So, cultural time!
I removed the audio because I was talking to my mom :D
And by the way, I take the camera off the street when I am about to film a person. That's not legal here without their consent.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r2K-aTjtLLs
Disclaimer: I am a socialist and I love writing. Writing nice stuff.
Anyway, to train I wrote the darkest horror I could think of.
They told us late.
http://commandelicious.de/index.php/blog/105-they-told-us-late
I still want to caress @riker
#introduction
I'm Hans. I live in Missoula, Montana where every day looks like the opening shot of A River Runs Through It or a post-apocalyptic sci-fi movie depending on how much smoke or snow is in the air. I have a master's in Biomedical Engineering but now work in the entertainment industry. My mind is still drawn to science, tech and engineering so I read and watch a lot of hard sci-fi as well as read science magazines and listen to science podcasts.
@freemo @Surasanji
My grandfather was son of a jewish mother and in the Wehrmacht. A year ago I got his picture diary and I decided to make it accessible to the internet. I left it mostly uncommented.
http://commandelicious.blogspot.com/2017/07/my-grandfathers-picture-wardiary.html
#history #ww2
I decided for a new thread and not derailing the discussion there. <3
@Surasanji I am not jewish but I love geeking over Hebrew and other religions. While I know far less than an expert ont he subject Hebrew /Judaism is one of my favorite topics, particularly when discussing it in the form it had a few thousand years ago.
Something random-
I've been reading up on ancient Canaanite religion recently, and it is a very interesting subject. Particularly when you look at it as the precursor religion to what would eventually become Judaism.
A lot of the god names are maintained in Hebrew- which is, itself, a Canaanite language- the only living (Although you could say resurrected) Canaanite language. Yam (long A, Yaam) for instance is one that is super easy to spot because the word, in Hebrew, for ocean is still yam.
It's a very interesting thing to study for me, as a Jewish person and a secular Zionist who ascribes to the notion that the Jewish people are the aboriginal people to the region of the world I've chosen to make my home.
However, from a history standpoint it's particularly interesting to see where my culture and the religion associated with said culture came from and evolved from.
Tech time - Electrolyte Condensators and easy Repairs saving a lot of money
@commandelicious Professionally and personally, I use distributors like Digikey, Mouser, or Arrow. You can find whatever electronic you're looking for typically between those 3 sites.
FOSS, privilege
Story time:
Muslims are the biggest group where I live (I am not one).
When somebody tells me all Muslims try to introduce Sharia law everywhere they go, I try to explain that this not the case, based on my *personal* experience they don't have.
If they keep insisting, that's damn frustrating: they are questioning *my experience*.
So, when a minority member tells me about their experience with privilege, I shut the fsck up. I don't want to be *that guy*.
Don't be *that guy*.
@Surasanji
Hey! I read your bio and do me a favour and take some pictures. I am very interested how Tel Aviv looks like but I don't want tourist pictures or something :D
I am very interested in culture and I completely lack the money to travel >.>
Tech time - Electrolyte Condensators and easy Repairs saving a lot of money
(I will write this as if you were stupid, of course none of you are, but I want to communicate this to as many people as possible, with or without previous knowledge)
I learnt to repair electronics (tube TVs and VCR … don’t say anything) in my apprenticeship. Most of that job is now obsolete. Nobody buys an tube TV or let someone repair their old flatscreen. Of course electronics are interesting, but the job demand is down to nearly zero because unlearnt people can switch boards in modern electronics.
But that’s not the topic of this. The topic is: People throw away their flatscreen after 2-4 years without even opening it to see what’s wrong.
In case of modern tech screens, or well, every electronic device really usually one thing happens: In the power supply the electrolyte condensators lose capacity and the power supply won’t work any more.
So I have a Samsung flat screen as a second monitor and in January 2018 it didn’t start up but the power LED was blinking.
Won’t start up usually means “Power supply is broken” but most people won’t know that. But it’s really the only thing that will break because condensators. ;)
Anyway, you can easily google that as well and find the answer in modern search engines. Be aware, that at least one answer (the answer with the most clicks …) was wrong.
What you have to do if a piece of hardware won’t work and you don’t have warranty: Open it up. Don’t be afraid, it’s broken anyway. All you will do is maybe damage some of the plastic.
Then you will have to look for the power supply and find the condensators. These are cylindrical little guys with usually a big white line on it showing MINUS.
At the bottom I will show pictures of a broken one and one intact one.
To repair your device you literally only need a soldering iron and solder, maybe a desolder gun and/or desolder wick.
The pieces I needed to repair my screen were literally ten bucks. Euros that is, so like dollars.
Of course I learnt this for three years but it’s really easy, you can do it. Everyone can do it if bodily able.
Condensators get a bulge on top. The surface has to perfectly flat, otherwise it’s already damaged or will give up soon.
If you check and see if the parts are broken just put the values, volts and capacity, into a trusted traders website or a search engine to find a trader. I ordered my stuff from a local German electronics company of course so I can’t give you any tips there.
If you need a soldering tutorial, check YouTube. Everyone can learn to remove or replace an electronic part in maximum an hour. Again: Don’t be afraid.
A man hour is about 80 euros here, that means it’s about 92 dollars. The parts are usually 20 bucks or less. Companies charge more for the parts as well.
I also will link you my tutorial video for my device to show easy it is and the condensator pieces I mean. Enjoy, repairing stuff is fun and cheap and people throw away too much stuff which is basically perfectly fine.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gnV5KNla2eg
#electronics #repair #youtube #fixing #tutorial #condensators #savingmoney
Happy National day of Upper Lusatia!
Upper Lusatia (German: Oberlausitz; Upper Sorbian: Hornja Łužica; Lower Sorbian: Górna Łužyca; Polish: Łużyce Górne or Milsko; Czech: Horní Lužice) is a historical region in Germany and Poland. Along with Lower Lusatia to the north, it makes up the region of Lusatia, named after the Slavic Lusici tribe. Both Lusatias are home to the West Slavic minority group of the Sorbs.
#history #germany #poland
Youtube content creator, writer, cat aficionado
Social Justice Thermonuclear Warhead
enthusiastic (ɛnˌθjuːzɪˈastɪk) about scifi, (alternative) history, politics, games, physics, mental health and our supreme overlords. The feline Masterfamily and suborder.