is healthy.

Things that really worked for me/us:

  1. Every baby is different and people who've written books aren't always right.
  2. Happiest Baby on the Block was the one that worked the best for us, but you can get by with the video ratcher than reading the book (Swaddle, Shake (but do it gently), Shhh... And it's been a decade, damnit, I can't remember).
  3. Give yourself (and your partner) grace. You're human and will be tired. Just know you're both doing your best.
  4. C-section? If you can afford it, stay in a hotel for the first few nights. Room service, maid service, and your partner only has to stumble a few feet to get to the loo. (our bathroom at the time was on a different floor than the bedroom!)
  5. Check things early: crib, car seat, pacifier (we did one that had a stuffed animal attached, they were great), white noise machine, bassinet, wow thinking about this reminds me how expensive it is...
  6. WHATEVER THE PREGNANT PERSON WANTS. I got NO ice cream or milk shakes but got a TON of salads from Subway consisting mostly of banana peppers. Not worth the fight.
  7. As someone else said, just do stuff. Don't wait to be asked. Change the diaper, feed or help with feeding, dress the kiddo, snuggle the baby.
  8. Baby breath smells good.
  9. Kids become interactive really fast, and they won't remember a bit of it, but they're generally adorable.
  10. Burp cloths.
  11. If you haven't changed a diaper yet, it's a thing to learn. I changed my first diaper about a month before my kid was born, and still almost got it wrong.
  12. If your child is going to be penis-possessing at birth: yes, you should cover their penis every time you change their diaper. Their range if uncovered is measured IN YARDS.
  13. Hat. Baby heads get cold.
  14. Do nice things for partner and not just baby.
  15. Every baby is different and what worked for me won't necessarily work for you.

Good luck!

[–] [email protected] 34 points 9 months ago (1 children)

I knew I was excluded and was generally okay with it... Until the kid was about four months old. Family went out to dinner. We were having a good time, baby needed changing, I grabbed him and MY diaper bag (yes, I had my own). I went to the restroom and discovered the only changing table was in the women's room.

I knocked, said hello, and went in. The only woman (teenager? College student? Younger than me, at least) who came in while I was changing the baby was polite and even offered her help.

But this US chain restaurant didn't even consider the possibility that someone other than a woman would change a baby. Come on.

[–] [email protected] 12 points 9 months ago

Oh, did you mean Brock "The Rapist" Turner? I heard he raped an unconscious woman because he's a terrible human being and also a rapist.

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